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http://scienceblogs.com/pharyngula/2...utm_medium=rss
Quote:
The presence of a functional α-actinin-3 gene is correlated with athletic performance. A study of the frequency of the R577X mutation in athletes and controls found that there is a significant reduction in the frequency of the mutation among sprinters and power-lifters. At the Olympic level, none of the sprinters in the sample (32 individuals) carried the α-actinin-3 deficiency. Among Olympic power lifters, all had at least one functional copy of α-actinin-3.
Yet another species worth saving found in some far-flung exotic land... NOT!
http://scienceblogs.com/grrlscientis...utm_medium=rss
^^ugh. fkin gross
http://www.popsci.com/science/articl...over-addiction
It's funny how everyone who ends up on the island is so linked to the island and their arrival was foreshadowed throughout multiple events in their lives before arriving ...
Except half the cast from the 1st season and the generics they kill off every so often.
wrong thread much?
I agree, though, I love the foreshadowing... somewhat proves they're not just pulling shit out of their asses and that there may be a great ending
Like + 11 now.
The death tax experiment, happening now...
http://improbable.com/2010/01/13/sle...bable+Research)
http://scienceblogs.com/grrlscientis...utm_medium=rssQuote:
For decades, it was widely suspected that a small seabird, the Arctic Tern, Sterna paradisaea, migrates an estimated 40,000 km each year -- the longest migratory journey of any animal.
"This is a mind-boggling achievement for a bird of just over 100 grams," says the study's first author Carsten Egevang, a seabird researcher with the Greenland Institute of Natural Resources.
But no one really knew precisely where they went nor how far these birds actually traveled on each trip.