Saturday, February 27, 2010

Just Add Money Makes the American Dream

american_dream_just_add_money1.jpg (JPEG Image, 1614x1146 pixels) - Scaled (42%)
Is it just me, or does the Obama Administration seem to follow this same recipe?  I keep hoping that he can cook up something but I have yet to see anything substantial.  I keep hoping,
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Thursday, February 25, 2010

Newly Identified Dinosaur Species Abydosaurus Mcintoshi Swallowed Food Whole - AOL News

ScienceNewly Identified Dinosaur Swallowed Food WholeUpdated: 15 hours 25 minutes agoPrint Text SizeE-mail MoreJeanna BrynerLiveScience(Feb. 24) --

A mom's wise words about chewing your food likely got lost on a giant, long-necked dinosaur that lived about 105 million years ago in North America. That's according to analyses of four skulls from a newly identified dinosaur species."They didn't chew their food; they just grabbed it and swallowed it," said study team member Brooks Britt, a paleontologist at Brigham Young University.Paleontologists discovered the four skulls, two of which had bones that were fully intact, from a quarry in Dinosaur National Monument in eastern Utah. Now called Abydosaurus mcintoshi, the dinosaur species is a type of sauropod (long-necked plant eaters) and is most closely related to Brachiosaurus, which lived 45 million years earlier.Fossil Finds National Park Service / AP37 photos Previous NextScientists say these skulls, found hidden in slabs of sandstone in Utah, belong to a newly identified species of long-necked dinosaurs: Abydosaurus mcintoshi. The giant, plant-eating dinosaurs lived about 105 million years ago and grabbed and swallowed their food, instead of chewing, according to paleontologists. Click through the gallery to see more amazing discoveries of ancient creatures.
Scientists say these skulls, found hidden in slabs of sandstone in Utah, belong to a newly identified species of long-necked dinosaurs: Abydosaurus mcintoshi. The giant, plant-eating dinosaurs lived about 105 million years ago and grabbed and swallowed their food, instead of chewing, according to paleontologists. Click through the gallery to see more amazing discoveries of ancient creatures.National Park Service / APNational Park Service / APWhile scientists have suggested sauropods didn't chew their food, there hasn't been much hard evidence to examine this premise. Just about 10 percent of the 120-plus sauropod species have been found with complete skulls. And so most of what scientists know about these herbivores comes from the neck down.With the skulls from Abydosaurus, the research team suspects sauropods' small heads, which are just about one two-hundredth the volume of their bodies, might explain why they skipped chewing."If you have a tiny skull and you're trying to feed a big body, you're wasting time if you're trying to process the food in your mouth," said Jeffrey Wilson of the Museum of Paleontology and Department of Geological Sciences at the University of Michigan.That's especially true for sauropods, which are the largest animals to ever plod the earth. Abydosaurus was likely a bit smaller than Brachiosaurus, which stretched more than 65 feet (20 meters) and weighed nearly 20 tons.During the Late Jurassic Period about 150 million years ago, sauropod fossils suggest the beasts sported both broad-crowned and narrow-crowned teeth. That changed by the end of the dinosaur age, when all sauropods likely had narrow, pencil-like teeth.Abydosaurus had teeth that seemed to be in transition from the broad shape to the narrowest ones. And while its teeth were narrower than those of Brachiosaurus, its skull looked pretty much the same.Sauropods also replaced their teeth continually. The narrower the teeth, the more that can be packed into the jaws and the faster they were replaced, Wilson said. Abydosaurus had teeth that were as broad as those that were replaced every two months or so, though the researchers haven't looked at this replacement rate yet.To explain the rapid tooth replacement, Wilson says Abydosaurus may have been snagging abrasive foods. In addition, the dinosaurs may have been low browsers, where they would pick up sediment and other silica-containing material that can wear down teeth quickly.Like Brachiosaurus and other sauropods, Abydosaurus didn't have any of the traits present in savvy plant-eating dinosaurs."For some reason, sauropods don't develop any of the tricks that other dinosaurs developed for eating plants," Wilson told LiveScience. For instance, Triceratops and some duck-billed dinosaurs have pointed beaks to help cut vegetation. They also had cheeks, like us, where they could store food while they were processing it in their mouths before swallowing, and they developed batteries of teeth to process food."So sauropods could have evolved this machinery but didn't. Our explanation [is that] these adaptations are not good evolutionary investments for an animal whose skull is so small compared to the rest of its body," Wilson said. "The sauropod strategy is to bite the food, maybe bite it once more, and then swallow it and let it digest in your gut."The discovery is detailed in the most recent issue of the German journal Naturwissenschaften.
Newly Identified Dinosaur Species Abydosaurus Mcintoshi Swallowed Food Whole - AOL News
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Monday, February 15, 2010

All of our thoughts and prayers have gone to the family and friends of this champion who lost his life too early.

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