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Genome Mapping: A Guide To The Genetic Highway We Call The Human Genome

Imagine you're in a car driving down the highway to visit an old friend who has just moved to Los Angeles. Your favorite tunes are playing on the radio, and you haven't a care in the world. You stop to check your maps and realize that all you have are interstate highway maps--not a single street map of the area. How will you ever find your friend's ...

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GenomeMappingHumanGenome
Geology

Hurricanes, The Basics

There is nothing like them in the atmosphere. Born in warm tropical waters, these spiraling masses require a complex combination of atmospheric processes to grow, mature, and then die. They are not ... Continue reading

HurricanesTheBasics
Biology

Vibrational Energy

Why is hearing such a rich and powerful sense? Maybe because it alone of all the senses has the power to fill our entire body with vibrational energy. We sometimes think of hearing as one of the ... Continue reading

VibrationalEnergy
Geology

How Much Water in an Inch of Snow?

If the snowfall amounts were translated into equivalent volumes of water - then how much water would that be? Using a rule of thumb that each 10 inches of snow, if melted, would produce one inch of ... Continue reading

HowMuchWaterinanInchofSnow
Geology

Types of Volcanoes

Geologists describe four types of volcanoes. Cinder cones, the simplest of volcanoes, grow as pieces of congealed lava rise from a central vent and form a funnel-shaped crater. Lava domes arise from ... Continue reading

TypesofVolcanoes

Palm Trees and Prickly Pears

PalmTreesandPricklyPearsIf you drive around Southern California you'll see a lot of palm trees and prickly pear cacti. If you drive around Southern Spain you will too! How did it happen that two places an ocean apart have the same desert plants? The Prickly Pear Cactus, known to scientists as 'Opuntia', is native to the American Southwest and Mexico. In Mexico they are called 'nopales'. They are the most widespread cactus in North America, found all over the Southwest and deep into Mexico. The state of Texas recently named the prickly pear as the state fruit! The fruits are shaped like pears, hence the name, and are edible once you peel off the prickly skin. Texas ranchers feed the found, flat stems to their cattle (after scorching off the thorns).

In Spain they are called 'chumberas'. How did they get across the Atlantic Ocean? The Spaniards who discovered and colonized Mexico and Southern California in the 16th Century brought some back to Spain, where they have flourished in the similar hot, dry climate. The palm trees traveled in the opposite direction. The Moors who conquered Spain in 711 AD brought date palms from North Africa over 1000 years ago and developed a highly successful system of cultivating them. Some of these palm groves survive today, especially around the city of Elche in Southern Spain.

In the 18th Century the spanish missionaries who ran the missions along the California coast brought date seeds to the new world. The Southern California desert turned out to be ideal for commercial date gardens (as in Spain, they must be irrigated). Now Southern California produces over 30 million pounds of dates every zear, 95% of all the dates grown in the U.S. How's that for a trade? The New World sent the prickly pear cactus to Spain, and Spain sent the date palm to the New World.