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Who was Typhoid Mary?

Mary Mallon lived in New York about 100 years ago, and worked as a cook. It seemed that every family she worked for suffered an outbreak of typhoid fever! The Dept. of Public Health found that she harbored the bacteria salmonella typhi, which causes typhoid fever. Even though there were no antibiotics in those days, doctors did know how to culture ...

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WhowasTyphoidMary
Geology

The World's Biggest Popsicle

Stored in a commercial freezer in France, along with quite a lot of frozen meat and cheese, is about 15 kilometers' worth of ice cores, taken from glaciers in Greenland and Antarctica. Each giant ... Continue reading

TheWorldsBiggestPopsicle
Engineering

Smoke Detectors

How does a smoke detector 'know' when there is a fire? Smoke detectors use one of two different methods to do their job, and for both methods the basic operating assumption is the cliche 'where ... Continue reading

SmokeDetectors
Biology

The Rapid Movement of the Soybean Rust Pathogen

Soybean rust, caused by the fungus Phakopsora pachyrhizi, results in soybean yield losses of up to 80%. Rust diseases are named for the orange powdery spores produced in leaf pustules. They are easily ... Continue reading

SoybeanRustPathogen
Biology

The Human Pancreas

The pancreas is a body organ that does some heavy lifting. It carries on two important functions relating to digestion and the regulation of blood sugar. The exocrine, the larger function, makes ... Continue reading

HumanPancreas

Spiders and Their Venom

SpidersVenomSpiders, which have been around for about 300 million years, are built differently from insects. They have eight legs, not six, and their bodies are divided into two sections, not three. Entomologists put spiders in the class Arachnida along with mites, ticks, and scorpions, and only about 34,000 of an estimated 120,000 species have been described. Fewer than that have been studied.

All spiders are venomous in the sense that all but one species possess a pair of poison glands. Since spiders use their jaws to employ their venom, they bite, jabbing their fangs into their prey while squeezing venom out from these glands. Chemically, spider venom is a mixture of many different toxins and digestive enzymes. Researchers today are investigating venom as a medicine. Necrotic venom, which is found in spiders like the brown recluse and which causes tissue decay, might be helpful in dispersing blood clots that cause heart attacks, according to one study. Spider-venom-derived medicines in homeopathy affect the nervous system, heart, and brain, with each species having its own particular accent.