Look At These Gorgeous Bronchial Cartilage Cells!

Look At These Gorgeous Bronchial Cartilage Cells!

look at these gorgeous bronchial cartilage cells!

More Posts from We-are-all-paranoid and Others

3 years ago

There's a really common type of DNA analysis called BLAST and so a lot of time it's like,,,, "yeah I blasted the sample" etc etc

So today one of the kids in my class is like! Oh this is just like the Danny Devito meme!!!!

And I-

There's A Really Common Type Of DNA Analysis Called BLAST And So A Lot Of Time It's Like,,,, "yeah I

...Yes. Exactly like the Danny Devito meme.

3 years ago
A Tiger Bursting To Freedom After Being Rescued From A Poacher’s Snare In The Russian Far East.

A tiger bursting to freedom after being rescued from a poacher’s snare in the Russian Far East.


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3 years ago
Stop The Ban On Blood Donation Of Gay Men

Stop the ban on blood donation of gay men

6 months ago
Hey... What The Fuck???
Hey... What The Fuck???

Hey... what the fuck???

So I read the article, and this is super cool. Basically what happened is that they let a drop of butyl alcohol out from a syringe onto the surface of another liquid, and it just... hung out there? For a very significant amount of time, too. In the past, this type of "droplet levitation" has only lasted a few milliseconds max, but this droplet was staying levitated without any external forces applied for tens of minutes.

The reason this happens is because of Solutocapilllary convection, which as far as I can tell essentially boosts the surface tension of that one spot in the underlying liquid using vapor molecules, so that the butyl alcohol molecule can't sink in.

Also, the reason why I specified that the reason this was cool is because it was done without external forces is that APPARENTLY we've been able to levitate things using sound waves since like... the 1930s. And it makes sense that you can do that, in principle, but it still looks absolutely wild to see.

Hey... What The Fuck???
2 years ago

Reminder that the "fittest" in "survival of the fittest" does not mean "strongest/most violent".

It refers to an animal that is best fitted to thriving in a given ecological niche. A fit animal is one that is successful at the tasks of finding food food and water, avoiding predators, and reproducing, by whatever means work best for their situation.


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3 years ago
Vitamin Sea, If You Will

vitamin sea, if you will

6 months ago
A colored line drawing of Tetracynodon, an extinct relative of early mammals, in a sitting pose. It has a somewhat badger-like body covered in short fur, with fairly slender limbs ending in paws with long claws. Its head resembles a long-snouted lizard with large eyes. It's depicted with brown-and-tan coloration.

Therocephalians were a group of synapsids very closely related to – or possibly even ancestral to – the lineage leading to modern mammals. They were a diverse and successful group of carnivores during the latter half of the Permian, but suffered massively during the "Great Dying" mass extinction, with only a handful of representatives making it a few million years into the Triassic.

Tetracynodon darti was one of these rare Triassic therocephalian survivors, living in what is now South Africa around 251 million years ago. Only about 25cm long (~10"), it had slender limbs and strong claws that suggest it was a scratch-digger. Its long snout was lined with pointed teeth, and it was probably an active predator hunting by snapping its jaws at fast-moving prey like insects and smaller vertebrates.

Its combination of small size, burrow-digging habits, and unspecialized diet may be the reason it scraped through the Great Dying when most of its relatives didn't – but unfortunately it seems to have been a "dead clade walking", disappearing only a short way into early Triassic deposits.

———

NixIllustration.com | Tumblr | Patreon

References:

Fontanarrosa, Gabriela, et al. "The manus of Tetracynodon (Therapsida: Therocephalia) provides evidence for survival strategies following the Permo-Triassic extinction." Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 38.4 (2018): 1-13. https://doi.org/10.1080/02724634.2018.1491404

Sigurdsen, Trond, et al. "Reassessment of the morphology and paleobiology of the therocephalian Tetracynodon darti (Therapsida), and the phylogenetic relationships of Baurioidea." Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 32.5 (2012): 1113-1134. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/254315180_Reassessment_of_the_Morphology_and_Paleobiology_of_the_Therocephalian_Tetracynodon_Darti_Therapsida_And_The_Phylogenetic_Relationships_of_Baurioidea

Wikipedia contributors. “Tetracynodon” Wikipedia, 21 Aug. 2024, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tetracynodon

Wikipedia contributors. “Therocephalia” Wikipedia, 01 Oct. 2024, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Therocephalia

3 years ago
“Culture”-ally Stimulating Art. Even Mold Can Be Beautiful… 

“Culture”-ally stimulating art. Even mold can be beautiful… 

by microbiologist Antoine Bridier-Nahmias

via Magical Contamination 

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  • we-are-all-paranoid
    we-are-all-paranoid reblogged this · 1 year ago
we-are-all-paranoid - microbe nerd alert
microbe nerd alert

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