ScienceIQ.com

The Strange Spin of Uranus

Directional terms like north and south make sense here on Earth. The north and south axis of the Earth is relatively perpendicular to the plane of the Earth's orbit around the sun. Actually, Earth's axis of rotation is 23.5 degrees from the vertical. The variance from the vertical is what causes our seasons. ...

Continue reading...

UranusSpin
Engineering

Drip, Drip Water Clocks

Water clocks were among the earliest timekeepers that didn't depend on the observation of celestial bodies. One of the oldest was found in the tomb of the Egyptian pharaoh Amenhotep I, buried around ... Continue reading

DripDripWaterClocks
Biology

Palm Trees and Prickly Pears

If you drive around Southern California you'll see a lot of palm trees and prickly pear cacti. If you drive around Southern Spain you will too! How did it happen that two places an ocean apart have ... Continue reading

PalmTreesandPricklyPears
Geology

Fossil Energy - The Basics

Contrary to what many people believe, fossil fuels are not the remains of dead dinosaurs. In fact, most of the fossil fuels we find today were formed millions of years before the first dinosaurs. ... Continue reading

FossilEnergyTheBasics
Astronomy

Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer Solves Mystery of Pulsar 'Speed Limit'

Gravitational radiation, ripples in the fabric of space predicted by Albert Einstein, may serve as a cosmic traffic enforcer, protecting reckless pulsars from spinning too fast and blowing apart, ... Continue reading

RossiXrayTimingExplorer

The World's Largest Clone

WorldsLargestCloneWhat's the world's largest clone? It's not a sheep, but an aspen tree...and it's a natural clone, not a human-engineered one. Nicknamed 'Pando' (Latin for 'I spread'), this 'stand' of 47,000 aspens in Utah is actually a single tree. It weighs six million kilograms (13 million pounds)--making it not only the world's largest clone, but also the world's largest living thing!

Long before humans even thought of cloning, aspen trees had mastered the art of vegetative reproduction. Like all other flowering plants, aspens produce seed, but their preferred method of reproduction is asexual. Mature trees send out underground suckers, or ramets, from their roots. The ramets sprout buds that grow into new, adult trees. The result is a large area of forestland covered by a single aspen clone. It's easy to spot aspen clones. They leaf out simultaneously in spring and turn the same color at the same time in fall.

Because ramets survive underground long after the parent tree is burned or cut, cloned aspens are frequent and successful pioneer colonizers after forest fires and logging operations. Sending out as many as 60,000 ramets per hectare, a single aspen can quickly invade bare ground as far as 40 meters from the parent tree. Because they draw water and nutrients from original tree, clonal sprouts grow far more rapidly than seedlings--as much as 1.8 meters (6 feet) their first year. Although individual 'trees' typically live no more than 200 years, new sprouts spring up as old ones die, making the aspen clone--in theory, at least--immortal. Some clones of quaking aspen in the United States are thought to be 8,000 to 10,000 years old.