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The Touching Brain

Our brain and skin are initially part of the same primitive formation during prenatal development, but they are separated during the process of neurogenesis (the embroyo's production of brain cells). Thus, in a sense, our skin is the 'other half' of our brain. This, perhaps, explains why at nearly all stages of life, one learns a great deal about ...

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TheTouchingBrain
Physics

Somewhere Over Which Rainbow?

How many rainbows are there really when we only see one during a rainstorm? The answer isn't as simple as you might think! Rainbows are formed when light enters a water droplet, reflects once inside ... Continue reading

DoubleRainbow
Biology

Do Blind People Dream?

Dreams are a universal feature of the human mind. Carl Jung even believed that visions in our dreams offer glimpses into universal archetypes, instinctive primordial images deriving from a collective ... Continue reading

DoBlindPeopleDream
Mathematics

Math On the Mind

In the mid-1800's, Paul Broca discovered that there were specialized functions for different regions in the human brain. He identified the third gyrus (the ridges on the surface of the cerebral ... Continue reading

MathMind
Chemistry

What Is The Periodic Table?

The periodic table of the elements is a representation of all known elements in an orderly array. The periodic law presented by Dmitri Mendeleev in 1869 stated that if the (known) elements are ... Continue reading

WhatIsThePeriodicTable

Luck Of The Irish?

LuckOfTheIrishIn the 1800s many Irish were poor tenant farmers who farmed mainly for the landowner and relied on small plots for their own food. Because high yields of potatoes could be obtained from these small plots, this was their main source of food. In other European countries, small farmers grew other high yielding crops like parsnips and cabbage and were not as dependent on a single crop as were the Irish. In 1843, late blight, a potato disease that was taken to Europe from South America along with the potato, attacked potato fields throughout Europe and outbreaks of the disease were repeated in 1844 and 1845.

Not only did the blighted potato vines produce fewer potatoes, but those that were harvested rotted in storage. As a result of their dependence on the potato, a million Irish died from starvation and related health problems, and another million or more left Ireland for other countries, many coming to the America.

Late blight is caused by a 'water mold' fungus (Oomycete) and is favored by cool, wet weather. The fungus can carry over from one season to the next as resting spores in the soil, but more commonly as fungus threads (mycelium) in diseased potato tubers. The disease commonly starts in cull piles where infected potatoes are dumped or in diseased potatoes left in the field after harvest. Late blight still is a problem at times in various places, but outbreaks of the disease are not the threat they once were. This is because effective fungicides are available, and agriculture is now highly diversified with many kinds of crops being grown.