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【转贴】Fact of the Day

【转贴】Fact of the Day

Hippopotamus


 
Do you know that hippos have killed more people than any other animal?

The hippo's yawn is not a sign of sleepiness or boredom but is actually a threat gesture, displaying long, thick, razor-sharp canine teeth(犬齿), or tusks(獠牙), with which it is capable of biting a small boat in half. Being fearlessly protective of their turf and young, hippos have killed more than 400 people in Africa - more than any other wild animal.

Hippopotamus amphibious (两栖的) means "river horse." The hippo, weighing 1 800 kg (4,000 pounds) and more, lives in Africa, south of the Sahara and along the length of the Nile river, although its range once included Asia and large parts of Europe. Hippos prefer rivers with deep water and nearby reed beds and grasslands, but are also found in salt-water areas near river mouths, and in lakes in Central Africa. They are hoofed vegetarians, feeding on grass, fallen fruit, and occasionally on cultivated crops such as sugar cane or corn during the night. They spend most of the day in the water.

The hippo is the third biggest land animals, slightly smaller but heavier than a white rhino (白犀牛) (the elephant is the biggest). In spite of its huge size - 3 metres (12 feet) in length, 1.5 metres (five feet) tall, with a mouth measuring a half metre (two feet) across - the hippopotamus can outrun a human. The bellowing (咆哮) of a bull hippo measures an ear-splitting 115 decibels, sounding like the roar of a lion.

Nearly all of the famous African explorers and hunters - Livingstone, Stanley, Burton, Selous, Speke, DuChaillu - had boating mishaps with hippos. All considered the hippo to be a wantonly malicious (不怀好意的,恶意的) beast. Spencer Tyron, a hunter, was killed while hunting near the shores of Lake Rukwa, Tanzania. A bull hippo turned over the dugout canoe from which Tyron was shooting, and bit off his head and shoulders.

Recent DNA evidence suggests that the hippopotamus is more closely related to cetaceans (whales and dolphins) than it is to any other artiodactyl (偶蹄动物)(even-toed hoofed mammal).

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Men's shirts have the buttons on the right, but women's blouses have the buttons on the left. This is more than just a way to tell whether a shirt is for men or women. There is a historical reason for it.

During the Victorian period, buttons were quite expensive, and were mostly worn by rich people. Since proper, well-to-do ladies were dressed by their servants, and most people are right-handed, their buttons were placed on the servant's right, which is the wearer's left side. However, most gentlemen dressed themselves, so their buttons were placed on the wearer's right side.

Those who could not afford servants copied the style of the wealthy, and women's buttons thereafter remained on the left.

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What insect is capable of precision flying? 

True flies (order Diptera (1)) can do amazing aerobatic stunts (2) because they use a special sensor to detect tiny shifts and turns (3). They can hover (4) precisely, and even fly sideways or backwards.

Most flying insects have four wings, but flies have only two. The rear pair of wings appears to have evolved into (5) special movement sensors called halteres. Each haltere is a rod with a weight at the end and hundreds of sensory organs at the base.

During flight, the halteres vibrate (6) up and down. If the fly turns left or right, up or down, or tilts either way (7), the halteres immediately sense the change and complex nerve circuits (8) adjust many tiny wing muscles.

Notes:
(1) 双翅目
(2) 飞行特技
(3) 微弱的移动和翻转
(4) 盘旋
(5) 进化,演化为
(6) 震动
(7) 倾斜的飞行
(8) 复杂的神经系统

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What creatures have four kinds of legs?
 
Decapod crustaceans (1) (shrimps, crayfish (2), and lobsters (3)) have 14 pairs of "legs", divided into four different groups.

The first three pairs, just behind the animal's mouthparts (4), are "eating legs" (maxillipeds (5)), used to manipulate food before passing it forward to the mouthparts. They are usually hidden beneath the head/thorax shield (6) (carapace).

Next are five pairs of "walking legs" (pereopods (7)). In some crustaceans, the first pereopod is equipped with a large claw (8). Some pereopods have gills (9) attached near their bases.

Behind these are five pairs of "swimming legs" (pleopods (10)), used for swimming slowly forward. Some crustaceans carry their eggs among their pleopods.

Finally, there is one pair of "tail legs" (uropods (11)) that are part of the tail fan, which is used for sudden backwards flight from predators (12) and other potential threats.

Notes:
(1) 十足甲壳类
(2) 小龙虾
(3) 龙虾
(4) (昆虫等的)口器
(5) (甲壳动物的)颚足,(昆虫)颚肢
(6) 头胸甲
(7) 甲壳动物的胸部附器
(8) 钳,螯
(9) 腮
(10)腹肢
(11)尾肢
(12)掠食者

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What airplane can land using a parachute?
 
The SR20 light aircraft from Cirrus Designs can land safely, even from a full spin, by popping out a built-in emergency parachute. It's the f irst airplane designed to make a parachute landing that has been licensed by the US Federal Aviation Administration.

When the pilot pulls a lever in the cockpit, a rocket shoots out of the rear of the plane, trailing the parachute. To prevent the chute from ripping to shreds if the plane is moving at a high speed, a cloth slider moves down the cables, opening the parachute slowly.

Once the parachute is open, the plane settles to the ground at about 17 miles per hour (27 kmph). When it touches down, the landing gear is destroyed, punching up through the wing, but the people in the plane will not be injured.

Notes:

SR20 light aircraft: SR20型轻型飞机

Cirrus Designs: 一家位于美国明尼苏达州的设计、生产和销售航空器的公司。

a full spin:(飞机的)高速旋冲

pop out: 突然弹出

a built-in emergency parachute:内置的紧急降落伞

chute:parachute 降落伞

rip to shreds: 被撕裂,撕成碎片

landing gear:起落装置

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Why is milk white?


 
Those chalky-white mustaches that color our lips after chugging down a refreshing ice-cold glass of creamy milk is caused by the protein called Casein. Rich in calcium, Casein helps contribute to milk's white color.

In addition, the cream that is found in milk contains white colored fat. The more cream in milk the more white it is.

Low and non-fat milk appear more grayish rather than white because they contain less cream.

Another reason milk looks white to our naked eyes is because some objects do not absorb very much light. Rather than absorb light, these objects reflect light. For instance, red colored objects reflect only red light and absorb the other colors of light in the rainbow spectrum. The molecules that make up Casein and cream reflect light. That's why milk is white.

Notes:

mustaches: 胡子
Casein: 干酪素
calcium: 钙
non-fat milk: 脱脂牛奶
spectrum: 光谱
molecules: 分子

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Who makes traditional sculptures out of butter?



The Tibetan culture is known for traditional sand paintings, in which multicolored sand is delicately arranged in intricate mandalas, displayed for a time, and then ceremoniously swept away. The short-lived sand paintings are said to reflect the temporary nature of all material forms.

A less well-known form of traditional art from the Tibetans is their butter sculpture. The largest and most elaborate of these are usually made around the time of the Tibetan New Year (Losar), when giant monuments are built of yak butter or ghee (clarified butter) mixed with fat and wax. Illuminated with colored lamps and decorated with colorful dyes, the intricate sculptures commemorate various traditional stories and fables.

Like the sand paintings, the butter sculptures are temporary. After days, weeks, months, or years, they are ceremonially destroyed.

Notes: 

Tibetan culture: 中国西藏文化

intricate mandalas: 错综复杂的道坛

for a time: 一段时间

ceremoniously: 隆重的

butter sculpture: 黄油雕塑

yak butter or ghee: 牦牛油和酥油

temporary: 暂时性的

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Do you know how our fingernails grow?



Fingernails and toenails grow from a point near the roots below the skin, at the base of the nail where the nail is very thin. White in color, and half-moon in shape, this semi-circle is appropriately named the "lunula, " and comprises a group of cells that manufacture keratin, a dead, hoof-like protein. The keratin like protein produced, gathers and merges with the nail plate, the dead armor that protects the soft and tender nail bed underneath, and pushes the entire nail up and out. Though the fingernails and toenails grow an average of two inches per year, their growth slows with age, and the average adult's fingernails grow only one inch over the course of eight months.

The base of the fingernails and toenails, as well as some of the nail along both sides of the nail, are embedded into the skin. Unlike other skin, this skin contains elastic fibers that connect it to the fingernail or toenail, and hold it firmly in place. The cuticle , a rim of skin over the lunula, protects it from bacterial infection, serves as a shock absorber, and shields the nail from any sudden impacts.

Though many consider dressing the fingernails up to go out a statement of beauty, or one of vanity, they serve those in the medical field as a diagnostic tool. Normally, the lunula, or half-moon, is white in color, indicating proper nutrition and good overall health. Blue lunula raise red flags that circulatory problems to the fingers may exist. Nails that are hard, brittle, and tend to split easily, may also be clues to poor circulation, infection, or disturbances of the glandular and nutritional systems.

Further nails that curl sharply around the finger point to coronary , liver, or lung diseases. Nails that are sunken in appearance often indicate anemia, a condition where an insufficient amount of oxygen is carried by the blood.

Notes:
lunula 指甲下端的白色弧影,甲弧影
keratin 角蛋白,角质
cuticle 角质层
brittle 硬而脆的
glandular 腺的
coronary 冠状动脉
anemia 贫血症

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What makes people dizzy when they spin?

 

Rolling down a hill or spinning around in endless circles causes dizziness or vertigo because hair-like sensory nerve cells in our ears send wrong messages to our brain.

The motions of our bodies are detected by the vestibular system found in the upper part of our inner ear. The vestibular system senses whether we are standing up or lying down.

When we spin in circles or get up too fast from the couch, we feel dizzy and lightheaded due to the vestibular system's nerve reactions to these unusual motions.

Here's how our vestibular system reacts to a slight change in direction when we bend our heads: The vestibular system senses motion through three semicircular canals that are at right angles to one another. Not only do these canals have hair-like sensory nerve cells, but they also contain a fluid called endolymph.

Following the principle of inertia, endolymph resists changes in motion. As a result of this resistance, the endolymph lags behind and stimulates hair cells to send nerve signals to the brain. Our brain interprets the nerve messages and knows which direction the head moved.

However, when we spin, our brain receives mixed messages. The endolymph slowly begins to move in the same direction we are spinning. As time goes by, the endolymph catches up to the rate of speed we are spinning and no longer stimulates the hair-like nerve cells. This causes our brain to quickly adapt to the nerve signals. However, when we stop spinning, the endolymph continues to move and stimulates hair cells in the opposite direction.

These hair cells send wrong messages to the brain making it think that the head is still spinning although it actually has stopped. As a result of this inaccurate signal, we experience dizziness. Eventually, the endolymph stops moving and no more signals are sent to the brain. The brain interprets that the spinning motion has ceased and the dizziness disappears.

Note:
vertigo: 晕头转向
sensory nerve: 感觉神经
vestibular system: 前庭系统
lightheaded: 头昏眼花的
fluid: 液体
endolymph: 内淋巴
inertia: 惯性

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How does a helium balloon float?


 
Helium is lighter than air and just as the heaviest things will tend to fall to the bottom, the lightest things will rise to the top.

Helium weighs 0.1785 grams per liter. Nitrogen, which makes up 80% of the air we breathe, weighs 1.2506 grams per liter.

Basically, if you were to fill a soda bottle with helium and another with air, the one filled with helium would weigh a gram less than the bottle with air. It doesn't sound like a lot, but that's usually why balloons are usually really big, the one-gram difference really adds up in large volumes. Helium balloons follow the same principle as you do when you float in the water; the law of buoyancy. If the water you displace weighs more than you do, you will float.

Helium isn't the lightest element, hydrogen, weighing a mere 0.08988 grams per liter, is.

Wondering why we don't use that instead of helium?

Well, hydrogen balloons used to be really popular, but it is extremely flammable. The slightest spark will set off a huge explosion.

Did you know?



Helium is a colorless, odorless, tasteless inert gas at room temperature and makes up about 0.0005% of the air we breathe.

Helium's principal source is natural gas wells where it is extracted from the crude natural gas stream and purified and that it can be stored and shipped either as a gas or a cryogenic liquid.

Note:

liter: 升
Nitrogen: 氮
buoyancy: 浮力
inert gas: 惰性气体
cryogenic liquid: 低温液体

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