ScienceIQ.com

How Can A Bullet-proof Vest Stop A Bullet?

Here's an experiment: take the small coil springs from a dozen or so retractable pens and roll them together in a heap until they are thoroughly tangled and entwined. Now try to pull them apart from end to end. You should find them extremely difficult to pull apart this way, as anyone who has ever tried to untangle a 'Slinky' toy will know. ...

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BulletproofVestStopABullet
Engineering

How We Use Crystals To Tell Time

Quartz clock operation is based on the piezoelectric property of quartz crystals. If you apply an electric field to the crystal, it changes its shape, and if you squeeze it or bend it, it generates an ... Continue reading

Crystals
Astronomy

Right Ascension & Declination

Right Ascension (abbreviated R.A.) and Declination (abbreviated Dec) are a system of coordinates used by astronomers to keep track of where stars and galaxies are in the sky. They are similar to the ... Continue reading

RightAscensionDeclination
Biology

Life In The Extreme

Lowly microbes just may be the toughest living things on Earth. They have learned to survive, and indeed flourish, in the harshest environment imaginable, deep-sea rifts. These rifts are chains of ... Continue reading

Microbes
Astronomy

Exercising In Space

What did astronaut Shannon Lucid like least about her six months on Space Station Mir? The daily exercise. 'It was just downright hard,' she wrote in Scientific American (May 1998). 'I had to put on a ... Continue reading

ExercisingInSpace

The Great Permian Extinction

PermianExtinctionMore than 250 million years ago, when the current continents formed a single land mass, known as the Pangea and there was one super-ocean called Panthalassa, something extraordinary happened. Nearly all life on Earth was wiped out. Over 90% of all marine species and over 70% of terrestrial species went extinct; only their fossils remained to tell us the story.

This so-called Great Permian Extinction, or Great Dying, marked the end of the Permian period and the beginning of the Triassic period in the natural history of the Earth. It was the most devastating extinction, shadowing even the Cretaceous-Tertiary one 65 million years ago when a giant meteor hit the Earth and caused the extinction of the Dinosaurs. Most species, however, did not disappear from the face of the Earth over-night. There was a gradual dying-off over thousands or even millions of years.

The Trilobites, for example, were extremely successful marine life forms at the time. In total, over 150 families and 15,000 species of these hard-shelled, thumb-sized creatures existed. The number of families, as you can see from the plot in the image, started dying off about 450 million years ago. The last remaining family of Trilobites however disappeared abruptly about 250 million years ago. A similar pattern can be seen in the extinction of some other species as well. So what could have caused this? Scientists believe it was a combination of volcanic activity spilling out tons of dust and greenhouse gases into the atmosphere and into the ocean; and then a meteor, the size of Mount Everest, hitting the Earth and spilling massive amounts of sulfur-related compounds into the ocean. What a way to go: first you get suffocated, poisoned and burned for thousands or millions of years, just to be finished off with a big sulfur-carrying meteor. Hell of Earth.