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  Re: Allergy idea         


Author: Flo
Date: Dec 26, 2008 11:32

On Dec 24, 7:10 am, "Giga" ho...@yahoo.co> wrote:
> Watching a BBC programme (Horizon) trying to work out why everyone is
> becoming allergic. It seemed to conclude that increase in wealth led to an
> increase in use of cleaning chemicals on the skin. This in turn damaged the
> skin and allowed stuff to get into the blood which disturbs the immune
> system.

When my daughter was about a year old, I tried to keep her and her
surroundings as clean as possible. But this is fairly impossible with
a toddler in the house and I did want her to be able to play and
explore her world as normally as possible. However, a friend of mine
with a similarly aged daughter was a cleanliness obsessive and doused
everything with Clorox which all but included the child. The next
thing we knew, her child was very ill and in the hospital. The doctor
told her she was too clean and that her daughter was able to develop
very little immunity being around no germs at all. Prior to this I
had felt a little guilty about my housekeeping but no more.
no comments
  How to distinguish green filamentious algae and blue-green filamentous algae         


Author: villandra
Date: Dec 26, 2008 08:13

How do you tell filamentous green algae and filamentous blue-green
algae apart? On line I can find only that others have asked that
question. The only answer I found is with a DNA test. Very funny.
Like, I am equipped to look through a microscope and see how many
loops or whatever in the DNA. If I understand correctly commercial
food grade spirogyra jumped from green to blue-green algae, and the
decision does not appear to ahve been based on a DNA test, whatever it
was based on.

I've seen a number of authoritative claims that spirogyra is green
algae adn blue-green algae. Conceivably it depends on whether one is
talking about spirogyra or teh food product called spirogyra.
Apparently those two species were originally considered spirogyra but
now have their own clade, Arthrospira, and are now considered blue-
green algae, even by those who consider spirogyra to be green
algae.

How did Arthospira jump to a new phylum and leave its parent clade
behind?
Show full article (1.30Kb)
1 Comment
  Re: NEW REPORT         


Author: Juan R. González-Álvarez
Date: Dec 25, 2008 01:35

spudnik wrote on Tue, 23 Dec 2008 20:44:33 -0800:
> Keizer weems to have reputable publications in the literature, but I see
> viturally nothing on your webblog. it is certainly news to me, that
> Dirac was a reductionist, or that he "solved the periodical table with
> his mechanics;" how
> do *you* account for the allegedly missing antimatter?

I have not studied this in detail still, because there is still problems
with characterization of anti-matter: holes in Dirac sense? Or better
bacwkward particles in Feynmann sense? Or maybe conjugate particles in
the second quantization formalism?

In my opinion none of those is still satisfactory. First I would find a
complete and satisfactory characterization of anti-mmater and next re-
examine data in the light of new formalism.
> there is nothing wrong with the theory of strings,

Some difficulties with string theory are noticed in the text, many other
were left out by motives of space and because the report main theme is
not an exhaustive analysis of string-brane-M theories.
Show full article (1.39Kb)
1 Comment
  Will the real dinosaurs stand up?         


Author: Garrison Hilliard
Date: Sep 22, 2008 15:17

By Jonathan Amos
Science reporter, BBC News

Most of the newly discovered dinosaurs are just that - new to science, an
assessment concludes.

With many past fossil finds named on the basis of partial remains, there
has been concern that a lot of double counting has been taking place.

Recent studies had even suggested this error rate might be as high as 50%%
- with some species being catalogued with several aliases.

But the journal Biology Letters reports that modern practice is now very
good.

"My research suggests we're getting better at naming things; we're being
more critical; we're using better material," said Professor Michael Benton
from Bristol University, UK.

The scientist looked at the original descriptions of all 1,047 species of
dinosaurs ever named, from 1824 to the present day.

He assessed the quality of the specimens on which the names were founded -
the type specimens. Professor Benton said some 500 were genuinely
distinct, and the confidence surrounding the latest discoveries - about
one new species a fortnight - was now very high.
Show full article (3.06Kb)
no comments
  First ever video footage of ovulation         


Author: j_thomas
Date: Sep 22, 2008 03:09

This is the first ever video footage of ovulation captured with an
endoscope inserted through cut in women's vaginal wall, the patient
monitored for temperature and hormones to predict when she is about
ovulate and when to begin filming, here you can see the ovary end of
fallopian tubule covered by finger like projection called fimbria, A
mucous plug containing the egg breaks away from the ovary, the fingers
move in time with the women's heart beat and become more distinct when
the reach for the egg, eventually they sweep egg into the fallopian
tube where pass into the uterusope

http://bioisolutions.blogspot.com/2008/09/ovulation.html
no comments
  Antibody Search Engine - New Biology Search Engine (VADLO)         


Author: Rb
Date: Sep 12, 2008 13:40

***New Biology Search Engine - VADLO***

Site : Vadlo (http://www.vadlo.com)

Cartoons: Life in Research Cartoons (http://vadlo.com/
Daily_Research_Cartoon.html)

Description: Vadlo is a search engine for the biology/biomedical
scientists. Find Lab methods, techniques, recipes, bioinformatics
links, websites, resources, lectures, & answers to life sciences
research queries on how to make & where to get information.

Keywords to find: Laboratory, Procedures, Assays, Experiments,
Reagents, Formulations, Presentations, Servers, Links, Lists,
Directories, Instruction Manuals, Product Guides.
no comments
  Bioinformatics Books         


Author: http://biotech.fyicenter.com
Date: Sep 9, 2008 08:26

Bioinformatics Books
http://biotech.fyicenter.com/resource/Bioinformatics_Books.html

Computational Biology
Developing Bioinformatics Computer Skills
Beginning Perl for Bioinformatics
Neural Networks and Genome Informatics
Bioinformatics: The Machine Learning Approach
Computational Molecular Biology
Computational Methods in Molecular Biology
........

More, Please visit:
http://biotech.fyicenter.com/resource/Bioinformatics_Books.html

Thank you,
BioTech FYI Center
http://biotech.fyicenter.com/
no comments
  US-MA-Boston: CHEMIST Researcher and developer         


Author: http://biotech.fyicenter.com
Date: Sep 9, 2008 08:24

US-MA-Boston: CHEMIST Researcher and developer
To apply for this position, please visit this Website.
http://biotech.fyicenter.com/jobs/99894364_CHEMIST_Researcher_and_developer.html
To see other BioTech job opportunities, please visit http://biotech.fyicenter.com/
Date: 09-Sep-2008

Job Title: CHEMIST Researcher and developer INTERN

The Chemist Intern will assist with supporting the various aspects of
laboratory R&D activities, including testing and sample preparation.

Specifically, this intern will: • Provide general laboratory R&D
support to senior scientists/engineers.

• Assist in the following efforts: o Sensor fabrication. o Sensor
testing. o Sample preparation. o Laboratory cleaning/organization. o
Chemical inventory list generation. o New chemistry formulation
development.

Requirements

• High school diploma or equivalent; college courses in chemistry/
engineering desired.

• Chemical laboratory safety training.

• Excellent PC skills in MSOffice (Excel, PowerPoint, Word).
Show full article (1.29Kb)
no comments
  US-OH-Affy Ohio: BioProcess Associate         


Author: http://biotech.fyicenter.com
Date: Sep 9, 2008 08:23

US-OH-Affy Ohio: BioProcess Associate
To apply for this position, please visit this Website.
http://biotech.fyicenter.com/jobs/99894353_BioProcess_Associate.html
To see other BioTech job opportunities, please visit http://biotech.fyicenter.com/
Date: 09-Sep-2008

BioProcess Associate

Position Description

Performs assay testing on raw materials utilizing techniques such as
HPLC, PCR/Enzymatic reactions, nucleic acid extraction, amplification,
labeling, fragmentation and hybridization. Preparing and filling bulk
reagents and buffers utilizing established test methods and batch
record specifications. Provide revision and maintenance support for
operation documents.

Position Requirements

Bachelor’s degree in related science. Excellence lab bench abilities
and laboratory familiarity. Excellent training in PCR, RNA-DNA
extraction, hybridization and target preparation is preferred as is
training in ISO 13485:2003. cGMP experience highly desirable.
Show full article (1.03Kb)
no comments
  видео Бритни и Кевина.         


Author: isabellebabe
Date: Sep 8, 2008 03:40

Смотри, как она сосет член, она лучшая! http://ragdai.info/golaya-pravda.htm
Это видео супер!
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