Sunday, April 7, 2013

World powers and Iran start second day of nuclear talks

ALMATY (Reuters) - World powers and Iran started the second day of nuclear talks on Saturday with little hope of striking a quick deal in the long-standing dispute that threatens to erupt into war.

Negotiators failed to narrow their differences in talks on Friday, which followed a round of negotiations in February, also in Kazakhstan's commercial hub, Almaty.

The six nations - the United States, Russia, China, France, Britain and Germany - suspect Iran's nuclear program has the covert aim of giving Tehran the capability to make an atom bomb.

The Islamic Republic denies it is seeking nuclear weapons and says it wants nuclear power for electricity generation and medical purposes.

(Reporting by Justyna Pawlak and Yeganeh Torbati; Editing by Alison Williams)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/world-powers-iran-start-second-day-nuclear-talks-060435367.html

PlayStation 4 michael jordan Safe Haven Robbie Rogers WWE Rita Ora Meteor Russia

Afghan attacks kill U.S. diplomat, soldiers, others

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan (Reuters) - A car bomb blast killed five Americans, including three U.S. soldiers and a young diplomat, on Saturday, while an American civilian died in a separate attack in the east.

The diplomat and other Americans were in a convoy of vehicles in Zabul province when the blast occurred, Secretary of State John Kerry said in a statement.

The soldiers and the diplomat died in the blast along with a civilian employee of the Defense Department and Afghan civilians, Kerry said. His statement gave no overall death toll.

The Washington Post identified the diplomat as Anne Smedinghoff, 25, citing her parents. Smedinghoff was Kerry's embassy guide and aide when he visited Afghanistan last month, the paper said.

Local and international officials in the region said earlier that six people died in the blast: three U.S. soldiers, two U.S. civilians and an Afghan doctor.

Provincial governor Mohammad Ashraf Nasery was in the convoy, but was unharmed, local and NATO officials said.

"Our American officials and their Afghan colleagues were on their way to donate books to students in a school in Qalat, the province's capital, when they were struck by this despicable attack," Kerry said in his statement.

He said he had met the diplomat during a trip to Kabul, and spoke to her parents after her death. Four other U.S. diplomats were wounded, one critically, Kerry said in his statement.

The convoy was near a hospital and a NATO base at the time of the explosion. Five Afghans, including a student and two reporters, were wounded, a local official said.

The attack came as the top U.S. general, Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, arrived in the country for a short visit to assess how much training Afghan troops need before U.S. troops pull out as planned by the end of 2014.

In an attack in Afghanistan's east, an American civilian working with the U.S. government was killed during an insurgent attack, the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force said in a statement.

Zabul shares borders with Pakistan to the southeast and Kandahar province, the birthplace of the Taliban, to the south.

The Taliban claimed responsibility for the Zabul attack in a text message from spokesman Qari Yousuf Ahmadi. He said a car bomb killed seven foreigners and wounded five others, although he later revised the toll to 13 foreigners killed and nine wounded.

The Taliban routinely exaggerates casualty figures.

The killings followed a bloody Taliban assault in the country's west on Wednesday that killed 44 people in a courtroom in Farah province. The United Nations says civilians are being increasingly targeted.

In a statement posted online earlier on Saturday, Ahmadi said the Taliban would continue to target Afghan judges and prosecutors.

"The Islamic Emirate, from today onwards, will keep a close watch over courthouses, all its personnel and all those who try to harm Mujahideen and will deal with them the same as the judges and prosecutors of Farah."

(Reporting by Ismail Sameem, additional reporting by Paul Eckert; Writing by Dylan Welch and Diane Bartz; Editing by Doina Chiacu and Xavier Briand)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/afghan-attacks-kill-u-diplomat-soldiers-others-021108162.html

jason wu for target collection nick diaz vs carlos condit the patriot hall of fame occupy dc ufc 143 fight card my fair lady

New light shed on ancient Egyptian port and ship graveyard

Apr. 7, 2013 ? New research into Thonis-Heracleion, a sunken port-city that served as the gateway to Egypt in the first millennium BC, will be discussed at an international conference at the University of Oxford (15-17 March).

This obligatory port of entry, known as 'Thonis' by the Egyptians and 'Heracleion' by the Greeks, was where seagoing ships probably unloaded their cargoes to have them assessed by temple officials and taxes extracted before transferring them to Egyptian ships that went upriver. Before the foundation of Alexandria, it was one of the biggest commercial hubs in the Mediterranean because of its geographical position at the mouth of the Nile. The conference will also explore the wider maritime trading economy during the Late Period (664 BC until 332 BC).

The first traces of Thonis-Heracleion were found 6.5 kilometres off today's coastline by the European Institute for Underwater Archaeology (IEASM) under the direction of Franck Goddio in 2000. The Oxford Centre for Maritime Archaeology at the University of Oxford is collaborating on the project with IEASM in cooperation with Egypt's Ministry of State for Antiquities.

In the ports of the city, divers and researchers are currently examining 64 Egyptian ships, dating between the eighth and second centuries BC, many of which appear to have been deliberately sunk. The project researchers say the ships were found beautifully preserved, lying in the mud of the sea-bed. With 700 examples of different types of ancient anchor, the researchers believe this represents the largest nautical collection from the ancient world.

'The survey has revealed an enormous submerged landscape with the remains of at least two major ancient settlements within a part of the Nile delta that was crisscrossed with natural and artificial waterways,' said Dr Damian Robinson, Director of the Oxford Centre for Maritime Archaeology at the University of Oxford. Dr Robinson, who is overseeing the excavation of one of the submerged ships known as Ship 43, will discuss his first findings about the Egyptians' unique shipbuilding style. He will also shed new light on why the boats appear to have been deliberately sunk.

'One of the key questions is why several ship graveyards were created close to the port. Ship 43 appears to be part of a large cluster of at least ten other vessels in a large ship graveyard about a mile from the mouth of the River Nile,' explained Dr Robinson. 'This might not have been simple abandonment, but a means of blocking enemy ships from gaining entrance to the port-city. Seductive as this interpretation is, however, we must also consider whether these boats were sunk simply to use them for land reclamation purposes.'

The port and its harbour basins also contain a collection of customs decrees, trading weights, and evidence of coin production. The material culture, for example, coin weights, will also be discussed at the conference, placing this into the wider narrative of how maritime trade worked in the ancient world.

Elsbeth van der Wilt, working on the project from the University of Oxford, said: 'Thonis-Heracleion played an important role in the network of long-distance trade in the Eastern Mediterranean, since the city would have been the first stop for foreign merchants at the Egyptian border. Excavations in the harbour basins yielded an interesting group of lead weights, likely to have been used by both temple officials and merchants in the payment of taxes and the purchasing of goods. Amongst these are an important group of Athenian weights. They are a significant archaeological find because it is the first time that weights like these have been identified during excavations in Egypt.'

Sanda Heinz from the University of Oxford will share her findings on over 300 statuettes and amulets from the Late and Ptolemaic Periods, including Egyptian and Greek subjects. The majority depict Egyptian deities such as Osiris, Isis, and their son Horus. She said: 'The statuettes and amulets were all found underwater, and are generally in excellent condition. The statuettes allow us to examine their belief system and at the same time have wider economic implications. These figures were mass-produced at a scale hitherto unmatched in previous periods. Our findings suggest they were made primarily for Egyptians; however, there is evidence to show that some foreigners also bought them and dedicated them in temples abroad.'

Franck Goddio, Director of the European Institute of Underwater Archaeology and Visiting Senior Lecturer in Maritime Archaeology at the Oxford Centre for Maritime Archaeology, commented: 'The discoveries we have made in Thonis-Heracleion since 2000 thanks to the work of a multidisciplinary team and the support of the Hilti Foundation are encouraging. Charts of the city's monuments, ports and channels are taking shape more clearly and further crucial information is gathered each year. The conference at Oxford University will present interesting results and might bring new clues and insights of the fascinating history of Thonis-Heracleion."

Franck Goddio will make a comprehensive presentation of the sacred topography of Thonis-Heracleion resulting from12 years of archaeological works on site.

Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

Other social bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Oxford.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/rIiuuqPJuBg/130407150740.htm

honduras prison fire do not call list sports illustrated westminster dog show 2012 words with friends words with friends phlebotomy

Saturday, April 6, 2013

Hallucinations of musical notation

Apr. 4, 2013 ? Professor of neurology, physician, and author Oliver Sacks M.D. has outlined case studies of hallucinations of musical notation, and commented on the neural basis of such hallucinations, in a new paper for the neurology journal Brain.

In this paper, Dr Sacks is building on work done by Dominic ffytche et al in 2000 [i], which delineates more than a dozen types of hallucinations, particularly in relation to people with Charles Bonnet syndrome (a condition that causes patients with visual loss to have complex visual hallucinations). While ffytche believes that hallucinations of musical notation are rarer than some other types of visual hallucination, Sacks says that his own experience is different.

"Perhaps because I have investigated various musical syndromes," writes Dr Sacks, "and people often write to me about these? I have seen or corresponded with a dozen or more people whose hallucinations include -- and sometimes consist exclusively of -- musical notation."

Sacks goes on to detail eight fascinating case studies of people who have reported experiencing hallucinations of musical notation, including:

  • A 77 year old woman with glaucoma who wrote of her "musical eyes." She saw "music, lines, spaces, notes, clefs -- in fact written music on everything [she] looked at."
  • A surgeon and pianist suffering from macular degeneration, who saw unreadable and unplayable music on a white background.
  • A Sanskrit scholar who developed Parkinson's disease in his 60s and later reported hallucinating ornately-written music, occurring with a Sanskrit script. "Despite the exotic nature of the script the result is still western music," he said.
  • A woman who reported seeing musical notation on her ceiling upon waking in the morning.
  • A woman who said she wasn't a musician, but would hallucinate when she had high fevers as a child. She said that the notes were "angry, and [she] felt unease. The lines and notes were out of control and at times in a ball."

It is striking that, of Dr Sacks' eight case studies, seven were gifted musicians. Sacks comments, "This is perhaps a coincidence, but it makes one wonder whether there is something about musical scores that is radically different from verbal texts." Musical scores are far more visually complex than standard (English) text, with not just a variety of notes, but also many symbols that indicate how the notes should be played.

Dr Sacks also says that he has a mild form of Charles Bonnet syndrome himself, in which he sees a variety of simple forms whenever he gazes at a blank surface. "When I recently returned to playing the piano and to studying scores minutely, I began to 'see' showers of flat signs along with the letters and runes on blank surfaces."

Another striking feature of these hallucinations is that -- like text hallucinations -- they are generally unreadable. They can seem playable at first, but on closer inspection it transpires that the music is often nonsensical or impossible to play, such as an example reported in one of the case studies: a melody line three or more octaves above middle C, and so may have half a dozen or more ledger lines above the treble staff.

Usually, the early visual system analyses forms and sends the information it has extracted to higher areas, where it gains coherence and meaning. Normally, in the act of perception, the entire visual system is engaged. Paradoxically, according to Sacks, "one may have to study disorders of the visual system to see how complex perceptual and cognitive processes are analysed and delegated to different levels? and hallucinations of musical notation can provide a very rich field of study here."

Oliver Sacks is Professor of Neurology at the NYU School of Medicine and Visiting Professor at the University of Warwick.

Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

Other social bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Oxford University Press (OUP), via AlphaGalileo.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. O. Sacks. Hallucinations of musical notation. Brain, 2013; DOI: 10.1093/brain/awt057

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/r_YqfK1lZY0/130404073007.htm

Martin Luther King, Jr. Mlk Quotes Elder Scrolls Online joe biden michelle obama lupe fiasco jason wu

Friday, April 5, 2013

MAKOplasty Procedure Makes Big Strides in Knee Surgery ? The ...

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars Loading ...?Loading ...

Written by Kim O?Brien Root

?

After injuring her knee four years ago, Tonya Higgins tried just about everything in order to avoid replacement surgery.

Arthroscopy helped some, and injections of cortisone and hyaluronic acid, which can serve as a lubricant to help buffer the knee, were only temporary fixes. Doctors even tried injecting plasma from her own platelets into the knee to try and heal it.

But Higgins? knee kept getting worse. It kept the 59-year-old Gloucester veterinarian from going on walks and hindered her volunteer work with homeless animals. Bone ground against bone with every painful step she took.

Then along came MAKOplasty?a type of partial-knee replacement surgery that uses computer- and robot-assisted technology to resurface the joint and install implants in the most precise manner possible. The technique means better results, quicker healing times and sometimes a way to avoid a more complicated total knee replacement.

The surgery was approved by the FDA in 2005, but only recently became available in Hampton Roads thanks to the purchase of new equipment at hospitals on the Peninsula and in South Hampton Roads. A handful of orthopedic surgeons in the region are now performing MAKOplasty surgeries at Mary Immaculate Hospital in Newport News and at Sentara Virginia Beach General Hospital.

There are two kinds of MAKOplasty surgery?partial-knee resurfacing and total hip, which is 10 to 15 percent more precise than traditional total hip replacements. Doctors are being trained in one or both areas. Last year, more than 10,200 MAKOplasty procedures were performed in the United States.

Dr. Peter Jacobson, an orthopedic surgeon with the Virginia Institute for Sports Medicine in Virginia Beach and one of three physicians trained to perform MAKOplasty at Virginia Beach General, calls the technology for the knee procedure in particular ?cutting edge.?

?We?re excited about it,? says Jacobson, adding that people were ready to sign up on the spot at a recent informational session on MAKOplasty at Virginia Beach General. ?It?s going to offer something new to patients.?

MAKOplasty uses a robotic arm and three-dimensional imaging of a patient?s knee to assist surgeons in resurfacing the diseased part of the knee as accurately as possible. The use of the robot arm and real-time feedback on a computer screen allows doctors to watch what they?re doing?and ensures that no mistakes are made.

The surgery still requires the skill and expertise of a trained surgeon, but it takes out any guesswork. For surgeons who might not do as many knee surgeries as others, the robotic assistance can be hugely beneficial, says Dr. Boyd Haynes, an orthopedic surgeon at the Orthopaedic & Spine Center in Newport News.

?For me, I?m very comfortable doing the old style or the MAKOplasty?it doesn?t matter to me,? says Haynes, who?s been an orthopedic surgeon for 28 years. ?With MAKOplasty, you can?t put [the implant] in the wrong place. The robot says, ?You?ll only go there.??

?It?s a great adjunct tool for making a good operation better,? Haynes adds.

The surgery requires only a four- to six-inch incision over the knee, along with small incisions in the femur and tibia to secure probes. The probes, attached to devices that look like small satellite dishes, are then synched with the robotic arm and a computer program that has the patient?s surgery ?plan? stored and ready to put into action. Healthy tissue and bone are preserved while an implant is put in the joint to allow the knee to move smoothly.

? it still feels like your knee. It?s less expensive, it?s more efficient for the hospital, requires less Physical therapy?

Higgins heard about the new surgery after attending an open house at Mary Immaculate Hospital, and on Jan. 8, she went under the knife of Dr. Anthony Carter, one of three surgeons on the Peninsula using MAKOplasty.?

The day of Higgins? surgery, Carter worked with a team of assistants at the operating table while keeping in constant contact with a representative from MAKO Surgical Corp., who stays in the OR to assist from behind the computer.

Once Carter finished chiseling off the irregular bone on the femur and tibia?using an instrument similar to what a dentist might use?he worked trial implants into place to make sure they were the right fit and then manipulated Higgins? knee, bending it back and forth to make sure she had the range of motion he wanted.?

?Perfect,? he declared.

The procedure took just about an hour?about twice as long as a traditional partial-knee replacement. But doctors say the results are worth it. Ten days after the operation, Carter told Higgins he was very pleased.

?It?s got so many benefits all around for the patient,? said Tony Cravin from the MAKO Surgical Corp. ?This lets it still feel like your knee. It?s less expensive, it?s more efficient for the hospital, requires less PT?so better off for health care.?

?More than 4.5 million Americans have had knee replacements, according to a research study presented to the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons last year. And replacement surgeries have more than doubled in the last 10 years, with younger people getting surgeries due to osteoarthritis.

Osteoarthritis, a degenerative joint disease, results in the wearing away and eventual loss of joint cartilage. Without the cushion of cartilage, bones begin rubbing together?when it happens in the knee, walking can be excruciating.

The need for technology in knee surgery is higher than perhaps ever before, doctors say. Studies show there could be a 200-fold increase in the need for knee replacements over the next 10 years, according to Dr. Colin Kingston, an orthopedic surgeon at Tidewater Orthopaedic Associates. Much of that is due to the Baby Boom population reaching their 50s to 70s.

For people in their 40s and 50s, doctors have usually been conservative to do a total knee replacement until the knee was bad enough, choosing instead to try injections and braces in patients who have arthritis in one or two parts of their knees?called uni- or bi-compartmental. Doctors now think MAKOplasty will allow them to treat patients in the earlier stages of the disease.

The procedure also leaves options?although it?s likely a patient will need a total knee replacement down the road, MAKOplasty should let them enjoy life for longer until they get to that point. But with MAKOplasty, all the ligaments remain intact, unlike a total knee replacement that removes the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) and sometimes the posterior cruciate ligament (PCL).

?It might not be their last operation, but it?ll be the only one they need for many years,? Jacobson says.

Sometimes, however, a surgeon will begin the operation only to discover that the knee is more damaged than X-rays and CAT scans showed. If the damage extends beyond one or two parts of the knee, then surgeons likely will have to do a total knee replacement. Higgins had agreed and was prepared for that before she entered the OR, and said she was relieved upon waking from anesthesia.

Jacobson said he sees MAKOplasty being beneficial for two population groups?those in their 40s and 50s who have been dealing with an old injury but aren?t ready for a total knee replacement, and older patients who want something done for their pain without a lengthy recovery time. A total knee replacement can take three times longer to heal than a MAKOplasty replacement.

Last month, Haynes performed MAKOplasty knee surgery on an 80-year-old woman at Mary Immaculate. The woman was kept overnight because of elevated blood pressure, but by the next day, ?the knee wasn?t bothering her,? Haynes says. ?She cleared physical therapy the same day.?

Haynes estimates that he performs 50 to 60 partial knee replacement a year and about 300 total knee replacements. He says he?s hopeful that about half of the people a year who would otherwise face a total knee surgery can instead have the MAKOplasty.

?With every year, there?s more innovation, more things to make things better,? Haynes says. ?We?re doing better things for the patients to make better outcomes.?

As for Higgins, the day after her surgery, she was using a walker. She would have been on her feet the same day, but a reaction from her anesthesia kept her in bed overnight. Within a week, she graduated to a cane. After three weeks, she was driving. Since the day of surgery, all she?s needed for pain is Tylenol.

Two months later, ?I?m pretty back to normal,? says Higgins, the veterinarian in charge of the Animal Resource Foundation?s Spay/Neuter Clinic in Gloucester. She thinks working with sometimes unruly dogs while volunteering at the nearby pound may have led and then exacerbated her knee injury in the first place.

Her knee wasn?t just injured?it was deformed to the point the knee bowed out. She spent four years ?walking very awkwardly,? she says.

Now, her knee is straight. It looks better; it feels better. And she can walk?often with her husband, Gary Rice, and two of their rescue dogs, Cheeser and Carrie?around their neighborhood without pain.

?I?m trying to walk a mile a day,? Higgins says. ?Before, if I walked a tenth of a mile I could have done it, but wouldn?t have chosen to.

?Now, I can choose to go for a walk.?

Share something about this post

comments

Source: http://www.thehealthjournals.com/2013/04/makoplasty/

history channel mila kunis hugo chavez rand paul Iron Man 3 Lauren Silberman Sim City

Kyle Richards to Bravo: Bring Back Taylor Armstrong!

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/04/kyle-richards-to-bravo-bring-back-taylor-armstrong/

brewers matt cain adastra holocaust remembrance day chesapeake energy dick clark death yom hashoah

Thursday, April 4, 2013

Photon 3D Scanner Will Let You Turn Real Objects Into Printable Objects

JulieScan_600pxThe Photon 3D scanner is a self-contained laser scanner that creates point clouds of real objects, allowing you, in turn, to create printable files of things you build or need to copy. It is $399 on Indiegogo and looks amazing. In short, you have no idea how badly I want to order one of these right now.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/6-225hicTN4/

oscar nominees oscar nominations 2012 kombucha tea separation of church and state dale earnhardt oscar predictions nba all star game 2012

Eleanor Of ?Gone in 60 Seconds? Will Cross The Block At Mecum's ...

The Opportunity to Own the Original Movie Hero Car is this May 18 in Indianapolis

Walworth, Wis. ? A true movie star will make its way down Mecum?s signature red carpet this May in Indianapolis. Known by most simply as ?Eleanor,? the modified 1967 Ford Mustang from Touchstone Pictures? ?Gone in 60 Seconds? will cross the block as Lot S135 at Dana Mecum?s 26th Original Spring Classic auction this May 14-19.

This collector car icon piloted in the movie by retired master car thief Memphis Raines, played by Nicholas Cage, is the real McCoy. Several cars were built to handle various duties in the filming of ?Gone,? but this is serial number 7R02C179710, the ?Hero? car driven by Cage during filming and the model used in movie close-ups, posters and promotional materials.

Built by Cinema Vehicle Services with the help of master designer Chip Foose, the body pieces of Eleanor were mocked up on a Mustang using clay and wood. Molds were then made to produce a new fiberglass front end filled with high-powered PIAA driving lights, new fender flares, side skirts and scoops, hood and trunk lid. To give the car big-screen performance, it was treated to a 351/400 HP Ford crate engine, which shares room with a front subframe body brace by Total Control Products, LLC. This progenitor of the Eleanor revolution is relatively untouched inside with the exception of an Autometer Sport Comp Monster tach, fire extinguisher, Go-Baby-Go shift knob button for Line Lock and a switch for activating a nitrous injection system.

?Eleanor has become one of the most widely recognized movie star muscle cars in the world, so when the decision was made to offer the ?Gone in 60 Seconds? Hero car for sale, Mecum?s Spring Classic auction in Indianapolis seemed like the perfect venue,? commented Ray Claridge, owner of Cinema Vehicle Services. Set to be offered directly from the builder on Saturday, May 18 at the original, best and largest muscle car auction, this is truly the car that started it all.

Thirty-two hours of the Indianapolis auction will be broadcast live on Discovery?s Velocity Network with the entire auction streaming live on Mecum?s website at www.mecum.com. Mecum?s Indy auction is open to buyers, sellers and spectators. Gates open at 8 a.m. each day and general admission can be purchased at the door for $20 per person; children 12 and younger will be admitted at no cost. For more information on the auction or to register as a bidder, visit www.mecum.com or call (262) 275-5050.

About Mecum Auctions

Nobody sells more than Mecum. Nobody. The Mecum Auction Company is the world leader of collector car and Road Art sales, hosting auctions throughout the United States. The company has been specializing in the sale of collector cars for 26 years, now offering more than 15,000 vehicles per year and averaging more than one auction each month. Established by President Dana Mecum in 1988, Mecum Auctions remains a family-run company headquartered in Walworth, Wis. For further information, visit www.mecum.com or call (262) 275-5050. Follow along with Mecum?s social media news and join us on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Pinterest and Instagram.

Schedule:

Dana Mecum?s 26th Original Spring Classic auction
Indiana State Fairgrounds
1202 E. 38th St.
Indianapolis, IN 46205

Admission:

$20 per person per day, children 12 and younger admitted free

Preview:

Gates open daily at 8 a.m.

Auction:

Vehicles start at 10 a.m. each day with Road Art 30 minutes prior

Live TV Schedule:

Wednesday-Saturday 1-9 p.m. (All Times Central)

Source: Mecum Auctions

? RM Auctions Offers Distinguished Don Davis Collection Without Reserve | Home | Hot Wheels Chevrolet Camaros Rolling Around Indy As 500 Festival Cars ?

Source: http://www.victorymusclecars.com/?p=11160

a wrinkle in time benjamin netanyahu storm shelters nick lachey chevy volt christina hendricks lifelock

An inside look at carnivorous plants

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

When we imagine drama playing out between predators and prey, most of us picture stealthy lions and restless gazelle, or a sharp-taloned hawk latched on to an unlucky squirrel. But Ben Baiser, a post-doctoral fellow at the Harvard Forest and lead author of a new study in Oikos, thinks on a more local scale. His inter-species drama plays out in the humble bogs and fens of eastern North America, home to the carnivorous pitcher plant, Sarracenia purpurea. "It's shocking, the complex world you can find inside one little pitcher plant," says Baiser.

A pitcher plant's work seems simple: their tube-shaped leaves catch and hold rainwater, which drowns the ants, beetles, and flies that stumble in.

But the rainwater inside a pitcher plant is not just a malevolent dunking pool. It also hosts a complex system of aquatic life, including wriggling mosquito, flesh fly, and midge larvae; mites; rotifers; copepods; nematodes; and multicellular algae. These tiny organisms are crucial to the pitcher plant's ability to process food. They create what scientists call a 'processing chain': when a bug drowns in the pitcher's rainwater, midge larvae swim up and shred it to smaller pieces, bacteria eat the shredded pieces, rotifers eat the bacteria, and the pitcher plant absorbs the rotifers' waste.

But that's not the whole story. Fly larvae are also eating the rotifers, midge larvae, and each other, and everybody eats bacteria. It's a complex food web that shifts on the order of seconds.

Aaron Ellison, a co-author on the new study and senior ecologist at the Harvard Forest, says the pitcher plant food web is an ideal model for understanding larger food webs?with top predators like wolves?that change over a longer period of time. He points out, "With pitcher plants, you can hold the whole food web in your hand. The vast number of pitcher plants in one bog provide endless opportunities for detailed experiments on how food webs work, not only in pitcher plants, but also in bigger ecosystems that are harder to manipulate, like ponds, lakes, or oceans."

With funding from the National Science Foundation, the research team traveled to bogs in British Columbia, Quebec City, and Georgia?the full extent of the plant's range?to analyze the aquatic food webs from 60 pitcher plants. They found 35 different types of organisms inside, with a large contingent of bacteria counting as just one type. Then, says Baiser, "We wanted to know: how did we get different food webs in individual pitchers from the same species pool? What caused these food webs to form the way they did?"

A few well-established scientific models predict how food webs form based on a ranked system of ecosystem factors. For the Oikos study, Baiser and his team checked their real-world observations against those models. He explains: "Say you've got a bunch of lakes. And you've got a big bucket holding all the species that can live in those lakes. When you dump out the bucket, which creatures end up in which lake? What matters more: the size of the lake, or the fact that predator species X is there, too? Or is it random? Those models help us tease those factors apart."

According to the Oikos study, the way pitcher plant food webs assemble is not random. In fact, it seems the predator-prey interactions are of key importance. "You take out one species, and that affects everything else," says Baiser.

###

Harvard University: http://www.harvard.edu

Thanks to Harvard University for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

This press release has been viewed 31 time(s).

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/127565/An_inside_look_at_carnivorous_plants

Mike Rice Jaromir Jagr Daddy Yankee Brian Banks LucasArts Bb&t Maria Sibylla Merian

Weak economic reports send stock market lower

NEW YORK (AP) ? Weak reports on hiring and service industries sent the stock market sharply lower Wednesday, giving the Dow Jones industrial average its worst day in more than a month.

The Dow fell 111.66 points, or 0.8 percent, to 14,550.35, its worst decline since Feb. 25. The Standard & Poor's 500 index dropped 16.56 points, or 1.1 percent, to 1,553.69. Both indexes closed at record highs the day before.

The stock market started 2013 with a rally as investors became more optimistic about the U.S. economy, especially housing and jobs. The reports Wednesday disappointed the market and came two days after news that U.S. manufacturing growth slowed unexpectedly last month.

The losses were widespread. All 10 industry groups in the S&P 500 index fell. Banks and energy stocks had the worst losses, 1.7 percent and 1.6 percent. Utilities, which investors hold when they want to play it safe, fell the least, 0.3 percent.

"The market is overdue for a correction," said Joe Saluzzi at Themis Trading. "I don't think that the economy supports this type of a rally."

Signs of investor skittishness appeared across a number of different markets.

Commodities slumped. Crude oil dropped $2.74, or 2.8 percent, to close at $94.45 a barrel and industrial metals like copper fell.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to 1.81 percent from 1.86 percent, the lowest level for the benchmark rate since January. The decline means investors are moving money into low-risk U.S. government debt.

The Russell 2000 index, which tracks small company stocks, fell for a third straight day, dropping 1.7 percent. It's now down 3.5 percent so far this week, far worse than the declines in the Dow, 0.2 percent, and the S&P, 1 percent. That's another signal that investors may be becoming more bearish about the U.S. economy.

Small company stocks, which did better than the Dow and the S&P 500 in the first three months of the year, are more sensitive to the outlook for the U.S. economy than the larger companies in the Dow and S&P. That's because they rely far more on domestic sales than global giants like IBM and Caterpillar, which sells heavy machinery and construction equipment around the globe.

The Dow Jones Transportation Average, an index of 20 stocks including airlines like Delta and freight companies FedEx and UPS, fell more than 1 percent for a third straight day. The index, which is regarded as a leading indicator for broader market indexes as well as the economy, has fallen 3.9 percent this week, after surging 17.9 percent in the first quarter.

U.S. service companies kept growing at a solid pace in March, but the expansion was less than economists were expecting. The Institute for Supply Management's index of service companies fell to 54.4 from 56 a month earlier. The report was the weakest in seven months.

Separately, payrolls processor ADP reported that U.S. employers added 158,000 jobs last month, down from February's gain of 237,000. The ADP report is often seen as a preview for the government's broader survey on employment, which is due out Friday.

The slowdown in hiring was due in part to construction firms holding back on adding new employees. That sent the stocks of homebuilders lower. PulteGroup fell 85 cent, or 4.3 percent, to $19.01 and D.R. Horton dropped 57 cents to $22.84.

In other trading, the Nasdaq composite fell 36.26 points, or 1.1 percent, to 3,218.60.

Even though stocks started the second quarter lower, markets typically add to their gains after ending the first quarter up, said Sam Stovall, an equity strategist at S&P Capital IQ. Using data going back over more than 60 years, Stovall says that the S&P 500 has gained an average of 9 percent from April to December after rising in the first quarter.

"Investors believe that the economic trajectory is improving," said Stovall. Stocks "do not reflect the true valuations based on where the economy will be at the end of the year."

Among stocks making big moves:

? Zynga rose 46 cents, or 15 percent, to $3.53 after the online game maker said two casino games would debut in the United Kingdom Wednesday.

? Abercrombie & Fitch rose $1.74, or 3.8 percent, to $47.20, making it the biggest percentage gainer in the S&P 500. The company said late Tuesday that it planned to expand internationally and place greater emphasis on cost control.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-04-03-Wall%20Street/id-6c21d71c6d3a4c9faecf733bcedaa045

Robert Morris spring lululemon jon hamm southern university biggest loser TJ Lane