Archive for May 6th, 2008

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One of a Kind

Tuesday, May 6th, 2008

If you are reading this, then you are a member of the human race.

You are a member of Kingdom Animalia, meaning you are multicellular, but, unlike plants, your cells do not have a cell wall. You are a member of Phylum Chordata, meaning you have a central nervous system, and Subphylum Vertebrata, meaning you also have a backbone to protect your dorsal nerve cord.

Your warm bloodedness and mammary glands put you in Class Mammalia. Your Subclass, Placentalia, means you were fully gestated inside your mother before birth, as opposed to being grown in a pouch like kangaroos.


Modern and fossil hominid skulls

Modern and fossil hominid skulls:
modern chimp in the upper left-hand corner, then a
chronologic sequence of hominids ending with modern humans.

Image courtesy NSF
(Click for Larger Image)

Like other members of the Order Primates, you have grasping hands, fingers, and both incisors and molars for teeth. Being in the Family Hominidae, you stand upright, have a large brain, stereoscopic vision, and a flat face. Your Genus, Homo, defines you as having an s-curved spine, and your Species, Homo Sapiens, means you have a well-developed chin and high forehead, which provides room for your brain’s frontal lobe, giving you cognitive ability to imagine the future and plan ahead.

There are presently 6.5 Billion beings in this club we call the Human Race. Even though we all share this taxonomic classification, we still exhibit a tremendous amount of diversity in our genes. Unless you have an identical twin, the chances of someone else having the exact same DNA sequence as you is 1 in 6 million, meaning there are in the area of 1083 people on this planet genetically identical to you.

Despite sharing this identical internal genetic code, known as your genotype, your outward expression of this code, your phenotype, is very different. Our DNA gives our bodies a great deal of plasticity when it comes to growing into our environments. All sorts of environmental factors, such as nutrition, climate, your mother’s womb, and physical experiences have all made your personal DNA expression unique.

Even if your genes did express themselves in the exact same way, as they almost do in identical twins, your personal experiences would be unique. Only you occupy the precise space and time in which you currently exist. No one else can occupy your space-time coordinates, and experience the world the way you do.

You will glimpse less than a century of the Universe’s projected googolplex years of life in your own lifetime (one followed by 100 zeros). The atoms that currently make up your body, atoms forged in the centers of stars millions of light years away and billions of years ago, will disassemble. Some of these will find their way into other living things, all of them will continue to venture throughout the Universe in one form or another until the end of time.

But nothing exactly like you will ever experience this Universe the way you are now. You are the Universe observing itself in this momentary flash of consciousness. Savor it.

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Science Etcetera, Marsday 20080506

Tuesday, May 6th, 2008
  • Be one of the first 10,000 people to register as a bone marrow donor, and the registration is free (as in BEER (except you’re signing up to save someone’s life)).
  • This electrical storm on Saturn has been going on since November 2007:

  • Persistent Electrical Storm on Saturn

    Persistent Electrical Storm on Saturn
    Cassini Imaging Team, SSI, JPL, ESA, NASA
  • Beauty is an inappropriately-named Bald Eagle that had her upper beak shot off, now conservationists are getting ready to equip her with a prosthetic one.
  • Loosing or gaining weight only effects the amount of fat stored in fat cells, the number of fat cells you have is set when you’re an adolescent. There are skeptics of this research conclusion.
  • From the guy who brought you monster.com, comes social networking for the dead.
  • How water forms in space.
  • Volvo has set out to build an injury-proof car by 2020.
  • Writers for the show Lost agonize over the science that goes into it, and then leave much of it on the cutting room floor to maintain the mystery.
  • Pollution makes men more likely to go bald.
  • A list of people who physicians will let die in the event of a pandemic has some wondering if it violates laws against age and disability discrimination. What do you think?
  • Available in the United States in July, Isabella Rossellini takes a very artsy and funny look at sex in the insect world with Green Porno. Check out how wildlife gets busy in your backyard (more videos at the site):