ScienceIQ.com

Types of Volcanoes

Geologists describe four types of volcanoes. Cinder cones, the simplest of volcanoes, grow as pieces of congealed lava rise from a central vent and form a funnel-shaped crater. Lava domes arise from lava too viscous to flow far or fast. The dome accumulates atop a central vent and expands from the inside. Shield volcanoes grow as fluid lava spreads ...

Continue reading...

TypesofVolcanoes
Biology

You Can Learn A Lot From A Microbe.

You can learn a lot from a microbe. Right now, a tiny critter from the Dead Sea is teaching scientists new things about biotechnology, cancer, possible life on other worlds. And that's just for ... Continue reading

YouCanLearnALotFromAMicrobe
Geology

Silent Earthquakes

Try this demonstration of earthquake movement. Shape modeling clay into two blocks or get two firm sponge blocks. Press the sides of the blocks together while trying to slide them slowly past each ... Continue reading

SilentEarthquakes
Astronomy

Jumping Starlight

'Twinkle, twinkle, little star, how I wonder what you are,' says the song by Jane Taylor. But stars don’t really twinkle; their light reaches the earth in a steady way. Why then do we see them ... Continue reading

JumpingStarlight
Geology

When This Lake 'Burps,' Better Watch Out!

Nearly twenty years ago, two lakes in Cameroon, a country in Africa, 'burped,' killing hundreds of people. What makes a lake burp? Lake Nyos and Lake Monoun are unusual lakes. They each formed in the ... Continue reading

LakeBurps

How Blood Clots

BloodClotsScabby knees and bruised shins are as much a part of growing up as climbing trees. Minor injuries from paper cuts to skinned elbows are nothing to worry about for most people, because the blood's natural clotting process swings into action whenever the skin is broken or a blood vessel damaged. Clotting stops bleeding. Without it, even a small scrape could trigger massive blood loss.

Coagulation or clotting of blood involves a series of changes in several blood proteins and enzymes. Cells in damaged tissues release proteins that trigger it. Blood cells called platelets congregate at the injury site. They adhere to damaged tissue and form a plug. After that, some 20 different substances get into the act. Calcium and vitamin K from food are two of them. The result is the formation of a network of strings or threads called, aptly enough, fibrin. A scab on the skin is a mesh of fibrin with platelets and red blood cells trapped in it. A bruise forms at the site of an internal blood clot.

Blood clots are life-saving, but when they form inside blood vessels, they can be life-threatening. A clot can block a vital artery--for example, one that supplies the heart or brain with blood. If the blockage to the heart is severe enough, heart muscle cells are deprived of oxygen and they die. That is a heart attack. A serious blockage in the brain causes neurons to die. That is one kind of stroke. Another kind of stroke is bleeding in the brain. It happens when normal clotting mechanisms fail.