|
|
Jul 18, 2008
Acid rain is rain or any other
form of precipitation which is unusually acidic. It has dangerous effects on
the environment and on structures. It is mostly caused by emissions due to
human activity of sulfur and nitrogen compounds which respond in the atmosphere
to produce acids. In recent years, many governments have introduced laws to lessen
these emissions. Both lower pH and higher aluminum concentration in the surface
water that occur as a result of acid rain can cause damage to fish and other
aquatic animals. At pHs lower than 5 most of the fish eggs would not hatch and
lower pHs can kill adult fish. As lakes become more acidic biodiversity is also
reduced. Soil biology can be critically damaged by acid rain. Some tropical
microbes can quickly consume acids but other microbes are incapable to tolerate
low pHs and are killed. The enzymes of these microbes are denatured by the
acid. The hydronium ions of acid rain also mobilize toxins and filter away
essential nutrients and minerals
Posted at 03:56 am by littlebooster
Permalink
Apr 17, 2008
The
coconut palm is grown throughout the tropical world, for decoration as well as
for its many cooking and non-culinary uses, virtually every part of the coconut
palm has some human use.The flowers of the coconut palm are polygamomonoecious,
with both male and female flowers in the similar inflorescence. Flowering
occurs continuously, with female plants producing seeds. Coconut palms are
believed to be largely cross-pollinated, although some dwarf varieties are
self-pollinating. Coconut water can be used as an intravenous fluid.
Nearly
all parts of the coconut palm are useful, and the palms have a comparatively
high yield, it therefore has important economic value. The name for the coconut
palm in Sanskrit is kalpa vriksha, which translates as the tree which provides
all the requirements of life. In Malay, the coconut is known as pokok seribu
guna, the tree of a thousand uses. In the Philippines, the coconut is generally
given the title Tree of Life. The white, fleshy part of the seed is safe to eat
and used fresh or dried in cooking.
Posted at 03:19 pm by littlebooster
Permalink
Mar 13, 2008
Dreams are the images, thoughts and feelings experienced
while sleeping, particularly strongly associated with swift eye movement sleep.
The contents and purpose of dreams are not fully silent, though they have been
a topic of gossip and interest throughout recorded history. There is no universally granted biological definition of
dreaming. General examination shows that dreams are strongly associated with
rapid eye movement (REM) sleep, during which an electroencephalogram shows
brain commotion to be most like restiveness. Participant-remembered dreams
during non-REM sleep are normally more humdrum in comparison. During a typical
lifespan, a human spends a total of about six years dreaming. It is unknown
where in the brain dreams instigate, if there is a single origin for dreams or
if multiple portions of the brain are involved, or what the purpose of dreaming
is for the body or mind.
When the body decides that it is time to sleep, neurons near
the eyes start to send signals throughout the body. According to Michael Smith,
these neurons are located in such close propinquity to neurons that control
eyelid big physique that the eyelids begin to grow deep. Glands begin to
secrete a hormone that helps induce sleep and neurons send signals to the
spinal flex which make the body relax.
Posted at 02:14 pm by littlebooster
Permalink
Mar 10, 2008
Cricket is a bat-and-ball sport contested by two teams, typically
of eleven players each. A cricket match is played on a meadow field, roughly
oval in shape, in the centre of which is a flat strip of ground 22 yards (20.12
m) long, called a cricket ground. A wicket, usually made of lumber, is placed
at each end of the pitch.
The bowler, a player from the fielding team, bowls a hard,
fist-sized cricket ball from the locality of one wicket towards the other. The
ball usually bounces once before reaching the batsman, a player from the
opposing team. In defence of the wicket, the batsman plays the ball with a
wooden cricket bat. Meanwhile, the other members of the bowler's team stand in
various positions around the field as fielders, players who retrieve the ball
in an crack to stop the batsman scoring runs, and if possible to get him or her
out. The batsman — if he or she does not get out — may run between the wickets,
exchanging ends with a second batsman, who has been waiting near the bowler's
wicket. Each completed exchange of ends scores one run. Runs are also scored if
the batsman hits the ball to the boundary of the playing area. The match is won
by the team that scores more runs.
Cricket has been an established team sport for hundreds of
years and is thought to be the second most popular sport in the world. More
than 100 countries are affiliated to the International Cricket Council,
cricket's international governing body. The sport's modern form originated in England,
and is most popular in the present and former members of the Commonwealth. In
many countries including India,
Pakistan, Bangladesh,
Sri Lanka and Australia,
cricket is the most popular sport. It is also a major sport in England, New
Zealand, South Africa, Zimbabwe and the English-speaking countries of the
Caribbean, which are collectively known in cricketing vernacular as the West
Indies. Many countries also have well-established amateur club competitions,
including the Netherlands,
Kenya, Nepal
and Argentina.
Posted at 02:22 pm by littlebooster
Permalink
Feb 19, 2008
An election is a resolution making process where a people
chooses an individual to hold official offices. This is the usual method by
which modern egalitarianism fills offices in the parliament, sometimes in the
executive and magistrates, and for regional and local government. This is also
typically the case in a wide range of other private and business organizations,
from clubs to charitable associations and corporations. However, as Montesquieu
points out in Book II, Chapter 2 of "The Spirit of Laws," in the case
of elections in either a republic or a democracy, voters alternate between
being the rulers of the country as well as being the subjects of the
government, with the act of voting being the independent (or ruling) capacity,
in which the people act as "masters" selecting their government
"servants." Rather, the unique character of democracies and republics
is the appreciation that the only legitimate source of power for government
"of the people, by the people, and for the people" is the consent of
the governed—the people themselves.
The general acceptance of elections as a tool for selecting
representatives in modern democracies is in distinction with the practice in
the democratic archetype, ancient Athens,
where elections were considered an oligarchic institution and where most
political offices were filled using sortition, also known as allotment, where
officeholders are chosen by lot.
Electoral reform describes the process of introducing fair
electoral systems where they are not in place, or improving the fairness or efficiency
of existing systems. Psephology is the study of results and other statistics
relating to elections.
Posted at 03:11 pm by littlebooster
Permalink
Feb 11, 2008
Beauty is commonly defined as a distinctive present in a
person, place, object or idea that provides a perceptual experience of delight,
meaning or satisfaction to the mind or to the eyes, arising from sensory
manifestations such as a shape, color, persona, sound, design or rhythm. Beauty
is studied as part of aesthetics, sociology, social psychology and culture.
Beauty, as a cultural creation, is also tremendously commercialized.
The subjective experience of "beauty" often
involves the elucidation of some entity as being in balance and concord with
nature, which may lead to feelings of attraction and emotional well-being.
"Beauty is in the eye of the beholder" is a common idiom attributed
to this concept.
In its most profound sense, beauty may provoke a relevant
experience of positive reflection about the meaning of one's own existence. An
"object of beauty" is anything that reveals or resonates with
personal meaning. Hence sacred and moral teachings often focus on the religion
and virtue of beauty, and to assert natural beauty as an aspect of a mysticism
and truth.
Posted at 10:26 am by littlebooster
Permalink
Jan 30, 2008
Nature, in the broadest wisdom, is the natural world,
physical universe, material world or material universe. Nature is the phenomena
of the physical world, and life in general. artificial objects and human
interaction are not considered part of nature except qualified in ways such as
"human nature" or "the whole of nature". Nature is
generally notable from the supernatural.
The word nature is derived from the Latin word natura, or "the course of
things, natural character. Natura was a Latin translation of the Greek word
physis, which originally related to the intrinsic character that plants,
animals, and other features of the world develop of their own accord. The
concept of nature as a whole, the physical universe, is one of several
expansions of the original notion; it began with certain core applications of
the word by pre-Socratic philosophers, and has gradually gained currency ever
since. This usage was confirmed during the advent of modern scientific method
in the last several centuries.
Within the various uses of the word today, "nature" may refer to the
general realm of various types of living plants and animals, and in some cases
to the processes connected with dead objects – the way that meticulous types of
things exist and change of their own accord, such as the weather and geology of
the Earth, and the matter and energy of which all these things are composed. It
is often taken to mean the "natural environment" or wilderness – wild
animals, rocks, forest, beaches, and in general those things that have not been
to a large extent altered by human intervention, or which persist despite human
intervention. This more traditional concept of natural things which can still
be found today implies a distinction between the natural and the artificial,
with the latter being understood as that which has been brought into being by a
human or human-like perception or mind.
Posted at 02:40 pm by littlebooster
Permalink
Jan 19, 2008
A laptop computer, or simply laptop, is a small mobile computer, which usually weighs 2-18 pounds (1-6 kilograms), depending on mass, materials, and other factors. Laptops usually run on a single main battery or from an external AC/DC adapter which can blame the battery while also supplying power to the processor itself. Many computers also have a 3 volt cell to run the clock and other processes in the occurrence of a power failure.
As personal computers, laptops are skilled of the same tasks as a desktop computer, although they are classically less powerful for the similar price. They contain components that are similar to their desktop counterparts and perform the same functions, but are miniaturized and optimized for mobile use and capable power consumption. Laptops usually have liquid crystal displays and most of them use unusual memory modules for their chance access memory (RAM), for instance, SO-DIMM in lieu of the superior DIMMs. In addition to a built-in keyboard, they may utilize a touchpad or a pointing stick for input, though an outside keyboard or mouse can frequently be attached.
Posted at 08:37 am by littlebooster
Permalink
Dec 29, 2007
Science refers to
any systematic knowledge or practice. In a more restricted sense, science
refers to a system of acquiring knowledge based on the scientific method, as
well as to the organized body of knowledge gained through such research. This
article focuses on the more restricted use of the word.
Fields
of science are commonly classified along two major lines:
·
Natural sciences, which study natural phenomena
(including biological life), and
·
Social sciences, which study human behavior and
societies.
These groupings are empirical sciences, which mean the
knowledge must be based on observable phenomena and capable of being
experimented for its validity by other researchers working under the same
conditions.
Posted at 12:39 pm by littlebooster
Permalink
Dec 19, 2007
The
papaya is a fruit of the tree. It is a small tree, the single stem growing from
5 to 10 m tall, with spirally set leaves confined to the top of the trunk, the
lower trunk is obviously scarred where leaves and fruit were borne. The leaves
are large, 50-70 cm width, deeply palmately lobed with 7 lobes. The tree is
typically unbranched if unlopped. The flowers are similar in shape to the
flowers of the Plumeria but are much slighter and wax like. They appear on the
axils of the leaves, maturing into the large 15-45 cm long and 10-30 cm
diameter fruit. The fruit is ripe when it feels soft and its skin has attained
amber to orange hue. The fruit's taste is vaguely similar to pineapple and
peach, although much milder without the tartness, creamier, and more fragrant,
with a texture of a little over-ripened cantaloupe.
The
primary use of the papaya is as an safe to eat fruit. The ripe fruit is
generally eaten raw, without the skin or seeds. The unripe green fruit of
papaya can be eaten ripe, usually in curries, salads and stews.
Posted at 02:18 pm by littlebooster
Permalink
|
|
|