ScienceIQ.com

How Did Dogs Evolve?

While the status of the dog as humankind's best and oldest friend remains unchallenged, debate rages about just how far back the friendship goes. Fossils of domesticated dogs appear in the remains of human settlements between 10,000 and 14,000 years old, but measurements of mutations in the genes of mitochondria (the 'energy factories' of cells) ...

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HowDidDogsEvolve
Engineering

Alloys

Water is a clear colorless liquid. So is methanol. If one were to take a quantity of methanol and pour it into some water, the result is also a clear colorless liquid. But this one is something new; a ... Continue reading

Alloys
Engineering

Leaning Wonder of Engineering

Most everyone is familiar with the famous Leaning Tower of Pisa. It's known not so much for its engineering, as for the fact that it hasn't fallen yet. From an engineering standpoint, it is a study in ... Continue reading

TowerofPisa
Astronomy

Starburst, No, Not The Candy

A starburst galaxy is a galaxy experiencing a period of intense star forming activity. Although this activity may last for ten million years or more, that is like a month in the life of a ten billion ... Continue reading

StarburstAstro
Biology

The World's Largest Clone

What'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 ... Continue reading

WorldsLargestClone

Fahrenheit 98.6

Fahrenheit986When you're well, your body temperature stays very close to 37o C. (98.6o F.), whether you're playing basketball in an overheated gym or sleeping in the stands at an ice hockey game in a snowstorm. Your body temperature is controlled by an area of the brain called the hypothalamus. It's about the size of the tip of your thumb and weighs a little more than a penny.

The hypothalamus is much like the thermostat attached to a furnace. Just as a thermostat senses temperature and turns the furnace on or off, the hypothalamus regulates the body's energy use and keeps temperature very near the norm. The hypothalamus can sense the temperature of the blood. If the blood becomes too cool, the hypothalamus causes the pituitary, a gland at the base of the brain, to release a hormone called TSH. (Hormones are chemicals made in one organ that travel through the blood and affect other organs.)

TSH travels through the blood and reaches the thyroid gland in the neck. There, it stimulates the thyroid to make another hormone, thyroxine. Thyroxine travels to all the cells of the body through the blood stream. It makes the cells burn food faster, generating more heat. If the blood is too warm, the reverse occurs. TSH production decreases, thyroxine levels decrease, and body cells release energy more slowly.