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#1 Science HQ » Cerebellum » Yesterday 22:08:41

Jai Ganesh
Replies: 0

Cerebellum

Gist

The cerebellum, Latin for "little brain," is a crucial part of the brain located at the back, beneath the cerebrum, vital for coordinating movement, balance, posture, and motor learning, essentially fine-tuning commands from the motor cortex to ensure smooth, precise actions by detecting and correcting "motor errors". It receives sensory info and motor plans, compares intended movement with actual execution, and sends corrective signals, influencing everything from walking and talking to complex tasks, with damage leading to coordination loss and slurred speech. 

The cerebellum, Latin for "little brain," is a crucial part of the hindbrain located at the back of the head, primarily responsible for coordinating voluntary movements, balance, posture, and motor learning, ensuring smooth, precise actions by fine-tuning signals from the cerebrum and brainstem; it's also increasingly recognized for roles in cognition, emotion, and social behavior. 

Summary

The cerebellum (pl.: cerebella or cerebellums; Latin for 'little brain') is a major feature of the hindbrain of all vertebrates. Although usually smaller than the cerebrum, in some animals such as the mormyrid fishes it may be as large as it or even larger. In humans, the cerebellum plays an important role in motor control and cognitive functions such as attention and language as well as emotional control such as regulating fear and pleasure responses, but its movement-related functions are the most solidly established. The human cerebellum does not initiate movement, but contributes to coordination, precision, and accurate timing: it receives input from sensory systems of the spinal cord and from other parts of the brain, and integrates these inputs to fine-tune motor activity. Cerebellar damage produces disorders in fine movement, equilibrium, posture, and motor learning in humans.

Anatomically, the human cerebellum has the appearance of a separate structure attached to the bottom of the brain, tucked underneath the cerebral hemispheres. Its cortical surface is covered with finely spaced parallel grooves, in striking contrast to the broad irregular convolutions of the cerebral cortex. These parallel grooves conceal the fact that the cerebellar cortex is actually a thin, continuous layer of tissue tightly folded in the style of an accordion. Within this thin layer are several types of neurons with a highly regular arrangement, the most important being Purkinje cells and granule cells. This complex neural organization gives rise to a massive signal-processing capability, but almost all of the output from the cerebellar cortex passes through a set of small deep nuclei lying in the white matter interior of the cerebellum.

In addition to its direct role in motor control, the cerebellum is necessary for several types of motor learning, most notably learning to adjust to changes in sensorimotor relationships. Several theoretical models have been developed to explain sensorimotor calibration in terms of synaptic plasticity within the cerebellum. These models derive from those formulated by David Marr and James Albus, based on the observation that each cerebellar Purkinje cell receives two dramatically different types of input: one comprises thousands of weak inputs from the parallel fibers of the granule cells; the other is an extremely strong input from a single climbing fiber. The basic concept of the Marr–Albus theory is that the climbing fiber serves as a "teaching signal", which induces a long-lasting change in the strength of parallel fiber inputs. Observations of long-term depression in parallel fiber inputs have provided some support for theories of this type, but their validity remains controversial.

Details

Your cerebellum is part of your brain that helps coordinate and regulate a wide range of functions and processes in both your brain and body. While it’s very small compared to your brain overall, it holds more than half of the neurons (cells that make up your nervous system) in your whole body.

What is the cerebellum?
Your cerebellum is a part of your brain located at the back of your head, just above and behind where your spinal cord connects to your brain itself. The name “cerebellum” comes from Latin and means “little brain.”

For centuries, scientists believed your cerebellum’s job was to coordinate your muscle movements. Advances in technology have shown that your cerebellum does much more than that. There’s much that scientists are still trying to understand about the cerebellum, including all the ways it works with the rest of your nervous system.

What’s the difference between the cerebellum and cerebrum?

Your cerebellum is a small part of your brain located at the bottom of this organ near the back of your head. Your cerebrum is the largest part of your brain and includes parts above and forward of the cerebellum.

Function:

What does the cerebellum do?

Scientists started analyzing the cerebellum more than 200 years ago by studying people or animals with cerebellum damage. They found people with this kind of damage usually had trouble keeping their balance while standing or walking, or they’d have trouble reaching for objects because their hands would miss an object they were trying to pick up.

Over time, scientists started finding evidence that cerebellum damage could have other effects. They found that damage could make it harder or for a person to learn new words or skills. Damage to your cerebellum can interfere with judging the size of or distance from objects. It can also affect your sense of timing. As an example, people with damage to their cerebellum may have trouble repeatedly tapping their fingers, causing them to tap too soon or too late from beat-to-beat.

Advances in technology have done even more to improve experts’ understanding of the cerebellum. Now, scientists can image a person’s brain activity while that person does a certain task. What scientists have found (so far) is that different parts of your cerebellum are more active depending on what you’re doing at the time. They’ve also found that your cerebellum plays a role in emotions and how you make decisions.

Can you live without a cerebellum?

There are cases of people born with cerebellar agenesis, which is being born without a cerebellum. This condition is extremely rare. Many people with it have only minor effects. They can walk and have lives that are more or less like anyone else’s. Others have severe symptoms and will need constant medical care for their entire life.

People can also survive injuries or diseases that damage their cerebellum, but it’s common for them to have long-term or permanent issues.

What are some interesting facts about the cerebellum?

Neurons are specialized cells that make up your nervous system, including your brain, spinal cord and all of your nerves. Your cerebellum is only about 10% of your brain in terms of how much space it takes up. However, it holds about half of all the neurons in your entire body.

Your cerebellum is also incredibly compact. The brain tissue that makes up your cerebellum is a sheet folded up like an accordion. Laid flat, it would be a little over 3 feet long and 4 inches wide (1 meter by 10 centimeters).

Anatomy:

Where is the cerebellum located?

Your cerebellum is inside of your head, at about the same level as your ears. In relation to the rest of your brain, it’s at the very bottom and sits just above where your neck meets your skull.

What does it look like?

Your cerebellum forms a half-circle shape around your brain stem, which connects your brain to your spinal cord. It has a series of horizontal grooves from top to bottom.

What color is it?

Your cerebellum is a pinkish-gray color.

How big is it?

The average adult cerebellum is about 4.5 inches (11.5 centimeters) wide. In the middle, it’s between 1 inch and 1.5 inches (3 centimeters - 4 centimeters) tall. On the sides, it’s between 2 inches and 2.5 inches (5 centimeters - 6 centimeters) tall.

How much does it weigh?

The average adult cerebellum weighs between 4.8 ounces and 6 ounces (136 grams - 169 grams).

Conditions and Disorders:

What are the common conditions and disorders that affect this body system or organ?

Any condition that can affect your brain can affect your cerebellum. Some major examples include:

* Ataxia (this is both a symptom and a group of diseases).
* Congenital disorders (conditions you have at birth, such as Chiari malformation).
* Immune and inflammatory conditions (an example of this is multiple sclerosis).
* Genetic disorders (conditions you have at birth that you inherited from one or both parents, such as Wilson’s disease).
* Infections (these can happen because of bacteria, viruses, parasites and fungi).
* Vitamin deficiencies and nutrition problems (such as low vitamin B12 levels).
* Stroke.
* Cancer.
* Cerebellar agenesis (being born without a cerebellum at all).

Common signs or symptoms of conditions affecting your cerebellum?

Many symptoms can happen with conditions affecting your cerebellum. Some of the most common symptoms include:

* Dysarthria: Problems with your cerebellum can affect your ability to speak clearly.
* Ataxia: This is a loss of coordination. It can make you clumsy, causing balance problems or trouble using your hands for common tasks.
* Dizziness.
* Paralysis: This can affect various parts of your body.
* Shaking or tremors: Loss of muscle coordination can cause parts of your body, especially your hands, to shake.
* Vision problems: Your cerebellum plays a role in controlling your eyes and how your brain processes what you see. Conditions that affect your cerebellum can cause double vision (diplopia) or other problems.

Common tests to check the health of the body organ?

Many types of tests can help diagnose conditions that affect your cerebellum, including:

* Blood tests (these can look for anything from immune system problems to toxins and poisons, especially certain metals like copper).
* Genetic testing.
* Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).
* Spinal tap (lumbar puncture).

Common treatments for the body organ?

The treatments for conditions that affect your cerebellum depend entirely on the conditions themselves. They can range from antibiotics for bacterial infections to radiation and chemotherapy for brain tumors. There’s no one-size-fits-all for treating problems that affect your cerebellum.

The cerebellum is located at the base of the brain, under the cerebrum and posterior to the spinal cord. The cerebellum is relatively small, but it is neuron-rich, containing over 50% of the brain’s neurons in a dense cellular layer, called the cerebellar cortex.

Functions of the Cerebellum

The cerebellum plays a vital role in function and mobility. Traditionally known functions of the cerebellum include:

* motor movement regulation, including gait coordination and maintenance of posture
* balance control
* control of muscle tone and voluntary muscle activity
* motor learning

There is also growing research on the cerebellum's role in emotion and cognition, specifically with visual-spatial memory, the creation of generative grammar into the structure of the brain, and the conscious ability to manipulate cause-and-effect relationships.

The cerebellum makes fine adjustments to motor actions. Four principles important to cerebellar processing have been identified.

* Feedforward processing
* Divergence and convergence
* Modularity
* Plasticity

Anatomical Position

The cerebellum is located at the back of the brain, immediately inferior to the occipital and temporal lobes, and within the posterior cranial fossa. It is separated from the occipital and temporal lobes by the tentorium cerebelli, a tough layer of dura mater. It is posterior to the pons. The fourth ventricle separates the pons from the cerebellum.

Cerebellar Structure

The cerebellum has two hemispheres. These hemispheres are connected by the vermis, a narrow midline area. The cerebellum receives input and transmits output via a limited number of cells. It is divided into thousands of independent modules, all with a similar structure.

The cerebellum is made up of grey matter and white matter:

* grey matter: located on the surface of the cerebellum. The grey matter forms the cerebellar cortex. It is tightly folded (i.e. convoluted to increase its surface area) and is divided into three layers: the molecular layer (external); the Purkinje cell layer (middle); and the granular layer (internal). There are two types of neurons in the molecular layer: the outer stellate cell and the inner basket cell.
* white matter: located below the cerebellar cortex. Four cerebellar nuclei (dentate, emboliform, globose, and fastigial nuclei) are embedded in the white matter.

The cerebellum can be subdivided in the following ways: (1) anatomical lobes, (2) zones and (3) functional divisions.

Additional Information

Cerebellum is the section of the brain that coordinates sensory input with muscular responses, located just below and behind the cerebral hemispheres and above the medulla oblongata.

The cerebellum integrates nerve impulses from the labyrinths of the ear and from positional sensors in the muscles; cerebellar signals then determine the extent and timing of contraction of individual muscle fibres to make fine adjustments in maintaining balance and posture and to produce smooth, coordinated movements of large muscle masses in voluntary motions.

Like the cerebrum, the cerebellum is divided into two lateral hemispheres, which are connected by a medial part called the vermis. Each of the hemispheres consists of a central core of white matter and a surface cortex of gray matter and is divided into three lobes. The flocculonodular lobe, the first section of cerebellum to evolve, receives sensory input from the vestibules of the ear; the anterior lobe receives sensory input from the spinal cord; and the posterior lobe, the last to evolve, receives nerve impulses from the cerebrum. All of these nerve impulses are integrated within the cerebellar cortex. Three paired bundles of nerve fibres relay information to and from the cerebellum—the superior, middle, and inferior peduncles—which connect the cerebellum with the midbrain, pons, and medulla, respectively.

Functionally, the cerebellar cortex is divided into three layers: an outer synaptic layer (also called the molecular layer), an intermediate discharge layer (the Purkinje layer), and an inner receptive layer (the granular layer). Sensory input from different types of receptors is conveyed to specific regions of the receptive layer, which is made up of numerous small nerve cells that project axons into the synaptic layer. There the axons excite the dendrites of the Purkinje cells, which in turn project axons to portions of the four intrinsic nuclei (known as the dentate, globose, emboliform, and fastigial nuclei) and upon dorsal portions of the lateral vestibular nucleus. Most Purkinje cells use the neurotransmitter GABA and therefore exert strong inhibitory influences upon the cells that receive their terminals. As a result, all sensory input into the cerebellum results in inhibitory impulses’ being exerted upon the deep cerebellar nuclei and parts of the vestibular nucleus. Cells of all deep cerebellar nuclei, on the other hand, are excitatory (secreting the neurotransmitter glutamate) and project upon parts of the thalamus, red nucleus, vestibular nuclei, and reticular formation.

Injuries or disease affecting the cerebellum usually produce neuromuscular disturbances, in particular ataxia, or disruptions of coordinated limb movements. The loss of integrated muscular control may cause tremors and difficulty in standing.

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#2 Re: This is Cool » Miscellany » Yesterday 21:10:56

2461) Andes Mountains

Gist

The Andes Mountains are located along the western coastline of South America. The name Andes stems from the Quechua word anti, which means high crest. The Andes is the world's longest range of mountains and runs north to south along the Pacific Ring of Fire and seven countries from Venezuela to Chile.

The Andes Mountains are not only one of the longest mountain ranges in the world but also the highest range outside of the Himalayas, making them an important natural landmark and a wonderful source of biodiversity for the region.

How cold are the Andes mountains at night?

From 11,500 to 14,800 feet it generally is cold—with great differences between day and night and between sunshine and shadow—and temperatures are below freezing at night. Between about 13,500 and 15,700 feet (the puna), the climate of the páramo is found, with constant subfreezing temperatures.

Summary

The Andes, Andes Mountains or Andean Mountain Range (Spanish: Cordillera de los Andes; Quechua: Anti) are the longest continental mountain range in the world, forming a continuous highland along the western edge of South America. The range is 8,900 km (5,500 mi) long and 200 to 700 km (120 to 430 mi) wide (widest between 18°S and 20°S latitude) and has an average height of about 4,000 m (13,000 ft). The Andes extend from south to north through seven South American countries: Argentina, Chile, Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador, Colombia, and Venezuela.

Along their length, the Andes are split into several ranges, separated by intermediate depressions. The Andes are the location of several high plateaus—some of which host major cities such as Arequipa, Bogotá, Cali, Medellín, El Alto, La Paz, Mérida, Santiago and Sucre. The Altiplano Plateau is the world's second highest after the Tibetan Plateau. These ranges are in turn grouped into three major divisions based on climate: the Tropical Andes, the Dry Andes, and the Wet Andes.

The Andes are the highest mountain range outside of Asia. The range's highest peak, Argentina's Aconcagua, rises to an elevation of about 6,961 m (22,838 ft) above sea level. The peak of Chimborazo in the Ecuadorian Andes is farther from the Earth's center than any other location on the Earth's surface, due to the equatorial bulge resulting from the Earth's rotation. The world's highest volcanoes are in the Andes, including Ojos del Salado on the Chile–Argentina border, which rises to 6,893 m (22,615 ft).

The Andes are also part of the American Cordillera, a chain of mountain ranges (cordillera) that consists of an almost continuous sequence of mountain ranges that form the western "backbone" of the Americas and Antarctica.

Details

Andes Mountains is a mountain system of South America and one of the great natural features on Earth.

The Andes consist of a vast series of extremely high plateaus surmounted by even higher peaks that form an unbroken rampart over a distance of some 5,500 miles (8,900 kilometers)—from the southern tip of South America to the continent’s northernmost coast on the Caribbean. They separate a narrow western coastal area from the rest of the continent, affecting deeply the conditions of life within the ranges themselves and in surrounding areas. The Andes contain the highest peaks in the Western Hemisphere. The highest of them is Mount Aconcagua (22,831 feet [6,959 meters]) on the border of Argentina and Chile (see Researcher’s Note: Height of Mount Aconcagua).

The Andes are not a single line of formidable peaks but rather a succession of parallel and transverse mountain ranges, or cordilleras, and of intervening plateaus and depressions. Distinct eastern and western ranges—respectively named the Cordillera Oriental and the Cordillera Occidental—are characteristic of most of the system. The directional trend of both the cordilleras generally is north-south, but in several places the Cordillera Oriental bulges eastward to form either isolated peninsula-like ranges or such high intermontane plateau regions as the Altiplano (Spanish: “High Plateau”), occupying adjoining parts of Argentina, Chile, Bolivia, and Peru.

Some historians believe the name Andes comes from the Quechuan word anti (“east”); others suggest it is derived from the Quechuan anta (“copper”). It perhaps is more reasonable to ascribe it to the anta of the older Aymara language, which connotes copper color generally.

Physical features

There is no universal agreement about the major north-south subdivisions of the Andes system. For the purposes of this discussion, the system is divided into three broad categories. From south to north these are the Southern Andes, consisting of the Chilean, Fuegian, and Patagonian cordilleras; the Central Andes, including the Peruvian cordilleras; and the Northern Andes, encompassing the Ecuadorian, Colombian, and Venezuelan (or Caribbean) cordilleras.

Geology

The Andean mountain system is the result of global plate-tectonic forces during the Cenozoic Era (roughly the past 65 million years) that built upon earlier geologic activity. About 250 million years ago the crustal plates constituting the Earth’s landmass were joined together into the supercontinent Pangaea. The subsequent breakup of Pangaea and of its southern portion, Gondwana, dispersed these plates outward, where they began to take the form and position of the present-day continents. The collision (or convergence) of two of these plates—the continental South American Plate and the oceanic Nazca Plate—gave rise to the orogenic (mountain-building) activity that produced the Andes.

Many of the rocks comprising the present-day cordilleras are of great age. They began as sediments eroded from the Amazonia craton (or Brazilian shield)—the ancient granitic continental fragment that constitutes much of Brazil—and deposited between about 450 and 250 million years ago on the craton’s western flank. The weight of these deposits forced a subsidence (downwarping) of the crust, and the resulting pressure and heat metamorphosed the deposits into more resistant rocks; thus, sandstone, siltstone, and limestone were transformed, respectively, into quartzite, shale, and marble.

Approximately 170 million years ago this complex geologic matrix began to be uplifted as the eastern edge of the Nazca Plate was forced under the western edge of the South American Plate (i.e., the Nazca Plate was subducted), the result of the latter plate’s westward movement in response to the opening of the Atlantic Ocean to the east. This subduction-uplift process was accompanied by the intrusion of considerable quantities of magma from the mantle, first in the form of a volcanic arc along the western edge of the South American Plate and later by the injection of hot solutions into surrounding continental rocks; the latter process created numerous dikes and veins containing concentrations of economically valuable minerals that later were to play a critical role in the human occupation of the Andes.

The intensity of this activity increased during the Cenozoic Era, and the present shape of the cordilleras emerged. The accepted time period for their rise had been from about 15 million to 6 million years ago. However, through the use of more advanced techniques, researchers in the early 21st century were able to determine that the uplift started much earlier, about 25 million years ago. The resultant mountain system exhibits an extraordinary vertical differential of more than 40,000 feet between the bottom of the Peru-Chile (Atacama) Trench off the Pacific coast of the continent and the peaks of the high mountains within a horizontal distance of less than 200 miles. The tectonic processes that created the Andes have continued to the present day. The system—part of the larger circum-Pacific volcanic chain that often is called the Ring of Fire—remains volcanically active and is subject to devastating earthquakes.

Physiography of the Southern Andes

The Fuegian Andes begin on the mountainous Estados (Staten) Island, the easternmost point of the Tierra del Fuego archipelago, reaching an elevation of 3,700 feet. They run to the west through Grande Island, where the highest ridges—including Mounts Darwin, Valdivieso, and Sorondo—are all less than 7,900 feet high. The physiography of this southernmost subdivision of the Andes system is complicated by the presence of the independent Sierra de la Costa.

The Patagonian Andes rise north of the Strait of Magellan. Numerous transverse and longitudinal depressions and breaches cut this wild and rugged portion of the Andes, sometimes completely; many ranges are occupied by ice fields, glaciers, rivers, lakes, or fjords. The crests of the mountains exceed 10,000 feet (Mount Fitz Roy reaching 11,073 feet) north to latitude 46° S but average only 6,500–8,400 feet from latitude 46° to 41° S, except for Mount Tronador (11,453 feet). North of Lake Aluminé (Argentina) the axis of the cordillera shifts to the east up to a zone of transition between latitude 37° and 35° S, where the geographic aspect and geomorphic structure change. This zone marks the most commonly accepted northern extent of the Patagonian Andes; there is some disagreement, however, about this limit, some placing it farther south, at the Gulf of Penas, (47° S) and others considering it to be to the north, around 30° S.

The line of permanent snow becomes higher in elevation with decreasing latitude in the Southern Andes: 2,300 feet in Tierra del Fuego, 5,000 feet at Osorno Volcano (41° S), and 12,000 feet at Domuyo Volcano (36°38′ S). A line of active volcanoes—including Yate, Corcovado, and Macá—occurs about 40° to 46° S; the southernmost of these, Mount Hudson of Chile, erupted in 1991. Enormous ice fields are located between Mount Fitz Roy (called Mount Chaltel in Chile) and Lake Buenos Aires (Lake General Carrera in Chile) at both sides of Baker Fjord; the Viedma, Upsala, and other glaciers originate from these fields. Other notable features are the more than 50 lakes found south of 39° S. Those depressions that are free of water form fertile valleys called vegas, which are easily reached by low passes. Magnificent and impenetrable forests grow on both sides of these cordilleras, especially on the western slopes; these forests cover the mountains as high as the snow line, although at the higher altitudes toward the north and in Tierra del Fuego the vegetation is lower and less dense. Both Argentina and Chile have created national parks to preserve the area’s natural beauty.

Physiography of the Central Andes

The Central Andes begin at latitude 35° S, at a point where the cordillera undergoes a sharp change of character. Its width increases to about 50 miles, and it becomes arid and higher; the passes, too, are higher and more difficult to cross. Glaciers are rare and found only at high elevations. The main range serves as the boundary between Chile and Argentina and also is the drainage divide between rivers flowing to the Pacific and the Atlantic. The last of the southern series of volcanoes, Mount Tupungato (21,555 feet) is just east of Santiago, Chile. A line of lofty, snowcapped peaks rise between Tupungato and the mighty Mount Aconcagua. To the north of Aconcagua lies Mount Mercedario (22,211 feet), and between them are the high passes of Mount Espinacito (16,000 feet) and Mount Patos (12,825 feet). South of Anconcagua the passes include Pircas (16,960 feet), Bermejo (more than 10,000 feet), and Iglesia (13,400 feet). Farther north the passes are more numerous but higher. The peaks of Mounts Bonete, Ojos del Salado, and Pissis surpass 20,000 feet.

The peak of Tres Cruces (22,156 feet) at 27° S latitude marks the culmination of this part of the cordillera. To the north is found a transverse depression and the southern limit of the high plateau region called the Atacama Plateau in Argentina and Chile and the Altiplano in Bolivia and Peru. The cordillera grows wider as it advances into Bolivia and Peru, where the great plateau is bounded by two ranges: the Occidental and the Oriental.

Northward, to latitude 18° S, the peaks of El Cóndor, Sierra Nevada, Llullaillaco, Galán, and Antofalla all exceed 19,000 feet. The two main ranges and several volcanic secondary chains enclose depressions called salars because of the deposits of salts they contain; in northwestern Argentina, the Sierra de Calalaste encompasses the large Antofalla Salt Flat. Volcanoes of this zone occur mostly on a northerly line along the Cordillera Occidental as far as Misti Volcano (latitude 16° S) in Peru.

The western slopes of the Cordillera Occidental descend gradually to the Atacama Desert along the coast. At about 18° S the trend of the Cordillera Occidental changes to a northwesterly direction. The Cordillera Oriental to the east, lower and built on a broad bed of lava, is cut and denuded by rivers with steep gradients, fed by heavy rainfall. It has two sections. The southern portion is 150 miles wide and—with the exception of Chorolque Peak in Bolivia (18,414 feet)—of relatively low elevation. The northern section in Bolivia, called Cordillera Real, is narrow, with higher peaks and glaciers; the most important peaks, at over 21,000 feet, are Mounts Illimani and Illampu.

At about latitude 22° S the Cordillera Oriental penetrates into Bolivia and describes a wide semicircle to the north and then to the northwest; to the west the Altiplano reaches its broadest extent. The Altiplano—500 miles long and 80 miles wide—is one of the largest interior basins of the world. Varying in elevation from 11,200 to 12,800 feet, it has no drainage outlet to the ocean. Roughly in the center of the plateau is a great depression between the two cordilleras. Lake Titicaca, the highest navigable lake of the world (110 miles long), fills the northern part of the depression; the Desaguadero River flows south through the depression, draining Titicaca water into the smaller Lake Poopó.

As the Andes enter Peru, the Cordillera Occidental runs parallel to the coast, while the Cordillera Real from Bolivia ends in the rough mountain mass of the Vilcanota Knot at latitude 15° S. From this knot (nudo), two lofty and narrow chains emerge northward, the Cordilleras de Carabaya and Vilcanota, separated by a deep gorge; a third range, the Cordillera de Vilcabamba, appears to the west of these and northwest of the city of Cuzco. The three ranges are products of erosive action of rivers that have cut deep canyons between them. West of the Cordillera de Vilcabamba, the Apurímac River runs in one of the deepest canyons of the Western Hemisphere. The city of Cuzco lies in the valley west of the Cordillera de Vilcanota at an altitude of nearly 11,000 feet.

The Peruvian Andes traditionally have been described as three cordilleras, which come together at the Vilcanota, Pasco, and Loja (Ecuador) knots. The Pasco Knot is a large, high plateau. To the west it is bounded by the Cordillera Huarochirí, on the west slope of which the Rímac River rises in a cluster of lakes fed by glaciers and descends rapidly to the ocean (15,700 feet in 60 miles). Ticlio Pass, at an altitude of some 15,800 feet, is used by a railway. Many small lakes and ponds are found on the knots, with Lake Junín (about 20 miles long) being the largest.

North of the Pasco Knot, three different ranges run along the plateau: the Cordilleras Occidental, Central, and Oriental. In the Cordillera Occidental, at latitude 10° S, the deep, narrow Huaylas Valley separates two ranges, Cordillera Blanca to the east and Cordillera Negra to the west; the Santa River runs between them and cuts Cordillera Negra to drain into the Pacific. Cordillera Blanca is a complex highland with permanently snowcapped peaks, some among the highest of the Andes (e.g., Mount Huascarán, at 22,205 feet). At times, the glaciers that rise there are broken off by earthquakes and rush down the slopes, demolishing vegetation and settlements in their paths. Cordillera Negra, so named because it is not covered with snow, is lower.

The two ranges join together at latitude 9° S. The Marañón River, which runs northward between the Cordilleras Occidental and Central at about 6° S, changes its direction of flow to the northeast, penetrating into a region of narrow transverse water gaps (pongos) that cut the cordillera to reach the Amazon basin. These include Rentema (about one and one-fourth miles long and 200 feet wide), Mayo, Mayasito, and Huarcaya gaps and—the most important—Manseriche Gap, which is seven miles long.

Between the Cordilleras Central and Oriental, the Huallaga River runs in a deep gorge with few small valleys; it cuts the eastern cordillera at Aguirre Gap (latitude 6° S). The Cordillera Oriental ends in the Amazon basin at 5° S.

The permanent snow line reaches an altitude of 19,000 feet in Mount Chanchani (about latitude 16° S) and declines to about 15,000 feet in Cordillera Blanca and to 13,000 feet on Mount Huascarán. Permanent snow is less common north of 8° S, the puna grasslands end, and the so-called humid puna, or jalca, begins. Mountains become wider and smoother in appearance, while vegetation changes to heathland and trees. The altitude diminishes, and passes are much lower, as at Porculla Pass (7,000 feet) east of Piura.

Physiography of the Northern Andes

A rough and eroded high mass of mountains called the Loja Knot (4° S) in southern Ecuador marks the transition between the Peruvian cordilleras and the Ecuadorian Andes. The Ecuadorian system consists of a long, narrow plateau running from south to north bordered by two mountain chains containing numerous high volcanoes. To the west, in the geologically recent and relatively low Cordillera Occidental, stands a line of 19 volcanoes, 7 of them exceeding 15,000 feet in elevation. The eastern border is the higher and older Cordillera Central, capped by a line of 20 volcanoes; some of these, such as Chimborazu Volcano (20,702 feet), have permanent snowcaps.

The outpouring of lava from these volcanoes has divided the central plateau into 10 major basins that are strung in beadlike fashion between the two cordilleras. These basins and their adjacent slopes, which are intensively cultivated, contain roughly half of Ecuador’s population.

A third cordillera has been identified in the eastern jungle of Ecuador and has been named the Cordillera Oriental. The range appears to be an ancient alluvial formation that has been divided by rivers and heavy rainfall into a number of mountain masses. Such masses as the cordilleras of Guacamayo, Galeras, and Lumbaquí are isolated or form irregular short chains and are covered by luxuriant forest. Altitudes do not exceed 7,900 feet, except at Cordilleras del Cóndor (13,000 feet) and Mount Pax (11,000 feet).

North of the boundary with Colombia is a group of high, snowcapped volcanoes (Azufral, Cumbal, Chiles) known as the Huaca Knot. Farther to the north is the great massif of the Pasto Mountains (latitude 1°–2° N), which is the most important Colombian physiographic complex and the source of many of the country’s rivers.

Three distinct ranges, the Cordilleras Occidental, Central, and Oriental, run northward. The Cordillera Occidental, parallel to the coast and moderately high, reaches an elevation of nearly 13,000 feet at Mount Paramillo before descending in three smaller ranges into the lowlands of northern Colombia. The Cordillera Central is the highest (average altitude of almost 10,000 feet) but also the shortest range of Colombian Andes, stretching some 400 miles before its most northerly spurs disappear at about latitude 8° N. Most of the volcanoes of the zone are in this range, including Mounts Tolima (17,105 feet), Ruiz (17,717 feet), and Huila (18,865 feet). At about latitude 6° N, the range widens into a plateau on which Medellín is situated.

Between the Cordilleras Central and Occidental is a great depression, the Patía-Cauca valley, divided into three longitudinal plains. The southernmost is the narrow valley of the Patía River, the waters of which flow to the Pacific. The middle plain is the highest in elevation (8,200 feet) and constitutes the divide of the other two. The northern plain, the largest (15 miles wide and 125 miles long), is the valley of Cauca River, which drains northward to the Magdalena River.

The Cordillera Oriental trends slightly to the northeast and is the widest and the longest of the three. The average altitude is 7,900 to 8,900 feet. North of latitude 3° N the cordillera widens and after a small depression rises into the Sumapaz Uplands, which range in elevation from 10,000 to 13,000 feet. North of the Sumapaz Upland the range divides into two, enclosing a large plain 125 miles wide and 200 miles long, often interrupted by small transverse chains that form several upland basins called sabanas that contain about a third of Colombia’s population. The city of Bogotá is on the largest and most populated of these sabanas; other important cities on sabanas are Chiquinquirá, Tunja, and Sogamoso. East of Honda (5° N) the cordillera divides into a series of abrupt parallel chains running to the north-northeast; among them the Sierra Nevada del Cocuy (18,022 feet) is high enough to have snowcapped peaks.

Farther north the central ranges of the Cordillera Central come to an end, but the flanking chains continue and diverge to the north and northeast. The westernmost of these chains is the Sierra de Ocaña, which on its northeastern side includes the Sierra de Perijá; the latter range forms a portion of the boundary between Colombia and Venezuela and extends as far north as latitude 11° N in La Guajira Peninsula. The eastern chain bends to the east and enters Venezuela as the Cordillera de Mérida. On the Caribbean coast just west of the Sierra de Perijá stands the isolated, triangular Santa Marta Massif, which rises abruptly from the coast to snowcapped peaks of 18,947 feet; geologically, however, the Santa Marta Massif is not part of the Andes.

The Venezuelan Andes are represented by the Cordillera de Mérida (280 miles long, 50 to 90 miles wide, and about 10,000 feet in elevation), which extends in a northeasterly direction to the city of Barquisimeto, where it ends. The cordillera is a great uplifted axis where erosion has uncovered granite and gneiss rocks but where the northwestern and southeastern flanks remain covered by sediments; it consists of numerous chains with snow-covered summits separated by longitudinal and transverse depressions—Sierras Tovar, Nevada, Santo Domingo, de la Culata, Trujillo, and others. The range forms the northwestern limit of the Orinoco River basin, beyond which water flows to the Caribbean. North of Barquisimeto, the Sierra Falcón and Cordillera del Litoral (called in Venezuela the Sistema Andino) do not belong to the Andes but rather to the Guiana system.

Additional Information

The Andes Mountains are such a fascinating and important part of South America’s geography and history. They are home to a unique ecosystem, rich in mineral resources, and provide freshwater for millions of people.

Flora and Fauna in The Andes Mountains

The Andes Mountains are also home to a wide variety of animal species, many of which are found nowhere else in the world.

Due to the altitude range of the Andes, from sea level to over 6,900 meters, the animal species found in the mountains are adapted to different climates and environments. Here are some of the most notable animal species that can be found in the Andes Mountains:

1. Vicuña

The Vicuña is a relative of the llama and is found in the high Andes Mountains of Peru, Chile, Bolivia, and Argentina. They are known for their fine wool, which is used to make high-quality clothing.

2. Andean Condor

The Andean Condor is one of the largest flying birds in the world and can be found throughout the Andes Mountains. They are scavengers and feed on carrion.

3. Spectacled Bear

The Spectacled Bear is the only bear species found in South America, and they are native to the Andes Mountains. They are named for the light-colored fur around their eyes that gives the appearance of wearing spectacles.

4. Puma

The Puma, also known as the mountain lion or cougar, is a large carnivorous cat found throughout the Andes Mountains. They are solitary animals and hunt prey such as deer, guanacos, and vicuñas.

5. Andean Cat

The Andean Cat is a small wild cat found in the high Andes Mountains of Bolivia, Peru, Chile, and Argentina. They are one of the rarest cat species in the world and are listed as endangered.

6. Chinchilla

The Chinchilla is a small rodent found in the Andes Mountains of Peru, Chile, Bolivia, and Argentina. They are known for their soft, dense fur, which is used for clothing and accessories.

7. Andean math-of-the-rock

The Andean math-of-the-rock is a brightly colored bird that is found in the cloud forests of the Andes Mountains. They are known for their bright red feathers.

8. Alpaca

The Alpaca is a domesticated camelid that is found throughout the Andes Mountains. They are bred for their wool, which is used to make clothing, blankets, and other textiles.

9. Giant Otter

The Giant Otter is the largest otter species in the world and can be found in the rivers and lakes of the Andes Mountains. They are highly social and live in family groups.

10, Mountain Viscacha

The Mountain Viscacha is a rodent found in the high Andes Mountains of Peru, Chile, Bolivia, and Argentina. They are known for their long, bushy tails and are sometimes called “Andean rabbits” due to their resemblance to rabbits.

Many of these incredible species are adapted to the unique environment of the Andes, and some are found nowhere else in the world. Protecting the habitats and ecosystems of these animals is crucial for maintaining the biodiversity of the Andes Mountains.

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#3 Jokes » Carrot Jokes - IV » Yesterday 14:26:03

Jai Ganesh
Replies: 0

Q: What do you call a vegetable with a sense of humor?
A: Carrot Top.
* * *
Q: Why did the Ukrainian turn his carrot around?
A: He wanted to start the orange revolution!
* * *
Q: What did the rabbit say to the carrot?
A: It's been nice gnawing you.
* * *
Q: What's a vegetable's favourite casino game?
A: Baccarrot!
* * *
Q: What does the Carrot priest say at church?
A: "Lettuce Pray".
* * *

#7 Re: Dark Discussions at Cafe Infinity » crème de la crème » 2025-12-11 22:57:02

2407) Lev Landau

Gist:

Work

When certain substances are cooled to very low temperatures, their properties undergo radical changes. At temperatures a couple of degrees above absolute zero, helium becomes superfluid and the liquid flows without friction. One of Lev Landau’s many contributions within theoretical physics came in 1941, when he applied quantum theory to the movement of superfluid liquid helium. Among other things, he introduced the concept of quasiparticles as the equivalent of sound vibrations and vortexes. This allowed him to develop his theoretical explanation for superfluidity.

Summary

Lev Davidovich Landau (22 January 1908 – 1 April 1968) was a Soviet physicist who made fundamental contributions to many areas of theoretical physics. He was considered as one of the last scientists who were universally well-versed and made seminal contributions to all branches of physics. He is credited with laying the foundations of twentieth century condensed matter physics, and is also considered arguably the greatest Soviet theoretical physicist.

His accomplishments include the independent co-discovery of the density matrix method in quantum mechanics (alongside John von Neumann), the quantum mechanical theory of diamagnetism, the theory of superfluidity, the theory of second-order phase transitions, invention of order parameter technique,[9] the Ginzburg–Landau theory of superconductivity, the theory of Fermi liquids, the explanation of Landau damping in plasma physics, the Landau pole in quantum electrodynamics, the two-component theory of neutrinos, and Landau's equations for S-matrix singularities. He received the 1962 Nobel Prize in Physics for his development of a mathematical theory of superfluidity that accounts for the properties of liquid helium II at a temperature below 2.17 K (−270.98 °C).

Details

Lev Davidovich Landau (born Jan. 9 [Jan. 22, New Style], 1908, Baku, Russian Empire (now Azerbaijan)—died April 1, 1968, Moscow, Russia, U.S.S.R.) was a Soviet theoretical physicist, one of the founders of the quantum theory of condensed matter whose pioneering research in this field was recognized with the 1962 Nobel Prize for Physics.

Landau was a mathematical prodigy and enfant terrible. His schooling reflected the zigzags of radical educational reforms during the turbulent period following the Russian Revolution of 1917. Like many scientists of the first Soviet generation, Landau did not formally complete some educational stages, such as high school. He never wrote a doctoral thesis either, as academic degrees had been abolished and were not restored until 1934. He did complete the undergraduate course in physics at Leningrad State University, where he studied from 1924 to 1927. In 1934 Landau was granted a doctorate as an already established scholar.

While still a student, Landau published his first articles. A new theory of quantum mechanics appeared in Germany during those years, and the 20-year-old complained that he had arrived a little too late to take part in the great scientific revolution. By 1927 quantum mechanics was essentially completed, and physicists started working on its relativistic generalization and applications to solid-state and nuclear physics. Landau matured professionally in Yakov I. Frenkel’s seminar at the Leningrad Physico-Technical Institute and then during his foreign trip of 1929–31. Supported by a Soviet stipend and a Rockefeller fellowship, he visited universities in Zürich, Copenhagen, and Cambridge, learning especially from physicists Wolfgang Pauli and Niels Bohr. In 1930 Landau pointed out a new effect resulting from the quantization of free electrons in crystals—the Landau diamagnetism, opposite to the spin paramagnetism earlier treated by Pauli. In a joint paper with physicist Rudolf Peierls, Landau argued for the need of yet another radical conceptual revolution in physics in order to resolve the mounting difficulties in relativistic quantum theory.

In 1932, soon after his return to the Soviet Union, Landau moved to the Ukrainian Physico-Technical Institute (UFTI) in Kharkov (now Kharkiv). Recently organized and run by a group of young physicists, UFTI burst into the new fields of nuclear, theoretical, and low-temperature physics. Together with his first students—Evgeny math, Isaak Pomeranchuk, and Aleksandr Akhiezer—Landau calculated effects in quantum electrodynamics and worked on the theory of metals, ferromagnetism, and superconductivity in close collaboration with Lev Shubnikov’s experimental cryogenics laboratory at the institute. In 1937 Landau published his theory of phase transitions of the second order, in which thermodynamic parameters of the system change continuously but its symmetry switches abruptly.

That same year, political problems caused his abrupt move to Pyotr Kapitsa’s Institute of Physical Problems in Moscow. Institutional conflicts at UFTI and Kharkov University, and Landau’s own iconoclastic behaviour, became politicized in the context of the Stalinist purge, producing a life-threatening situation. Later in 1937 several UFTI scientists were arrested by the political police and some, including Shubnikov, were executed. Surveillance followed Landau to Moscow, where he was arrested in April 1938 after discussing an anti-Stalinist leaflet with two colleagues. One year later, Kapitsa managed to get Landau released from prison by writing to the Russian prime minister, Vyacheslav M. Molotov, that he required the theoretician’s help in order to understand new phenomena observed in liquid helium.

A quantum theoretical explanation of Kapitsa’s discovery of superfluidity in liquid helium was published by Landau in 1941. Landau’s theory relied on a concept of collective excitations that had been suggested somewhat earlier by Frenkel and physicist Igor Tamm. A quantized unit of collective motion of many atomic particles, such excitation can be mathematically described as if it were a single particle of some novel kind, often called a “quasiparticle.” To explain superfluidity, Landau postulated that in addition to the phonon (the quantum of a sound wave) there exists another collective excitation, the roton (the quantum of vortex movement). Landau’s theory of superfluidity won acceptance in the 1950s after several experiments confirmed some new effects and quantitative predictions based on it.

In 1946 Landau was elected a full member of the U.S.S.R. Academy of Sciences. He organized a theoretical group in the Institute of Physical Problems with Isaak Khalatnikov and later Alexey A. Abrikosov. New students had to pass a series of challenging exams, called the Landau minimum, in order to join the group. The group’s weekly colloquium served as the major discussion centre for theoretical physics in Moscow, although many speakers could not cope with the devastating level of criticism considered normal at its meetings. Over the years, Landau and math published their multivolume Course of Theoretical Physics, a major learning tool for several generations of research students worldwide.

The collective work of Landau’s group embraced practically every branch of theoretical physics. In 1946 he described the phenomenon of Landau damping of electromagnetic waves in plasma. Together with Vitaly L. Ginzburg, in 1950 Landau obtained the correct equations of the macroscopic (phenomenological) theory of superconductivity. During the 1950s he and collaborators discovered that even in renormalized quantum electrodynamics, a new divergence difficulty appears (the Moscow zero, or the Landau pole). The phenomenon of the coupling constant becoming infinite or vanishing at some energy is an important feature of modern quantum field theories. In addition to his 1941 theory of superfluidity, in 1956–58 Landau introduced a different kind of quantum liquid, whose collective excitations behave statistically as fermions (such as electrons, neutrons, and protons) rather than bosons (such as mesons). His Fermi-liquid theory provided the basis for the modern theory of electrons in metals and also helped explain superfluidity in He-3, the lighter isotope of helium. In the works of Landau and his students, the method of quasiparticles was successfully applied to various problems and developed into an indispensable foundation of the theory of condensed matter.

Even after his marriage in 1939, Landau stuck to the theory that a union must not constrain both partners’ sexual freedom. He did not like the natural philosophy of dialectical materialism, especially when applied to physics, but he did uphold historical materialism—the Marxist political philosophy—as an example of scientific truth. He hated Joseph Stalin for the betrayal of the ideals of the 1917 revolution, and after the 1930s he criticized the Soviet regime as no longer socialist but fascist. Aware that the earlier political charges against him had not been officially withdrawn, Landau performed some calculations for the Soviet atomic weapons project, but after Stalin’s death in 1953 he declined classified work as no longer necessary for his personal protection. The postwar cult of science contributed to the public recognition and hero-worship he received during his later years. In 1962 Landau suffered serious injuries in a car accident. Doctors managed to save his life, but he never recovered enough to return to work and he died of subsequent complications.

landau-13158-portrait-medium.jpg

#8 Re: This is Cool » Miscellany » 2025-12-11 22:35:59

2460) Indian Elephant

Gist

Indian elephants are smaller than their African relatives but are still among the largest land animals on earth. They have a rounded head, smaller ears, and a long trunk used for feeding, drinking, and even social gestures.

Indian elephants are a subspecies of Asian elephants native to the Indian subcontinent that represent around 60% of all Asian elephants. They are highly intelligent animals with complex social structures that display emotional intelligence.

Summary

Indian elephants may spend up to 19 hours a day feeding and they can produce about 220 pounds of dung per day while wandering over an area that can cover up to 125 square miles. This helps to disperse germinating seeds. They feed mainly on grasses, but large amounts of tree bark, roots, leaves, and small stems are also eaten. Cultivated crops such as bananas, rice, and sugarcane are favored foods as well. Since they need to drink at least once a day, these elephants are always close to a source of fresh water.

Indian elephants are a subspecies of Asian elephants native to the Indian subcontinent that represent around 60% of all Asian elephants. They are highly intelligent animals with complex social structures that display emotional intelligence. The females live in tight-knit family groups led by elderly matriarchs, while males typically live alone.

Indian elephants are similar to their Asian elephant cousins, the Sumatran and Sri Lankan elephants, but are distinguishable from their African cousins by their smaller, more rounded ears and their smaller bodies. Mature Indian elephants are two to three metres (6.6 to 9.8 feet) tall at the shoulders and weigh anywhere from 2,000 to 5,000 kilograms (2.25 to 5.5 tonnes), making them up to one metre smaller and 3,000 kilograms lighter than their African counterparts. Indian elephants also have thinner skin and less hair.

Indian elephants are herbivores and spend up to 19 hours a day eating as much as 136 kilograms (300 pounds) of fruit, grasses, roots, and bark. They are migratory animals with large home ranges, meaning they wander across their forest habitat searching for food, water, and mates.

These habits make them a keystone species—one on which other animals rely for their survival—as they disperse seeds through their faeces and promote vegetation growth by creating clearings and trails that allow more light to reach the forest floor. In short, they play a vital role in the ecosystems in which they live, helping to maintain the biodiversity and ecological health of these regions. However, due to threats like habitat loss and poaching, Indian elephant populations are declining rapidly.

What is an Indian elephant's scientific name?

The scientific name for the Indian elephant is Elephas maximus indicus, roughly translating to ‘greatest elephant from India’. It is one of three subspecies of Asian elephants, the two other being the Sumatran and Sri Lankan elephants, known scientifically as Elephas maximus sumatrensis and Elephas maximus maximus.

Are Indian elephants endangered?

The IUCN Red List has listed Indian elephants as endangered since 1986 because their population and the quality of their habitat are in decline. The number of Asian elephants overall has decreased by 50% over the last three generations, while the population size of Indian elephants has decreased by 11% in just 30 years. These large mammals face human-caused threats, including habitat loss and fragmentation, as well as poaching and human-animal conflict.

Where do Indian elephants live?

Indian elephants are the only Asian elephants that live in mainland Asia. Here, they inhabit a range of different habitats, including dry-thorn forests, moist and dry deciduous forests, tropical evergreen and semi-evergreen forests, as well as cultivated and secondary forests.

They migrate throughout the year in search of vegetation and water, though they do have home ranges too. The size of a range varies based on the number of elephants in the area, as well as the quality and availability of food.

Details

The Indian elephant (Elephas maximus indicus) is one of three extant recognized subspecies of the Asian elephant, native to mainland Asia. The species is smaller than the African elephant species with a convex back and the highest body point on its head. The species exhibits significant sexual dimorphism with a male reaching an average shoulder height of about 2.75 m (9 ft 0 in) and weighing 4,000 kg (8,800 lb) whereas a female reaches an average shoulder height of about 2.4 m (7 ft 10 in) and weighs 2,700 kg (6,000 lb). It has a broader skull with a concave forehead, two large laterally folded ears and a large trunk. It has smooth grey skin with four large legs and a long tail.

The Indian elephant is native to mainland Asia with nearly three-fourth of the population found in India. The species is also found in other countries of the Indian subcontinent including Nepal, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Myanmar and South East Asian countries including Thailand, Malaysia, Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam with small populations in China. It inhabits grasslands, dry deciduous, moist deciduous, evergreen and semi-evergreen forests across the range. The species is classified as a megaherbivore and consume up to 150 kg (330 lb) of plant matter per day. They consume a variety of diet depending on the habitat and seasons and might include leaves and twigs of fresh foliage, thorn-bearing shoots, flowering plants, fruits and grass.

Since 1986, the Asian elephant has been listed as Endangered on the IUCN Red List as the wild population has declined by at least 50% over the last three elephant generations. The species is threatened by environmental degradation, habitat loss and fragmentation. Poaching of elephants for ivory is a serious threat in some parts of Asia. Project Elephant was launched in 1992 by the Government of India to protect elephant habitats and population.

The Indian elephant is a cultural symbol throughout its range and appears in various religious traditions and mythologies. The elephants are treated positively and is revered as a form of Ganesha in Hinduism. It has been designated the national heritage animal in India and is the national animal of Thailand and Laos.

Taxonomy

The Indian elephant (Elephas maximus indicus) is one of three extant recognized subspecies of the Asian elephant. Carl Linnaeus proposed the scientific name Elephas maximus in 1758 for an elephant from Ceylon. Elephas indicus was proposed by Georges Cuvier in 1798, who described an elephant from India. Frederick Nutter Chasen classified all three as subspecies of the Asian elephant in 1940.

Description

In general, the Asian elephant is smaller than African elephant. Its back is convex or level with the highest body point on its head. The species exhibits significant sexual dimorphism with a male reaching an average shoulder height of about 2.75 m (9 ft 0 in) and weighing up to 4,000 kg (8,800 lb) whereas a female reaches an average shoulder height of about 2.4 m (7 ft 10 in) and weighs up to 2,700 kg (6,000 lb), with specimens rarely exceeding 3.2 m (10 ft) and 5,400 kg (11,900 lb) in males and 2.54 m (8 ft 4 in) 4,160 kg (9,170 lb) in females. The largest Indian elephant was 3.43 m (11.3 ft) high at the shoulder. On average, it measures 5.5–6.5 m (18–21 ft) in length including the trunk.

It has a broader skull with a concave forehead and two dorsal bulges on the top. Two large laterally folded ears and a large trunk with one finger-like process are attached to the head. It has 20 pairs of ribs and 34 vertebrae. There are four large legs which are almost straight with broader toes and with five nail like structures on each foreleg and four on each of the hind-legs. The large legs help support the larger weight for longer periods without spending much energy with the broad feet helping to cushion against hard surfaces. It has a long tail measuring on average 1.2–1.5 m (3 ft 11 in – 4 ft 11 in) in length. The skin color is generally grey and lighter than that of E. m. maximus but darker than that of E. m. sumatranus. The skin is generally smoother than that of the African species and might consist of smaller patches of white depigmentation or grey spots. The body is covered by brownish to reddish hairs which reduce and darken with age. The female is usually smaller than the male with short or no tusks. There are about 29 narrow cheek teeth.

Additional Information

The Indian elephant (Elephas maximus indicus) is one of the most respected animals in India. For centuries, it has been a part of our culture, mythology, and daily life. Worshipped as a symbol of strength and wisdom, elephants are seen in temples, festivals, and folklore across the country. But beyond culture, they also play a vital role in the forests dispersing seeds, clearing vegetation, and helping new life grow.

How to Identify an Indian Elephant

Indian elephants are smaller than their African relatives but are still among the largest land animals on earth. They have a rounded head, smaller ears, and a long trunk used for feeding, drinking, and even social gestures. Unlike African elephants, where both males and females grow tusks, in India only some males have tusks. The tuskless males and females are called makhnas.

Size, Weight, and Appearance

Adult males: 8-10 feet tall at the shoulder, weighing 2,000-5,000 kg
Females: 7-9 feet tall, slightly smaller than males
Skin: Dark grey to dusty brown, often covered with mud or dust (nature’s sunscreen)

These gentle giants love dust baths, which not only keep them cool but also protect them from insect bites.

Birth and Life Cycle

Elephants have one of the longest pregnancies of any land animal about 22 months. A calf weighs close to 100 kg at birth and is cared for by the entire herd. These social bonds are strong, and young elephants rarely leave the safety of their mothers and aunts.

In the wild, Indian elephants can live 60-70 years. In captivity, their lifespan often depends on how well they are cared for.

Key Characteristics of Indian Elephant

Feature  :  Description
Scientific Name  :  Elephas maximus indicus
Height  :  2 to 3.5 m (6.6 to 11.5 ft) at the shoulder
Weight  :  2,000 to 5,500 kg (4,400 to 12,100 lbs)
Lifespan  :  60 to 70 years in the wild
Habitat  :  Grasslands, dry deciduous, moist deciduous, evergreen, and semi-evergreen forests.
Distribution  :  Found in India and other countries of mainland Asia, including Nepal, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Myanmar, Thailand, and others.
Diet  :  Herbivore. Consumes up to 150 kg (330 lbs) of vegetation per day.
Social Structure  :  Live in matriarchal herds led by the oldest and most experienced female.
Conservation Status  :  Endangered (IUCN Red List).

What Do They Eat?

An adult elephant can eat over 150 kg of food a day grasses, leaves, bark, and seasonal fruits. They drink more than 100 liters of water daily. Despite their bulk, they can run up to 40 km/h if threatened.

Where Do Indian Elephants Live?

Indian elephants prefer dense forests, grasslands, and river valleys. They never stray far from water.

Main Elephant Regions in India

Southern India – Karnataka, Kerala, Tamil Nadu
Central India – Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Odisha
Northeast India – Assam, Arunachal Pradesh, Meghalaya
Northern India – Uttarakhand, Uttar Pradesh

Together, these regions form the last strongholds of the Indian elephant, where conservation efforts are vital to keep their ancient migration routes alive.

Best Places to See Elephants in India

Jim Corbett National Park (Uttarakhand) – Famous for large herds crossing forest roads.
Kaziranga National Park (Assam) – Ideal for spotting elephants along with rhinos.
Periyar Wildlife Sanctuary (Kerala) – Known for elephant sightings near the lake.
Bandipur & Nagarhole (Karnataka) – Rich elephant corridors with strong protection.

These parks are also popular for elephant safaris, though ethical wildlife viewing always prefers observing them in the wild, not in captivity.

Migration and Movement Patterns

Indian elephants travel long distances as the seasons change, mainly in search of food and water. Some herds follow the same routes for generations, guided by the memory of matriarchs who know the land well.

Major Elephant Migration Regions in India

Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve (Karnataka, Kerala, Tamil Nadu) – One of the most important elephant landscapes with famous corridors like Mudumalai-Bandipur-Wayanad-Nagarhole.
Kaziranga-Karbi Anglong (Assam) – Elephants move between grasslands and nearby hills depending on the season.
Dooars and North Bengal (West Bengal) – Regular movements between forests of Bhutan foothills and Indian reserves.
Rajaji-Corbett (Uttarakhand) – Known for elephants moving between Shivalik hills and Terai grasslands.
Eastern India (Odisha, Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh) – Seasonal migrations often bring elephants close to farmlands.

Wildlife corridors in these regions are critical, as they connect fragmented forests and reduce conflict. Without them, elephants are forced to cross farms, roads, and railway lines, which increases the risk of accidents and human-elephant conflict.

Behavior and Social Life

Elephants live in matriarch-led herds, usually made up of females and calves. Males leave the group when they mature and either live alone or in small bachelor groups.

Daily Routine

* Foraging for 12-18 hours a day
* Bathing and cooling off in rivers or mud pools
* Walking long distances to find food and water
* Resting and social bonding

Communication

They “talk” through rumbles, trumpets, body language, and even vibrations felt through the ground. Elephants are known to mourn their dead, showing remarkable emotional intelligence.

kaziranga-elephant.webp

#9 This is Cool » Blood Plasma » 2025-12-11 19:15:37

Jai Ganesh
Replies: 0

Blood Plasma

Gist

Blood plasma is the pale yellow, liquid component of blood, making up about 55% of its volume, primarily water (92%) carrying vital proteins (like albumin, globulins, clotting factors), nutrients, hormones, electrolytes, and waste products, serving to transport blood cells, maintain fluid balance, regulate pH, and support immunity and clotting. It's essential for transporting substances throughout the body and is a key source for life-saving medicines. 

Blood is a specialized body fluid. It has four main components: plasma, red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets. The blood that runs through the veins, arteries, and capillaries is known as whole blood—a mixture of about 55% plasma and 45% blood cells.

Summary

Blood plasma is a light amber-colored liquid component of blood in which blood cells are absent, but which contains proteins and other constituents of whole blood in suspension. It makes up about 55% of the body's total blood volume. It is the intravascular part of extracellular fluid (all body fluid outside cells). It is mostly water (up to 95% by volume), and contains important dissolved proteins (6–8%; e.g., serum albumins, globulins, and fibrinogen), glucose, clotting factors, electrolytes (Na+  Ca2+  Mg2+, HCO3−, Cl− , etc.), hormones, carbon dioxide (plasma being the main medium for excretory product transportation), and oxygen. It plays a vital role in an intravascular osmotic effect that keeps electrolyte concentration balanced and protects the body from infection and other blood-related disorders.

Blood plasma can be separated from whole blood through blood fractionation, by adding an anticoagulant to a tube filled with blood, which is spun in a centrifuge until the blood cells fall to the bottom of the tube. The blood plasma is then poured or drawn off. For point-of-care testing applications, plasma can be extracted from whole blood via filtration or via agglutination to allow for rapid testing of specific biomarkers. Blood plasma has a density of approximately 1,025 kg/{m}^{3} (1.025 g/ml). Blood serum is blood plasma without clotting factors. Plasmapheresis is a medical therapy that involves blood plasma extraction, treatment, and reintegration.

Fresh frozen plasma is on the WHO Model List of Essential Medicines, the most important medications needed in a basic health system. It is of critical importance in the treatment of many types of trauma which result in blood loss, and is therefore kept stocked universally in all medical facilities capable of treating trauma (e.g., trauma centers, hospitals, and ambulances) or that pose a risk of patient blood loss such as surgical suite facilities.

Details

Blood flows like a liquid because of plasma. And that isn’t the only thing that makes it important. Plasma also carries proteins and chemical compounds that keep you alive and your body working properly. You can also donate plasma, and it can be used to help others in a variety of ways.

Plasma is the liquid part of your blood. This fluid makes up a little over half of your blood’s total volume. Other blood cells — like red blood cells, white blood cells and platelets — mix in with the plasma, which carries them to every corner of your body.

Plasma is about 92% water. Proteins (antibodies, coagulation factors, albumin and fibrinogen) make up another 7% of it. The other 1% is hormones, vitamins, water, salt, enzymes and other important compounds.

Function:

What does plasma do?

Plasma has several jobs that make it vital to your survival:

* Carrying red blood cells to your lungs so they can pick up oxygen and release carbon dioxide
* Maintaining blood pressure so blood vessels stay open, making circulation possible
* Delivering water, hormones, nutrients, electrolytes and proteins to parts of your body that need them
* Helping regulate your body temperature
* Carrying immune cells “on patrol” and delivering them to deal with threats like infections
* Carrying proteins that your body uses for inflammation, to clot blood and to repair damage
* Removing waste products to your liver or kidneys so your body can get rid of them

Think of plasma like a river, and everything it carries like boats. Without enough plasma, it’s like a river with a water level that’s too low. It can’t flow or carry those boats — and their vital cargo —where they need to go.

Anatomy:

Where does plasma come from?

Plasma doesn’t really come from a specific place. Instead, it forms when water in your body combines with electrolytes you absorb through your digestive tract. Some of the important proteins that go into plasma come from specific organs or places, though. They include your:

* Bone marrow
* Degenerating, older blood cells
* Liver
* Spleen

Once those proteins combine with the electrolyte-rich liquid, you have plasma.

What does plasma look like?

Plasma is a pale, yellowish or straw-colored liquid when you separate it from red blood cells, white blood cells and platelets.

Your plasma can be different colors if you have a condition that affects what’s in the plasma. For example, if you have red blood cells breaking down (hemolysis), your plasma might look pinkish. If you have high bilirubin levels and jaundice from a liver condition, your plasma may look greenish or brownish.

What percentage of blood is plasma?

In general, your blood is about 55% plasma. That number can vary a little, depending on your sex or medical conditions you have.

How do you separate plasma from the other components of blood?

You can separate blood components, including plasma, using a tool called a centrifuge. This machine spins a tube full of blood very fast. That creates a gravity-like effect that pulls heavier red blood cells to the bottom of the tube. Atop the red blood cells is a whitish layer of platelets and white blood cells. And above that whitish layer is the plasma.

Additional Information

The liquid portion of the blood, the plasma, is a complex solution containing more than 90 percent water. The water of the plasma is freely exchangeable with that of body cells and other extracellular fluids and is available to maintain the normal state of hydration of all tissues. Water, the single largest constituent of the body, is essential to the existence of every living cell.

The major solute of plasma is a heterogeneous group of proteins constituting about 7 percent of the plasma by weight. The principal difference between the plasma and the extracellular fluid of the tissues is the high protein content of the plasma. Plasma protein exerts an osmotic effect by which water tends to move from other extracellular fluid to the plasma. When dietary protein is digested in the gastrointestinal tract, individual amino acids are released from the polypeptide chains and are absorbed. The amino acids are transported through the plasma to all parts of the body, where they are taken up by cells and are assembled in specific ways to form proteins of many types. These plasma proteins are released into the blood from the cells in which they were synthesized. Much of the protein of plasma is produced in the liver.

The major plasma protein is serum albumin, a relatively small molecule, the principal function of which is to retain water in the bloodstream by its osmotic effect. The amount of serum albumin in the blood is a determinant of the total volume of plasma. Depletion of serum albumin permits fluid to leave the circulation and to accumulate and cause swelling of soft tissues (edema). Serum albumin binds certain other substances that are transported in plasma and thus serves as a nonspecific carrier protein. Bilirubin, for example, is bound to serum albumin during its passage through the blood. Serum albumin has physical properties that permit its separation from other plasma proteins, which as a group are called globulins. In fact, the globulins are a heterogeneous array of proteins of widely varying structure and function, only a few of which will be mentioned here. The immunoglobulins, or antibodies, are produced in response to a specific foreign substance, or antigen. For example, administration of polio vaccine, which is made from killed or attenuated (weakened) poliovirus, is followed by the appearance in the plasma of antibodies that react with poliovirus and effectively prevent the onset of disease. Antibodies may be induced by many foreign substances in addition to microorganisms; immunoglobulins are involved in some hypersensitivity and allergic reactions. Other plasma proteins are concerned with the coagulation of the blood.

Many proteins are involved in highly specific ways with the transport function of the blood. Blood lipids are incorporated into protein molecules as lipoproteins, substances important in lipid transport. Iron and copper are transported in plasma by unique metal-binding proteins (transferrin and ceruloplasmin, respectively). Vitamin B12, an essential nutrient, is bound to a specific carrier protein. Although hemoglobin is not normally released into the plasma, a hemoglobin-binding protein (haptoglobin) is available to transport hemoglobin to the reticuloendothelial system should hemolysis (breakdown) of red cells occur. The serum haptoglobin level is raised during inflammation and certain other conditions; it is lowered in hemolytic disease and some types of liver disease.

Lipids are present in plasma in suspension and in solution. The concentration of lipids in plasma varies, particularly in relation to meals, but ordinarily does not exceed 1 gram per 100 ml. The largest fraction consists of phospholipids, complex molecules containing phosphoric acid and a nitrogen base in addition to fatty acids and glycerol. Triglycerides, or simple fats, are molecules composed only of fatty acids and glycerol. Free fatty acids, lower in concentration than triglycerides, are responsible for a much larger transport of fat. Other lipids include cholesterol, a major fraction of the total plasma lipids. These substances exist in plasma combined with proteins of several types as lipoproteins. The largest lipid particles in the blood are known as chylomicrons and consist largely of triglycerides; after absorption from the intestine, they pass through lymphatic channels and enter the bloodstream through the thoracic lymph duct. The other plasma lipids are derived from food or enter the plasma from tissue sites.

Some plasma constituents occur in plasma in low concentration but have a high turnover rate and great physiological importance. Among these is glucose, or blood sugar. Glucose is absorbed from the gastrointestinal tract or may be released into the circulation from the liver. It provides a source of energy for tissue cells and is the only source for some, including the red cells. Glucose is conserved and used and is not excreted. Amino acids also are so rapidly transported that the plasma level remains low, although they are required for all protein synthesis throughout the body. Urea, an end product of protein metabolism, is rapidly excreted by the kidneys. Other nitrogenous waste products—uric acid and creatinine—are similarly removed.

Several inorganic materials are essential constituents of plasma, and each has special functional attributes. The predominant cation (positively charged ion) of the plasma is sodium, an ion that occurs within cells at a much lower concentration. Because of the effect of sodium on osmotic pressure and fluid movements, the amount of sodium in the body is an influential determinant of the total volume of extracellular fluid. The amount of sodium in plasma is controlled by the kidneys under the influence of the hormone aldosterone, which is secreted by the adrenal gland. If dietary sodium exceeds requirements, the excess is excreted by the kidneys. Potassium, the principal intracellular cation, occurs in plasma at a much lower concentration than sodium. The renal excretion of potassium is influenced by aldosterone, which causes retention of sodium and loss of potassium. Calcium in plasma is in part bound to protein and in part ionized. Its concentration is under the control of two hormones: parathyroid hormone, which causes the level to rise, and calcitonin, which causes it to fall. Magnesium, like potassium, is a predominantly intracellular cation and occurs in plasma in low concentration. Variations in the concentrations of these cations may have profound effects on the nervous system, the muscles, and the heart, effects normally prevented by precise regulatory mechanisms. Iron, copper, and zinc are required in trace amounts for synthesis of essential enzymes; much more iron is needed in addition for production of hemoglobin and myoglobin, the oxygen-binding pigment of muscles. These metals occur in plasma in low concentrations. The principal anion (negatively charged ion) of plasma is chloride; sodium chloride is its major salt. Bicarbonate participates in the transport of carbon dioxide and in the regulation of pH. Phosphate also has a buffering effect on the pH of the blood and is vital for chemical reactions of cells and for the metabolism of calcium. Iodide is transported through plasma in trace amounts; it is avidly taken up by the thyroid gland, which incorporates it into thyroid hormone.

The hormones of all the endocrine glands are secreted into the plasma and transported to their target organs, the organs on which they exert their effects. The plasma levels of these agents often reflect the functional activity of the glands that secrete them; in some instances, measurements are possible though concentrations are extremely low. Among the many other constituents of plasma are numerous enzymes. Some of these appear simply to have escaped from tissue cells and have no functional significance in the blood.

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#10 Science HQ » Cerebrum » 2025-12-11 18:07:44

Jai Ganesh
Replies: 0

Cerebrum

Gist

The cerebrum is the largest part of the human brain, responsible for higher functions like thought, memory, language, and voluntary movement, divided into two hemispheres (left/right) connected by the corpus callosum, and further split into four lobes (frontal, parietal, temporal, occipital) that manage sensory input and conscious actions. Its wrinkled outer layer (cerebral cortex) of grey matter allows for complex processing, while the inner white matter facilitates communication. 

The cerebrum is the largest part of the human brain, responsible for higher functions like thought, memory, senses, and voluntary movement, divided into two hemispheres (left and right) and further into four lobes (frontal, parietal, temporal, occipital) that process different types of information. Its folded outer layer, the cerebral cortex (gray matter), increases surface area for complex processing and allows us to think, plan, learn, speak, and feel emotions. 

Summary

Cerebrum is the largest and uppermost portion of the brain. The cerebrum consists of the cerebral hemispheres and accounts for two-thirds of the total weight of the brain. One hemisphere, usually the left, is functionally dominant, controlling language and speech. The other hemisphere interprets visual and spatial information.

The cerebral hemispheres consist of an inner core of myelinated nerve fibres, the white matter, and an outer cortex of gray matter. The cerebral cortex is responsible for integrating sensory impulses, directing motor activity, and controlling higher intellectual functions. The human cortex is several centimetres thick and has a surface area of about 2,000 square cm (310 square inches), largely because of an elaborate series of convolutions; the extensive development of this cortex in humans is thought to distinguish the human brain from those of other animals. Nerve fibres in the white matter primarily connect functional areas of the cerebral cortex. The gray matter of the cerebral cortex usually is divided into four lobes, roughly defined by major surface folds. The frontal lobe contains control centres for motor activity and speech, the parietal for somatic senses (touch and position), the temporal for auditory reception and memory, and the occipital for visual reception. Sometimes the limbic lobe, involved with smell, taste, and emotions, is considered to be a fifth lobe.

Numerous deep grooves in the cerebral cortex, called cerebral fissures, originate in the extensive folding of the brain’s surface. The main cerebral fissures are the lateral fissure, or fissure of Sylvius, between the frontal and temporal lobes; the central fissure, or fissure of Rolando, between the frontal and parietal lobes, which separates the chief motor and sensory regions of the brain; the calcarine fissure on the occipital lobe, which contains the visual cortex; the parieto-occipital fissure, which separates the parietal and occipital lobes; the transverse fissure, which divides the cerebrum from the cerebellum; and the longitudinal fissure, which divides the cerebrum into two hemispheres.

A thick band of white matter that connects the two hemispheres, called the corpus callosum, allows the integration of sensory input and functional responses from both sides of the body. Other cerebral structures include the hypothalamus, which controls metabolism and maintains homeostasis, and the thalamus, a principal sensory relay centre. These structures surround spaces (ventricles) filled with cerebrospinal fluid, which helps to supply the brain cells with nutrients and provides the brain with shock-absorbing mechanical support.

Details

The cerebrum (pl.: cerebra), telencephalon or endbrain is the largest part of the brain, containing the cerebral cortex (of the two cerebral hemispheres) as well as several subcortical structures, including the hippocampus, basal ganglia, and olfactory bulb. In the human brain, the cerebrum is the uppermost region of the central nervous system. The cerebrum develops prenatally from the forebrain (prosencephalon). In mammals, the dorsal telencephalon, or pallium, develops into the cerebral cortex, and the ventral telencephalon, or subpallium, becomes the basal ganglia. The cerebrum is also divided into approximately symmetric left and right cerebral hemispheres.

With the assistance of the cerebellum, the cerebrum controls all voluntary actions in the human body.

Structure

The cerebrum is the largest part of the brain. Depending upon the position of the animal, it lies either in front or on top of the brainstem. In humans, the cerebrum is the largest and best-developed of the five major divisions of the brain.

The cerebrum is made up of the two cerebral hemispheres and their cerebral cortices (the outer layers of grey matter), and the underlying regions of white matter. Its subcortical structures include the hippocampus, basal ganglia and olfactory bulb. The cerebrum consists of two C-shaped cerebral hemispheres, separated from each other by a deep fissure called the longitudinal fissure.

Cerebral cortex

The cerebral cortex, the outer layer of grey matter of the cerebrum, is found only in mammals. In larger mammals, including humans, the surface of the cerebral cortex folds to create gyri (ridges) and sulci (furrows) which increase the surface area.

The cerebral cortex is generally classified into four lobes: the frontal, parietal, occipital and temporal lobes. The lobes are classified based on their overlying neurocranial bones. A smaller lobe is the insular lobe, a part of the cerebral cortex folded deep within the lateral sulcus that separates the temporal lobe from the parietal and frontal lobes, is located within each hemisphere of the mammalian brain.

Cerebral hemispheres

The cerebrum is divided by the medial longitudinal fissure into two cerebral hemispheres, the right and the left. The cerebrum is contralaterally organized, i.e., the right hemisphere controls and processes signals (predominantly) from the left side of the body, while the left hemisphere controls and processes signals (predominantly) from the right side of the body. According to current knowledge, this is due to an axial twist that occurs in the early embryo. There is a strong but not complete bilateral symmetry between the hemispheres, while lateralization tends to increase with increasing brain size. The lateralization of brain function looks at the known and possible differences between the two.

Development

In the developing vertebrate embryo, the neural tube is subdivided into four unseparated sections which then develop further into distinct regions of the central nervous system; these are the prosencephalon (forebrain), the mesencephalon (midbrain) the rhombencephalon (hindbrain) and the spinal cord. The prosencephalon develops further into the telencephalon and the diencephalon. The dorsal telencephalon gives rise to the pallium (cerebral cortex in mammals and reptiles) and the ventral telencephalon generates the basal ganglia. The diencephalon develops into the thalamus and hypothalamus, including the optic vesicles (future retina). The dorsal telencephalon then forms two lateral telencephalic vesicles, separated by the midline, which develop into the left and right cerebral hemispheres. Birds and fish have a dorsal telencephalon, like all vertebrates, but it is generally unlayered and therefore not considered a cerebral cortex. Only a layered cytoarchitecture can be considered a cortex.

Additional Information

Your cerebrum is the largest part of your brain and handles conscious thoughts and actions. Different areas within your cerebrum also have different responsibilities like language, behavior, sensory processing and more. Areas of your brain also commonly work together on the same tasks, helping you understand what’s happening in the world around you.

What is the cerebrum?

Your cerebrum is the largest part of your brain, and it handles a wide range of responsibilities. Located at the front and top of your skull, it gets its name from the Latin word meaning “brain.”

Your cerebrum is instrumental in everything you do in day-to-day life, ranging from thoughts to actions. In essence, it’s responsible for the brain functions that allow us to interact with our environment and make us who we are.

Scientists have been studying the brain for years, trying to unlock just how it works and how to diagnose and treat conditions that affect it. While experts know a lot about how the cerebrum works, there’s much that’s not fully understood. Fortunately, advances in technology and medical science have helped drive growth in what experts understand about the brain.

What’s the difference between the cerebellum and cerebrum?

Your cerebrum is the largest part of your brain and includes parts above and forward of your cerebellum. Your cerebrum is the part of your brain that starts and manages conscious thoughts; meaning, things that you actively think about or do.

Your cerebellum is a small part of your brain located at the bottom of this organ near the back of your head. It processes and regulates signals between other parts of your brain and body, and is involved in coordinating functions of your body (for example, walking).

Function:

What does the cerebrum do?

Your cerebrum handles much of your brain’s “conscious” actions. That means it’s responsible for elements that require thinking, including:

* Your five senses: Your cerebrum manages and processes everything your senses take in. That includes sight, sound, smell, taste and touch.
* Language: Various parts of your cerebrum control your ability to read, write and speak.
* Working memory: This is a type of short-term memory. An example of working memory is when you remind yourself to pick up something from the grocery store.
* Behavior and personality: Part of your cerebrum is your frontal lobe, which manages your personality and behavior. It's the part of your brain that acts as a filter to stop you from doing or saying things you might later regret.
* Movement: Certain areas of your cerebrum send signals that tell your muscles what to do when you need to use them.
* Learning, logic and reasoning: Different areas of your cerebrum work together when you need to learn a new skill, make a plan of action or puzzle out a problem.

How does it help with other organs?

Your cerebrum works together with other parts of your brain, especially your cerebellum, to help you with your daily activities. An example of this is picking up a pencil off a table. Your cerebrum sends the signals to the muscles in your arms, and your cerebellum helps calculate and control your movements, so your hand goes right to the pencil without missing.

Your cerebellum not only manages conscious thoughts, but also planning and actions. That includes when you decide to be physically active, choose what to eat for a meal or set aside time to see a healthcare provider for any reason. Because of this, your cerebrum plays a critical role in the health and well-being of your entire body.

What are some interesting facts about the cerebrum?

* Crossed representation. When you do something with one side of your body, the other side of your brain is usually behind that process. An example of this is having a stroke on the left side of your brain and feeling its effects on the right side of your body.

* Your brain is very adaptable. Your brain can “rewire” itself. This ability can happen as you learn new skills or help you recover from injuries to your brain.

* Your brain has specialized areas. Different parts of your brain are responsible for different abilities and skills. However, that’s also fed into the disproven myth that some people are “left-brained” or “right-brained.”

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#11 Re: Jai Ganesh's Puzzles » General Quiz » 2025-12-11 17:26:27

Hi,

#10693. What does the term in Biology Enzyme mean?

#10694. What does the term in Biology Epidemiology mean?

#12 Re: Jai Ganesh's Puzzles » English language puzzles » 2025-12-11 17:06:26

Hi,

#5889. What does the noun ringlet mean?

#5890. What does the verb (used with object) rinse mean?

#13 Re: Jai Ganesh's Puzzles » Doc, Doc! » 2025-12-11 16:57:26

Hi,

#2540. What does the term Ewing sarcoma mean?

#14 Dark Discussions at Cafe Infinity » Colleagues Quotes - I » 2025-12-11 16:47:43

Jai Ganesh
Replies: 0

Colleagues Quotes

1. I'm not the smartest fellow in the world, but I can sure pick smart colleagues. - Franklin D. Roosevelt

2. A lot of people, when a guy scores a lot of goals, think, 'He's a great player', because a goal is very important, but a great player is a player who can do everything on the field. He can do assists, encourage his colleagues, give them confidence to go forward. It is someone who, when a team does not do well, becomes one of the leaders. - Pele

3. I find discussing mathematics with colleagues of different backgrounds one of the most productive ways of making progress. - Maryam Mirzakhani

4. Whatever position I occupied, it was the result of colleagues - of my comrades in the movement - who had decided in their wisdom to use me for the purpose of focusing the attention of the country and the international community on me. - Nelson Mandela

5. Some people work hard in this business and become really popular, really big stars but they never receive an award from within the business. Somehow, when your colleagues and friends believe in you to the point of handing you an award it means so much more. - Sharon Stone

6. In 2010, my two Harvard mathematician colleagues and I dismantled kin-selection theory, which was the reigning theory of the origin of altruism at the time. - E. O. Wilson

7. The importance of building relationships among colleagues, of trying to create coalitions behind the issues that you are championing, was not something I ever had much insight into until I was elected and started serving in the Senate. - Hillary Clinton

8. Awards are great, as you get to meet up with friends and colleagues from your industry - a sort of reunion. - Penelope Cruz.

#15 Jokes » Carrot Jokes - III » 2025-12-11 16:29:18

Jai Ganesh
Replies: 0

Q: What did one snowman say to the other?
A: Does it smell like carrots?
* * *
Q: How do you make gold soup?
A: Put 24 carrots in it.
* * *
Q: What did the carrot say to the rabbit?
A: Do you want to grab a bite?
* * *
Q: What's orange and smells of carrots?
A: Rabbit puke!
* * *
Q: What kind of vegetable watches over the elderly?
A: The Carrot-aker.
* * *

#19 Science HQ » Fracture » 2025-12-10 19:34:53

Jai Ganesh
Replies: 0

Fracture

Gist

A fracture is a partial or complete break in the continuity of a bone, caused by trauma (falls, impacts, sports), repetitive stress (stress fractures), or underlying conditions (osteoporosis). Symptoms include severe pain, swelling, bruising, deformity, and inability to move the area, requiring immediate medical attention for diagnosis (X-ray) and treatment, often involving immobilization (cast) or surgery (pins, plates) for proper healing. 

A fracture is a break or crack in a bone, typically caused by trauma like a fall or accident. It can range from a minor crack to a complete break where the bone is in multiple pieces. Other causes include repetitive stress on the bone, a condition called a stress fracture, or a disease that weakens the bone, known as a pathological fracture. 

A bone fracture, or broken bone, is a break in the bone's continuity, caused by trauma (like falls, accidents) or stress, leading to symptoms like pain, swelling, and inability to move the limb normally. Fractures range from hairline cracks (incomplete) to multiple fragments (comminuted) or bone breaking the skin (open/compound). Treatment involves aligning the bone (casting, surgery) so it can knit back together, requiring immediate care for severe breaks. 

Summary

A bone fracture (abbreviated FRX or Fx, Fx, or #) is a medical condition in which there is a partial or complete break in the continuity of any bone in the body. In more severe cases, the bone may be broken into several fragments, known as a comminuted fracture. An open fracture (or compound fracture) is a bone fracture where the broken bone breaks through the skin.

A bone fracture may be the result of high force impact or stress, or a minimal trauma injury as a result of certain medical conditions that weaken the bones, such as osteoporosis, osteopenia, bone cancer, or osteogenesis imperfecta, where the fracture is then properly termed a pathologic fracture. Most bone fractures require urgent medical attention to prevent further injury.

Signs and symptoms

Although bone tissue contains no pain receptors, a bone fracture is painful for several reasons:

* Breaking in the continuity of the periosteum, with or without similar discontinuity in endosteum, as both contain multiple pain receptors.
* Edema and hematoma of nearby soft tissues caused by ruptured bone marrow evokes pressure pain.
* Involuntary muscle spasms trying to hold bone fragments in place.

Damage to adjacent structures such as nerves, muscles or blood vessels, spinal cord, and nerve roots (for spine fractures), or cranial contents (for skull fractures) may cause other specific signs and symptoms.

Complications

Some fractures may lead to serious complications, including a condition known as compartment syndrome. If not treated, eventually, compartment syndrome may require amputation of the affected limb. Other complications may include non-union, where the fractured bone fails to heal, or malunion, where the fractured bone heals in a deformed manner. One form of malunion is the malrotation of a bone, which is especially common after femoral and tibial fractures. Complications of fractures may be classified into three broad groups, depending upon their time of occurrence. These are as follows –

* Immediate complications – occurs at the time of the fracture.
* Early complications – occurring in the initial few days after the fracture.
* Late complications – occurring a long time after the fracture.

Details

Bone fractures are a very common injury and can affect anyone at any age. If you’re older than 50 or have a family history of osteoporosis, talk to your provider about a bone density screening.

Overview:


What is a bone fracture?

A bone fracture is the medical definition for a broken bone.

Fractures are usually caused by traumas like falls, car accidents or sports injuries. But some medical conditions and repetitive forces (like running) can increase your risk for experiencing certain types of fractures.

If you break a bone, you might need surgery to repair it. Some people only need a splint, cast, brace or sling for their bone to heal. How long it takes to recover fully depends on which of your bones are fractured, where the fracture is and what caused it.

Bone fracture vs. break

Bone fractures and broken bones are the same injury and mean the same thing. You might see them used interchangeably. A fracture is the medical term for a broken bone, so your healthcare provider will probably refer to your broken bone as a certain type of fracture after they diagnose it.

Bone fracture vs. bone bruise

Bone fractures and bone bruises are both painful injuries caused by a strong force hitting your body — usually a fall, car accident or sports injury. The difference is how damaged your bone is.

Your bones are living tissue that can get bruised in lots of the same ways your skin can. It takes much more force to bruise a bone than it does your skin, but the injury is very similar. If something hits your bones with enough force, they can bleed without being broken. Blood trapped under the surface of your bone after an injury is a bone bruise.

A bone fracture happens when something hits your bone with enough force not only to damage it, but to break it in at least one place. Fractures are more serious injuries and can take much longer to heal than bone bruises.

If you’ve experienced a trauma and have pain on or near a bone, go to the emergency room or visit your provider as soon as possible. No matter which injury you have, it’s important to get your bone examined right away.

Bone fractures vs. sprains

Bone fractures and sprains are common sports injuries.

If you experience a bone fracture, you’ve broken one or more of your bones. You can’t sprain a bone. A sprain happens when one of your ligaments is stretched or torn.

It’s possible to experience a bone fracture and a ligament sprain during the same injury, especially if you damage a joint like your knee or elbow.

What are the different types of bone fractures?

There are many different types of fractures. Your provider will diagnose a specific fracture type depending on a few criteria, including its:

* Pattern: A fracture pattern is the medical term for the shape of a break or what it looks like.
* Cause: Some fractures are classified by how they happen.
* Body part: Where in your body your broke a bone.

Fractures diagnosed by pattern or shape

Some fractures are classified by their pattern. This can either be the direction a break goes (if it’s a straight light across your bone) or its shape (if it’s more than a single line break).

Fractures that have a single straight-line break include:

* Oblique fractures.
* Transverse fractures.
* Longitudinal fractures (breaks that happen along the length of the bone).

Fracture patterns that don’t break your bone in a single straight line include:

* Greenstick fractures.
* Comminuted fractures.
* Segmental fractures.
* Spiral fractures.

Fractures diagnosed by cause

A few types of fractures are named or classified by what causes them. These include:

* Stress fractures (sometimes referred to as hairline fractures).
* Avulsion fractures.
* Buckle fractures (sometimes referred to as torus or impacted fractures).

Fractures diagnosed by location

Lots of fractures are specific to where they happen in your body. In some cases, it’s possible to experience a location-based fracture that’s also one of the other types listed above. For example, someone who experiences a severe fall might have a comminuted tibia (shin bone) fracture.

Fractures that affect people’s chest, arms and upper body include:

* Clavicle fractures (broken collarbones).
* Shoulder fractures.
* Humerus (upper arm bone) fractures.
* Elbow fractures.
* Rib fractures.
* Compression fractures.
* Facial fractures.

Some fractures that can affect your hands or wrists include:

* Barton fractures.
* Chauffeur fractures.
* Colles fractures.
* Smith fractures.
* Scaphoid fractures.
* Metacarpal fractures (breaking any of the bones in your hand that connect your wrist to your fingers).

Fractures that damage the bones in your lower body and legs include:

* Pelvic fractures.
* Acetabular fractures.
* Hip fractures.
* Femur fractures.
* Patella fractures.
* Growth plate fractures.
* Tibia (your shin bone) and fibula (your calf bone) fractures.

Fractures that affect your feet and ankles are more likely to have complications like nonunion. They include:

* Calcaneal stress fractures.
* Fifth metatarsal fractures.
* Jones fractures.
* Lisfranc fractures.
* Talus fractures.
* Trimalleolar fractures.
* Pilon fractures.

Open vs. closed fractures

Your provider will classify your fracture as either open or closed. If you have an open fracture, your bone breaks through your skin. Open fractures are sometimes referred to as compound fractures. Open fractures usually take longer to heal and have an increased risk of infections and other complications. Closed fractures are still serious, but your bone doesn’t push through your skin.

Displaced vs. non-displaced fractures

Displaced or non-displaced are more words your provider will use to describe your fracture. A displaced fracture means the pieces of your bone moved so much that a gap formed around the fracture when your bone broke. Non-displaced fractures are still broken bones, but the pieces weren’t moved far enough during the break to be out of alignment. Displaced fractures are much more likely to require surgery to repair.

Who gets bone fractures?

Bone fractures can affect anyone. Because they’re usually caused by traumas like falls, car accidents or sports injuries, it’s hard to know when someone will break a bone.

You’re more likely to experience a fracture if your bones are weakened by osteoporosis.

Osteoporosis

Osteoporosis weakens bones, making them more susceptible to sudden and unexpected fractures. Many people don’t know they have osteoporosis until after it causes them to break a bone. There usually aren’t obvious symptoms.

Females and adults older than 50 have an increased risk for developing osteoporosis. Talk to your provider about a bone density screening that can catch osteoporosis before it causes a fracture.

How common are bone fractures?

Bone fractures are a common injury. Millions of people break a bone every year.

Additional Information

A fracture is a partial or complete break in the bone. When a fracture happens, it’s classified as either open or closed:

* Open fracture (compound fracture): The bone pokes through the skin and can be seen. Or a deep wound exposes the bone through the skin.

* Closed fracture (simple fracture). The bone is broken, but the skin is intact.

Fractures have a variety of names. Here is a list of types that may happen:

* Greenstick. This is an incomplete break. A part of the bone is broken, causing the other side to bend.

* Transverse. The break is in a straight line across the bone.

* Spiral. The break spirals around the bone. This is common in a twisting injury.

* Oblique. The break is diagonal across the bone.

* Compression. The bone is crushed. This causes the broken bone to be wider or flatter in appearance.

* Comminuted. The bone has broken into 3 or more pieces. Fragments are present at the fracture site.

* Segmental. The same bone is broken in 2 places, so there is a "floating" piece of bone.

* Avulsion. The bone is broken near a tendon or ligament. A tendon or ligament pulls off a small piece of bone.

What causes fractures?

Fractures most often happen when more force is applied to the bone than the bone can take. Bones are weakest when they are twisted.

Bone fractures can be caused by falls, injury, or as a result of a direct hit or kick to the body.

Overuse or repetitive motions can tire muscles and put more pressure on the bone. This causes stress fractures. This is more common in athletes and military recruits.

Fractures can also be caused by diseases that weaken the bone. This includes osteoporosis or cancer in the bones.

What are the symptoms of a fracture?

Symptoms may be a bit different for each person. Symptoms of a broken or fractured bone may include:

* Sudden pain
* Trouble using or moving the injured area or nearby joints
* Unable to bear weight
* Swelling
* Obvious deformity
* Warmth, bruising, or redness

The symptoms of a broken bone may seem like other health conditions or problems. Always see a healthcare provider for a diagnosis.

How is a fracture diagnosed?

Your healthcare provider will take a full health history (including asking how the injury happened). You will also have a physical exam. Tests used for a fracture may include:

* X-ray. A diagnostic test that uses invisible electromagnetic energy beams to make pictures of internal tissues, bones, and organs on film.
* MRI. An imaging test that uses large magnets, radiofrequencies, and a computer to make detailed pictures of structures within the body.
* CT scan. This is an imaging test that uses X-rays and a computer to make detailed images of the body. A CT scan shows details of the bones, muscles, fat, and organs.

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#20 Re: Dark Discussions at Cafe Infinity » crème de la crème » 2025-12-10 17:31:35

2406) Andrew Huxley

Gist:

Work

The nervous system in people and animals consists of many different cells. In cells, signals are conveyed by small electrical currents and by chemical substances. By measuring changes in electrical charges in a very large nerve fiber from a species of octopus, Andrew Huxley and Alan Hodgkin were able to show how nerve impulses are exchanged between cells. In 1952 they could demonstrate that a fundamental mechanism involves the passage of sodium and potassium ions in opposite directions in and out through the cell wall, which gives rise to electrical charges.

Summary

Sir Andrew Fielding Huxley (born November 22, 1917, Hampstead, London, England—died May 30, 2012, Cambridge) was an English physiologist, cowinner (with Sir Alan Hodgkin and Sir John Carew Eccles) of the 1963 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine. His researches centred on nerve and muscle fibres and dealt particularly with the chemical phenomena involved in the transmission of nerve impulses. He was knighted in 1974 and was president of the Royal Society from 1980 to 1985.

Andrew Fielding, a grandson of the biologist T.H. Huxley and son of the biographer and man of letters Leonard Huxley, received his M.A. from Trinity College, Cambridge, where later, from 1941 to 1960, he was a fellow and then director of studies, a demonstrator, an assistant director of research, and finally a reader in experimental biophysics in the Department of Physiology. In 1960 he went to University College, London, first as Jodrell professor and then, from 1969, as Royal Society research professor, in the Department of Physiology. Huxley and Hodgkin’s researches were concerned largely with studying the exchange of sodium and potassium ions that causes a brief reversal in a nerve cell’s electrical polarization; this phenomenon, known as an action potential, results in the transmission of an impulse along a nerve fibre. Apart from the researches directly mentioned in the Nobel citation, Huxley made contributions of fundamental importance to knowledge of the process of contraction by a muscle fibre. He published many important papers in periodicals, particularly in the Journal of Physiology. His Sherrington Lectures were published as Reflections on Muscle (1980).

Details

Sir Andrew Fielding Huxley (22 November 1917 – 30 May 2012) was an English physiologist and biophysicist. He was born into the prominent Huxley family. After leaving Westminster School in central London, he went to Trinity College, Cambridge, on a scholarship, after which he joined Alan Hodgkin to study nerve impulses. Their eventual discovery of the basis for propagation of nerve impulses (called an action potential) earned them the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1963. They made their discovery from the giant axon of the Atlantic squid. Soon after the outbreak of the Second World War, Huxley was recruited by the British Anti-Aircraft Command and later transferred to the Admiralty. After the war he resumed research at the University of Cambridge, where he developed interference microscopy that would be suitable for studying muscle fibres.

In 1952, he was joined by a German physiologist Rolf Niedergerke. Together they discovered in 1954 the mechanism of muscle contraction, popularly called the "sliding filament theory", which is the foundation of our modern understanding of muscle mechanics. In 1960 he became head of the Department of Physiology at University College London. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1955, and President in 1980. The Royal Society awarded him the Copley Medal in 1973 for his collective contributions to the understanding of nerve impulses and muscle contraction. He was conferred a Knight Bachelor by the Queen in 1974, and was appointed to the Order of Merit in 1983. He was a fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, until his death.

Career

Having entered Cambridge in 1935, Huxley graduated with a bachelor's degree in 1938. In 1939, Alan Lloyd Hodgkin returned from the US to take up a fellowship at Trinity College, and Huxley became one of his postgraduate students. Hodgkin was interested in the transmission of electrical signals along nerve fibres. Beginning in 1935 in Cambridge, he had made preliminary measurements on frog sciatic nerves suggesting that the accepted view of the nerve as a simple, elongated battery was flawed. Hodgkin invited Huxley to join him researching the problem. The work was experimentally challenging. One major problem was that the small size of most neurons made it extremely difficult to study them using the techniques of the time. They overcame this by working at the Marine Biological Association laboratory in Plymouth using the giant axon of the longfin inshore squid (Doryteuthis (formerly Loligo) pealeii), which have the largest neurons known. The experiments were still extremely challenging as the nerve impulses only last a few milliseconds, during which time they needed to measure the changing electrical potential at different points along the nerve. Using equipment largely of their own construction and design, including one of the earliest applications of a technique of electrophysiology known as the voltage clamp, they were able to record ionic currents. In 1939, they jointly published a short paper in Nature reporting on the work done in Plymouth and announcing their achievement of recording action potentials from inside a nerve fibre.

Then World War II broke out, and their research was abandoned. Huxley was recruited by the British Anti-Aircraft Command, where he worked on radar control of anti-aircraft guns. Later he was transferred to the Admiralty to do work on naval gunnery, and worked in a team led by Patrick Blackett. Hodgkin, meanwhile, was working on the development of radar at the Air Ministry. When he had a problem concerning a new type of gun sight, he contacted Huxley for advice. Huxley did a few sketches, borrowed a lathe and produced the necessary parts.

Huxley was elected to a research fellowship at Trinity College, Cambridge, in 1941. In 1946, with the war ended, he was able to take this up and to resume his collaboration with Hodgkin on understanding how nerves transmit signals. Continuing their work in Plymouth, they were, within six years, able to solve the problem using equipment they built themselves. The solution was that nerve impulses, or action potentials, do not travel down the core of the fiber, but rather along the outer membrane of the fiber as cascading waves of sodium ions diffusing inward on a rising pulse and potassium ions diffusing out on a falling edge of a pulse. In 1952, they published their theory of how action potentials are transmitted in a joint paper, in which they also describe one of the earliest computational models in biochemistry. This model forms the basis of most of the models used in neurobiology during the following four decades.

In 1952, having completed work on action potentials, Huxley was teaching physiology at Cambridge and became interested in another difficult, unsolved problem: how does muscle contract? To make progress on understanding the function of muscle, new ways of observing how the network of filaments behave during contraction were needed. Prior to the war, he had been working on a preliminary design for interference microscopy, which at the time he believed to be original, though it turned out to have been tried 50 years before and abandoned. He, however, was able to make interference microscopy work and to apply it to the problem of muscle contraction with great effect. He was able to view muscle contraction with greater precision than conventional microscopes, and to distinguish types of fiber more easily. By 1953, with the assistance of Rolf Niedergerke, he began to find the features of muscle movement. Around that time, Hugh Huxley and Jean Hanson came to a similar observation. Authored in pairs, their papers were simultaneously published in the 22 May 1954 issue of Nature. Thus the four people introduced what is called the sliding filament theory of muscle contractions. Huxley synthesized his findings, and the work of colleagues, into a detailed description of muscle structure and how muscle contraction occurs and generates force that he published in 1957. In 1966 his team provided the proof of the theory, and has remained the basis of modern understanding of muscle physiology.

In 1953, Huxley worked at Woods Hole, Massachusetts, as a Lalor Scholar. He gave the Herter Lectures at Johns Hopkins Medical School in 1959 and the Jesup Lectures at Columbia University in 1964. In 1961 he lectured on neurophysiology at Kiev University as part of an exchange scheme between British and Russian professors.

He was an editor of the Journal of Physiology from 1950 to 1957 and also of the Journal of Molecular Biology. In 1955, he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society and served on the Council of the Royal Society from 1960 to 1962.

Huxley held college and university posts in Cambridge until 1960, when he became head of the Department of Physiology at University College London. In addition to his administrative and teaching duties, he continued to work actively on muscle contraction, and also made theoretical contributions to other work in the department, such as that on animal reflectors. In 1963, he was jointly awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his part in discoveries concerning the ionic mechanisms of the nerve cell. In 1969 he was appointed to a Royal Society Research Professorship, which he held in the Department of Physiology at University College London.

In 1980, Huxley was elected as President of the Royal Society, a post he held until 1985. In his Presidential Address in 1981, he chose to defend the Darwinian explanation of evolution, as his ancestor, T. H. Huxley had in 1860. Whereas T. H. Huxley was defying the bishops of his day, Sir Andrew was countering new theories of periods of accelerated change. In 1983, he defended the Society's decision to elect Margaret Thatcher as a fellow on the ground of her support for science even after 44 fellows had signed a letter of protest.

In 1984, he was elected Master of Trinity, succeeding his longtime collaborator, Sir Alan Hodgkin. His appointment broke the tradition that the office of Master of Trinity alternates between a scientist and an arts man. He was Master until 1990 and was fond of reminding interviewers that Trinity College had more Nobel Prize winners than did the whole of France. He maintained up to his death his position as a fellow at Trinity College, Cambridge, teaching in physiology, natural sciences and medicine. He was also a fellow of Imperial College London in 1980.

From his experimental work with Hodgkin, Huxley developed a set of differential equations that provided a mathematical explanation for nerve impulses—the "action potential". This work provided the foundation for all of the current work on voltage-sensitive membrane channels, which are responsible for the functioning of animal nervous systems. Quite separately, he developed the mathematical equations for the operation of myosin "cross-bridges" that generate the sliding forces between actin and myosin filaments, which cause the contraction of skeletal muscles. These equations presented an entirely new paradigm for understanding muscle contraction, which has been extended to provide understanding of almost all of the movements produced by cells above the level of bacteria. Together with the Swiss physiologist Robert Stämpfli, he evidenced the existence of saltatory conduction in myelinated nerve fibres.

Awards and honours

Huxley, Alan Hodgkin and John Eccles jointly won the 1963 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine "for their discoveries concerning the ionic mechanisms involved in excitation and inhibition in the peripheral and central portions of the nerve cell membrane". Huxley and Hodgkin won the prize for experimental and mathematical work on the process of nerve action potentials, the electrical impulses that enable the activity of an organism to be coordinated by a central nervous system. Eccles had made important discoveries on synaptic transmission.

Huxley was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society (FRS) in 1955, and was awarded its Copley Medal in 1973 "in recognition of his outstanding studies on the mechanisms of the nerve impulse and of activation of muscular contraction." Huxley was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1961. He was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II on 12 November 1974. He was elected to the American Philosophical Society in 1975 and the United States National Academy of Sciences in 1979. He was appointed to the Order of Merit on 11 November 1983. In 1976–77, he was President of the British Science Association and from 1980 to 1985 he served as President of the Royal Society. In 1986 he was elected an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering then known as the Fellowship of Engineering.

Huxley's portrait by David Poole hangs in Trinity College's collection.

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#21 Re: This is Cool » Miscellany » 2025-12-10 17:04:01

2459) Compass

Gist

A compass is a tool for finding direction. A simple compass is a magnetic needle mounted on a pivot, or short pin. The needle, which can spin freely, always points north. The pivot is attached to a compass card. The compass card is marked with the directions. To use a compass, a person lines up the needle with the marking for north. Then the person can figure out all the other directions.

A compass works because Earth is a huge magnet. A magnet has two main centers of force, called poles—one at each end. Lines of magnetic force connect these poles. Bits of metal near a magnet always arrange themselves along these lines. A compass needle acts like these bits of metal. It points north because it lines up with Earth’s lines of magnetic force.

Earth’s magnetic poles are not the same as the geographic North and South poles. The geographic poles are located at the very top and bottom of a globe. The magnetic poles are nearby but not at exactly the same places. A compass points to the magnetic North Pole, not the geographic North Pole. Therefore, a compass user has to make adjustments to find true north.

A special kind of compass called a gyrocompass does point to true north. The gyrocompass uses a device called a gyroscope, which always points in the same direction. Today large ships carry both magnetic compasses and gyrocompasses.

People in China and Europe first learned how to make magnetic compasses during the 1100s. They discovered that when a magnetized bit of iron floated in water, it pointed north. Sailors soon began to use compasses to navigate, or find their way, at sea. 

Summary

A compass, in navigation or surveying, is the primary device for direction-finding on the surface of the Earth. Compasses may operate on magnetic or gyroscopic principles or by determining the direction of the Sun or a star.

The oldest and most familiar type of compass is the magnetic compass, which is used in different forms in aircraft, ships, and land vehicles and by surveyors. Sometime in the 12th century, mariners in China and Europe made the discovery, apparently independently, that a piece of lodestone, a naturally occurring magnetic ore, when floated on a stick in water, tends to align itself so as to point in the direction of the polestar. This discovery was presumably quickly followed by a second, that an iron or steel needle touched by a lodestone for long enough also tends to align itself in a north-south direction. From the knowledge of which way is north, of course, any other direction can be found.

The reason magnetic compasses work as they do is that the Earth itself acts as an enormous bar magnet with a north-south field that causes freely moving magnets to take on the same orientation. The direction of the Earth’s magnetic field is not quite parallel to the north-south axis of the globe, but it is close enough to make an uncorrected compass a reasonably good guide. The inaccuracy, known as variation (or declination), varies in magnitude from point to point upon the Earth. The deflection of a compass needle due to local magnetic influences is called deviation.

Over the centuries a number of technical improvements have been made in the magnetic compass. Many of these were pioneered by the English, whose large empire was kept together by naval power and who hence relied heavily upon navigational devices. By the 13th century the compass needle had been mounted upon a pin standing on the bottom of the compass bowl. At first only north and south were marked on the bowl, but then the other 30 principal points of direction were filled in. A card with the points painted on it was mounted directly under the needle, permitting navigators to read their direction from the top of the card. The bowl itself was subsequently hung on gimbals (rings on the side that let it swing freely), ensuring that the card would always be level. In the 17th century the needle itself took the shape of a parallelogram, which was easier to mount than a thin needle.

During the 15th century navigators began to understand that compass needles do not point directly to the North Pole but rather to some nearby point; in Europe, compass needles pointed slightly east of true north. To counteract this difficulty, British navigators adopted conventional meridional compasses, in which the north on the compass card and the “needle north” were the same when the ship passed a point in Cornwall, England. (The magnetic poles, however, wander in a predictable manner—in more recent centuries Europeans have found magnetic north to be west of true north—and this must be considered for navigation.)

In 1745 Gowin Knight, an English inventor, developed a method of magnetizing steel in such a way that it would retain its magnetization for long periods of time; his improved compass needle was bar-shaped and large enough to bear a cap by which it could be mounted on its pivot. The Knight compass was widely used.

Some early compasses did not have water in the bowl and were known as dry-card compasses; their readings were easily disturbed by shocks and vibration. Although they were less affected by shock, liquid-filled compasses were plagued by leaks and were difficult to repair when the pivot became worn. Neither the liquid nor the dry-card type was decisively advantageous until 1862, when the first liquid compass was made with a float on the card that took most of the weight off the pivot. A system of bellows was invented to expand and contract with the liquid, preventing most leaks. With these improvements liquid compasses made dry-card compasses obsolete by the end of the 19th century.

Modern mariners’ compasses are usually mounted in binnacles, cylindrical pedestals with provision for illuminating the compass face from below. Each binnacle contains specially placed magnets and pieces of steel that cancel the magnetic effects of the metal of the ship. Much the same kind of device is used aboard aircraft, except that, in addition, it contains a corrective mechanism for the errors induced in magnetic compasses when airplanes suddenly change course. The corrective mechanism is a gyroscope, which has the property of resisting efforts to change its axis of spin. This system is called a gyromagnetic compass.

Gyroscopes are also employed in a type of nonmagnetic compass called the gyrocompass. The gyroscope is mounted in three sets of concentric rings connected by gimbals, each ring spinning freely. When the initial axis of spin of the central gyroscope is set to point to true north, it will continue to do so and will resist efforts to realign it in any other direction; the gyroscope itself thus functions as a compass. If it begins to precess (wobble), a pendulum weight pulls it back into line. Gyrocompasses are generally used in navigation systems because they can be set to point to true north rather than to magnetic north.

Details

A compass is a device that shows the cardinal directions used for navigation and geographic orientation. It typically consists of a magnetized needle or another element, such as a compass card or compass rose, that pivots to align itself with magnetic north. Other methods may be used, including gyroscopes, magnetometers, and GPS receivers.

Compasses often show angles in degrees: north corresponds to 0°, and the angles increase clockwise, so east is 90°, south is 180°, and west is 270°. These numbers allow the compass to show azimuths or bearings which are commonly stated in degrees. If local variation between magnetic north and true north is known, then direction of magnetic north also gives direction of true north.

Among the Four Great Inventions, the magnetic compass was first invented as a device for divination as early as the Chinese Han dynasty (since c. 206 BC), and later adopted for navigation by the Song dynasty Chinese during the 11th century. The first usage of a compass recorded in Western Europe and the Islamic world occurred around 1190.

The magnetic compass is the most familiar compass type. It functions as a pointer to "magnetic north", the local magnetic meridian, because the magnetized needle at its heart aligns itself with the horizontal component of the Earth's magnetic field. The magnetic field exerts a torque on the needle, pulling the North end or pole of the needle approximately toward the Earth's North magnetic pole, and pulling the other toward the Earth's South magnetic pole. The needle is mounted on a low-friction pivot point, in better compasses a jewel bearing, so it can turn easily. When the compass is held level, the needle turns until, after a few seconds to allow oscillations to die out, it settles into its equilibrium orientation.

In navigation, directions on maps are usually expressed with reference to geographical or true north, the direction toward the Geographical North Pole, the rotation axis of the Earth. Depending on where the compass is located on the surface of the Earth the angle between true north and magnetic north, called magnetic declination can vary widely with geographic location. The local magnetic declination is given on most maps, to allow the map to be oriented with a compass parallel to true north. The locations of the Earth's magnetic poles slowly change with time, which is referred to as geomagnetic secular variation. The effect of this means a map with the latest declination information should be used. Some magnetic compasses include means to manually compensate for the magnetic declination, so that the compass shows true directions.

Additional Information

A compass is a device that indicates direction. It is one of the most important instruments for navigation.

A compass is a device that indicates direction. It is one of the most important instruments used for navigation. Magnetic compasses are the best-known type of compass. While the design and construction of the magnetic compass have changed significantly over the centuries, the concept of how it works remains the same. A magnetic compass consists of a magnetized needle that rotates to line up with Earth's magnetic field. The ends point to what are known as the north magnetic pole and the south magnetic pole.

History of Compasses

The principle of magnetism has been observed by humans for thousands of years. Ancient Greeks observed the principle of magnetism, but they did not understand its relationship to the Earth or that a magnetized metal would point north. People in Ancient China also recognized magnetism. They learned that a magnetized bar of lodestone tied to a string would always point in the same direction. This observation became part of their spiritual beliefs as religious leaders used a magnetic spoon balanced on a plate to predict the future. Some consider this to be the earliest form of a compass, although compasses are more accurately defined as instruments devised for navigational purposes. A unique aspect of these early compasses in China is that they were oriented to the south and were referred to as “south pointing spoons” or “south pointers.” Later Chinese compasses were similarly oriented to point south rather than north like today’s compasses.

There is evidence that explorers from China and Europe were using compasses to navigate the seas as far back as the 1100s. In fact, many historians believe that people in China were using compasses to navigate long before that time. Miners in search of jade, for instance, appear to have used “south pointing spoons.” Some historians also believe that compasses originated in China and traveled to Europe through trade routes, but others think that Europeans developed the technology independently.

Early Compasses

Very early compasses were made of a magnetized needle attached to a piece of wood or cork that floated freely in a dish of water. As the needle settled, the marked end would point toward magnetic north.

As engineers and scientists learned more about magnetism, the compass needle was mounted and placed in the middle of a card that showed the cardinal directions: north, south, east, and west. In time, 32 points of direction were added to the compass card.

In their earliest use, compasses were likely used as a backup navigational tool for when the sun, stars, or other landmarks could not be seen. As compasses became more reliable and more explorers understood how to use them, compasses became an essential tool for travelers.

Adjustments and Adaptations

By the 15th century, explorers realized that the “north” indicated by a compass needle was not the same as Earth’s true geographic north. This discrepancy between magnetic north and true north is called variation (by mariners or pilots) or magnetic declination (by land navigators), and it varies depending on location. Because of this variation, a compass could lead a novice user many kilometers off-course. Navigators learn to adjust their compass readings to account for variation.

Other adaptations have been made to magnetic compasses over time, especially for their use in marine navigation. When ships evolved from being made of wood to being made of iron and steel, the magnetism of the ship affected compass readings. This difference is called deviation. Adjustments, such as placing soft iron balls (called Kelvin spheres) and bar magnets (called Flinders bars) near the compass, help increase the accuracy of the readings. Deviation must also be taken into account on aircraft using compasses, due to the metal in the construction of an airplane.

Magnetic compasses come in many forms. The most basic are portable compasses for use on casual hikes. Magnetic compasses can have additional features, such as magnifiers for use with maps, a prism or mirror that allows the user to see the landscape and compass reading at the same time, or markings in Braille for people with a visual impairment. The most complicated compasses are complex devices on ships or planes that can calculate and adjust for motion, variation, and deviation.

Other Types of Compasses

Some compasses do not use Earth’s magnetism to indicate direction. The gyrocompass, invented in the early 20th century, uses a spinning gyroscope to follow Earth’s axis of rotation to point to true north. Since magnetic north is not measured, variation is not an issue. Once the gyroscope begins spinning, motion will not disturb it. This type of compass is often used on ships and aircraft.

A solar compass uses the sun as a navigational tool. It was used in the 19thand 20thcenturies to survey land. Because a solar compass is not affected by iron metal deposits or location relative to the poles, a solar compass can be more accurate than a magnetic compass, particularly near the poles. The most common method is to use a compass card and the angle of the shadow of the sun to indicate direction.

Another type of solar compass is an old-fashioned analog (not digital) watch. Using the watch’s hands and the position of the sun, it is possible to determine north or south. Simply hold the watch parallel to the ground (in your hand) and point the 12 o'clock mark in the direction of the sun. Find the angle between the hour hand and the 12 o’clock mark. This is the north-south line. In the Southern Hemisphere, north will be the direction closer to the sun. In the Northern Hemisphere, north will be the direction further from the sun.

Receivers from the global positioning system (GPS) have begun to take the place of compasses. A GPS receiver coordinates with satellites orbiting Earth and monitoring stations on Earth to pinpoint the receiver's location. GPS receivers can plot latitude, longitude, and altitude on a map. In open areas and optimal conditions, standard GPS is accurate to about 6 meters (20 feet), and researchers have developed a so-called “SuperGPS” that is accurate within 10 centimeters (3.9 inches).

Many people throughout history have used knowledge of the stars and constellations as a kind of compass. For example, Polynesians have been using patterns in the sky to navigate the ocean for at least 2,000 years. A native Hawaiian historian, Charles Nainoa Thompson, developed a Hawaiian star compass in the mid-2000s to illustrate how Polynesians use the constellations for navigation. Much like a magnetic compass, there are 32 stars situated around a center point on a star compass.

Impact of the Compass

The compass had a major impact on the world, particularly for people who were navigating the sea. Because compasses were more accurate than other naval navigational tools, explorers used them to explore parts of the world that were unknown to them during the so-called Age of Exploration that began in the early 15th century, a development with both positive and negative impacts. European exploration contributed to trade and the circulation of knowledge, but it would also lead to the spread of disease, the colonization of new lands, and the enslavement of Africans and other indigenous populations. Because today’s global relationships have emerged from these relationships, the legacy of colonization—and the invention of the compass—continues to have a profound impact on the world today.

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#22 Dark Discussions at Cafe Infinity » Collar Quotes » 2025-12-10 16:22:41

Jai Ganesh
Replies: 0

Collar Quotes

1. I remember in that red leisure suit I sort of felt like a Pizza Hut employee, and the white one was the ultimate, with the white turtleneck collar, that was the ultimate in bad taste. - Johnny Depp

2. I hate ready-made suits, button-down collars, and sports shirts. - Bobby Fischer

3. Joe Frazier was the epitome of a champion. I mean, here is a guy who was total old school, blue collar, who would fight anybody. You know, he didn't tell you he was the best fighter pound for pound. - Sugar Ray Leonard.

#23 Jokes » Carrot Jokes - II » 2025-12-10 16:01:16

Jai Ganesh
Replies: 0

Q: Whats orange and sounds like a parrot?
A: A carrot.
* * *
Q: What's a Vegetable's favourite martial art?
A: Carrotee!
* * *
Q: How do you lead a horse to water?
A: With carrots.
* * *
Q: What vegetable are all others afraid of? 
A: A scarrot.
* * *
Q: Why did the carrot get an award?
A: Because he was out standing in his field.
* * *

#24 Re: Jai Ganesh's Puzzles » General Quiz » 2025-12-10 15:52:37

Hi,

#10691. What does the term in Geography Conifer mean?

#10692. What does the term in Geography Geographic contiguity mean?

#25 Re: Jai Ganesh's Puzzles » English language puzzles » 2025-12-10 15:31:06

Hi,

#5887. What does the adjective compliant mean?

#5888. What does the noun complicity mean?

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