ScienceIQ.com

What Is Air Pressure?

You can think of our atmosphere as a large ocean of air surrounding the Earth. The air that composes the atmosphere is made of many different gases. Nitrogen accounts for as much as 78 percent of the volume, while oxygen accounts for 21 percent. The remaining one percent is composed of such gases as argon, carbon dioxide, helium and hydrogen. ...

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WhatIsAirPressure
Astronomy

Astronaut Photography

Astronauts are trained in scientific observation of ecological, geological, geographic, oceanographic, environmental, and meteorological phenomena. They are also instructed in the use of photographic ... Continue reading

AstronautPhotography
Medicine

It's Hay Fever Season!

If spring's flying pollen is making you sneeze, you are not alone. Some 40 to 50 million people in the United States complain of respiratory allergies, and experts estimate that three to four million ... Continue reading

HayFever
Geology

The Mineral Chalcedony

Chalcedony is a catch all term that includes many well known varieties of cryptocrystalline quartz gemstones. They are found in all 50 States, in many colors and color combinations, and in ... Continue reading

TheMineralChalcedony
Medicine

Encephalitis and Meningitis

Encephalitis and meningitis are inflammatory diseases of the membranes that surround the brain and spinal cord and are caused by bacterial or viral infections. Viral meningitis is sometimes called ... Continue reading

EncephalitisandMeningitis

Why Can't We Really Clone Dinosaurs?

CloneDinosaursYou might think, if you saw the movie Jurassic Park, or read the book, that a real live cloned dinosaur would be on the TV evening news any day now. Not very likely! In the fictional version, the dinosaur DNA is resurrected from the stomachs of prehistoric mosquitoes that had sucked some dinosaur blood just before being trapped and preserved in amber 80 million years ago. (Indeed, amber is a wonderful preservative, and just might preserve some DNA!) Then the DNA was transferred into crocodile eggs whose own DNA had been removed. Voila! Baby dinosaurs.

But to clone an animal, as Dolly the sheep was cloned a few years ago, you need not just DNA but whole nuclei - plus an unfertilized egg with its own nucleus removed, to transfer it into. That's why scientists call the cloning process 'nuclear transplantation.' The DNA in sheep or dinosaurs, or people or frogs or mice, or any other animal large enough to see, comes packaged in the nucleus with a lot of associated scaffolding and regulatory proteins to help it carry out the business of running a cell. Naked DNA can't do much by itself. And whole dinosaur nuclei aren't going to be found any time soon.

Some people who have given up on the possibility of cloning dinosaurs think mammoths would be a better bet. Several have been frozen (not fossilized) in the Arctic permafrost in Siberia, and they are only thousands of years old, not millions. Still, the chances of recovering intact nuclei from them is pretty slim. So don't be planning your trip to Jurassic Park, or Mammoth Park, this year.