ScienceIQ.com

How a Horse Can Save Your Life?

Most people who have been vaccinated with the smallpox vaccine never really question what exactly was injected into their body. If they did, they might be surprised, and maybe thank a horse or two. You may not know it, but the smallpox vaccine is a solution containing the living cowpox virus, not the smallpox virus. The cowpox virus is a strain of ...

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HorseLife
Astronomy

Reading The Colors of the Spectrum

Did you ever wonder how scientists can tell us so much about distant stars, for example, the surface temperature or chemical makeup of a star, light years away from Earth? Scientists can only use what ... Continue reading

SpectrumColors
Biology

The Ants Go Marching One by One, Hurrah!

Have you ever wondered how ants know the way from one place to another? Even when you remove them all, they are right back to the trail they were on before as if there were an invisible road telling ... Continue reading

AntsMarching
Geology

Global Warming?

The contiguous United States experienced its 16th coolest summer on record and seventh coolest August, according to scientists at NOAA Climatic Data Center in Asheville, N.C. While much of the West, ... Continue reading

GlobalWarming
Chemistry

Your Nose Knows!

Would you like spearmint or caraway flavor? That's a strange choice, but believe it or not, they are the same thing. Well, almost. Spearmint and caraway both contain a molecule called carvone with the ... Continue reading

YourNoseKnows

We Live In Two Distinct Visual Worlds

VisualWorldsHave you ever wondered what it would be like to live on a planet where all the colors were different from what you're used to? Actually, you already have a lot of experience with two different worlds with two completely different color schemes. They're called night and day.

Eyes started out as simple light detectors. Only after a long period of evolution did our eyes develop rods, sensory receptors that we still use for night vision. Rods allow us to perceive images in black, white, and gray, but not in color. Later still came the development of cones. Blue cones were the first color cones to evolve from rods. Most species of New World monkeys have only rods and blue cones. About 30 million years ago, red and green cones evolved from the blue cones.

We share a visual system of those three cone colors with apes and Old World monkeys. The result is two different visual worlds. One is a daytime world of color, where you have to look directly at an object if you want to bring it into sharp focus. That's because the color cones are concentrated in the center of your retina, where an image is projected if it's in the middle of your visual field. The other world is black, white, and gray. In that colorless night-time world, objects are sharper if you look near them instead of at them. That's because the rods are concentrated away from the center of the retina, where images are projected if you look at them a little askance.