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Bird Flu, Swine Flu, Human Flu

Influenza, unlike many viruses that make humans sick, can also affect birds and pigs. Generally strains of the influenza virus that causes disease in people are slightly different from those that affect birds and pigs. People and pigs can catch flu from each other, and birds and pigs can catch it from each other, but until 1997 people didn't catch ...

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Physics

How Fast is Mach 1?

A Mach number is a common ratio unit of speed when one is talking about aircrafts. By definition, the Mach number is a ratio of the speed of a body (aircraft) to the speed of sound in the undisturbed ... Continue reading

Mach1
Physics

The World's Largest Laser

In a rural community in Northern California, in a building spanning the length of two football fields scientists are creating the world's largest laser. The National Ignition Facility project, know as ... Continue reading

LargestLaser
Geology

What is Geodesy?

Geodesy is the science of measuring and monitoring the size and shape of the Earth. Geodesists basically assign addresses to points all over the Earth. If you were to stick pins in a model of the ... Continue reading

WhatisGeodesy
Astronomy

Powerful Quasars

Quasars appear as distant, highly luminous objects that look like stars. Strong evidence now exists that a quasar is produced by gas falling into a supermassive black hole in the center of a galaxy. ... Continue reading

PowerfulQuasars

Marmaduke and the Taco Bell Chihuahua Are Cousins

MarmadukeYou would never think Marmaduke, the enormous great dane of the newspaper cartoons, and the tiny Taco Bell chihuahua are close relatives. But the fact is, ALL dogs are pretty close relatives. Scientists now believe that all dogs, including the semi-wild dingoes of Australia, Arctic huskies, Shetland sheepdogs, great danes and tiny chihuahuas, are descended from only two original domestic dogs. DNA evidence also suggests that dogs are all derived from wolves, not coyotes or jackals.

The DNA evidence further suggests that dogs were first domesticated about 100,000 years ago. However, the first dog fossils, found in Europe and Asia, date from only 14,000 years ago. The scientists who did the DNA study think that early dogs looked so much like wolves that they can't be distinguished from them in the fossil record until about 14,000 years ago. People later took their dogs with them as they spread out over the globe, to Australia, the New World, and the Pacific Islands. Wild dogs recently discovered in the southeastern United States may be descended from the dogs kept by the Native Americans.

Domestic dogs are smaller than their wild forebears, with smaller brains, less acute senses, and smaller teeth. In appearance and behavior, they are immature, puppy-like wolves.