ScienceIQ.com

What’s So Different About Ferns?

Most plants reproduce by producing a flower, then seeds. Anthers, considered the male reproductive structure, hold the pollen. The ovum, the female reproductive structure inside the flower, is fertilized by pollen. This reproductive process takes place in flowering plants. What about ferns? They do not produce a flower; they evolved a different ...

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Ferns
Biology

The Egg-citing Egg

How many chicken eggs have you eaten in your life? If it is any gauge, the per capita consumption of eggs by Americans is over 250 per year. Eggs are not only found on your breakfast plate, but in ... Continue reading

Eggs
Geology

All That Glitters

Gold is called a 'noble' metal because it does not oxidize under ordinary conditions. Its chemical symbol Au is derived from the Latin word 'aurum.' In pure form gold has a metallic luster and is sun ... Continue reading

AllThatGlitters
Mathematics

How To Calculate The Circumference Of A Circle

A circle is what you get if you take a straight line and bend it around so that its ends touch. You can demonstrate this by taking a piece of stiff wire and doing just that: bring the ends of the wire ... Continue reading

CircumferenceOfACircle
Biology

Cloning and Ethics

Cloning technology today is far from perfect: it requires many attempts and only 1%, if any, of the cloned eggs become embryos and then survive. For example, the first cloned sheep, Dolly, was ... Continue reading

CloningandEthics

The Great Permian Extinction

PermianExtinctionMore than 250 million years ago, when the current continents formed a single land mass, known as the Pangea and there was one super-ocean called Panthalassa, something extraordinary happened. Nearly all life on Earth was wiped out. Over 90% of all marine species and over 70% of terrestrial species went extinct; only their fossils remained to tell us the story.

This so-called Great Permian Extinction, or Great Dying, marked the end of the Permian period and the beginning of the Triassic period in the natural history of the Earth. It was the most devastating extinction, shadowing even the Cretaceous-Tertiary one 65 million years ago when a giant meteor hit the Earth and caused the extinction of the Dinosaurs. Most species, however, did not disappear from the face of the Earth over-night. There was a gradual dying-off over thousands or even millions of years.

The Trilobites, for example, were extremely successful marine life forms at the time. In total, over 150 families and 15,000 species of these hard-shelled, thumb-sized creatures existed. The number of families, as you can see from the plot in the image, started dying off about 450 million years ago. The last remaining family of Trilobites however disappeared abruptly about 250 million years ago. A similar pattern can be seen in the extinction of some other species as well. So what could have caused this? Scientists believe it was a combination of volcanic activity spilling out tons of dust and greenhouse gases into the atmosphere and into the ocean; and then a meteor, the size of Mount Everest, hitting the Earth and spilling massive amounts of sulfur-related compounds into the ocean. What a way to go: first you get suffocated, poisoned and burned for thousands or millions of years, just to be finished off with a big sulfur-carrying meteor. Hell of Earth.