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Messaggi del 19/04/2011

 

Un cuore matto ...

Post n°849 pubblicato il 19 Aprile 2011 da diegobaratono

Egyptian Princess Mummy Had Oldest Known Heart Disease
Egyptian mummy picture: A male mummy's head and upper torso in a CT scanner

The mummy of an Egyptian nobleman undergoes CT scanning as part of a study of ancient disease.

Photograph courtesy Michael Miyamoto

James Owen

for National Geographic News

Published April 15, 2011

An ancient Egyptian princess might have been able to postpone her mummification if she had cut the calories and exercised more, medical experts say.

Known as Ahmose Meryet Amon, the princess lived some 3,500 years ago and died in her 40s. She was entombed at the Deir el-Bahri royal mortuary temple on the west bank of the Nile, opposite to the city of Luxor. (Take an ancient-Egypt quiz.)

The princess's mummified body is among those now housed at the Egyptian Museum in Cairo.

Recent scans of 52 of the museum's mummies revealed almost half of the dead have clogged arteries—including the princess. In fact, she is now the earliest known sufferer of coronary atherosclerosis, a condition caused by a buildup of arterial plaque, which can lead to heart attack or stroke.

(Related: "King Tut Mysteries Solved: Was Disabled, Malarial, and Inbred.")

Ahmose Meryet Amon—"Child of the Moon, Beloved of Amun"—had blockages in five major arteries, including those that supply blood to the brain and heart, said study co-leader Gregory Thomas, a professor of cardiology at the University of California, Irvine.

"If the princess was in a time machine and I was to see her now, I would tell her to lay off the fat, take plenty of exercise, then schedule her for heart surgery," Thomas said.

"She would require a double bypass."

Egypt Princess Lived in Times of Bread and Honey

Although the mummies' actual hearts had been removed before entombment, the CT scans uncovered calcium deposits elsewhere in the bodies that are indicative of artery damage. But the study team could not confirm that any of the mummies died of heart disease, because most of the mummies' organs were either disintegrated or missing.

However, a medical text dating back to the time the princess lived—between 1550 and 1580 B.C.—describes the pain in the arm and chest that precedes a potentially fatal heart attack. (Read "Mending Broken Hearts" in National Geographic magazine.)

In general, blocked arteries and heart attacks are health risks we associate with today's lifestyle and diet, not those of the ancient Egyptians, noted study co-author Michael Miyamoto of the University of California, San Diego's School of Medicine.

"They lacked a lot of the risk factors that we consider to be important in the development of atherosclerosis in modern populations—namely smoking, high rates of diabetes and obesity, and foods rich in trans fats," Miyamoto said.

But as a daughter of the Pharaoh Seqenenre Tao II, the princess—like the other examined mummies—was a member of the elite. That means she was possibly more prone to heart disease than the rest of the population.

"Since they were the elite, they presumably led more pampered lifestyles, were more sedentary, and also—maybe importantly—had access to foods which were dense in calories, particularly meats," Miyamoto said.

Adel Allam, study co-author and professor of cardiology at Egypt's Al Azhar University, added that the princess lived during a prosperous period of Egyptian history.

"Even the very poor people would eat a lot of pork, and the bread became mixed with honey," he said. "If ordinary people at this time did get a lot of carbohydrates and fat in their diets, then of course the elite would have got even more unhealthy food," he said.

Royal's Damaged Arteries a Family Affair?

Perhaps backing up diet as a contributing factor, researchers had previously found some evidence among ancient Egyptians for diabetes, a condition often associated with obesity, Allam added. Also, Egyptian papyrus documents by ancient physicians refer to diabetes symptoms.

However, although body fat is not preserved on ancient mummies, the signs are that Ahmose Meryet Amon was probably petite, Allam said. In fact, the team suspects some factor other than diet and lifestyle may have contributed to her vascular disease.

(Related: "Chemical BPA Linked to Heart Disease, Study Confirms.")

For instance, "in her family there were a couple of other queens and princesses that had atherosclerosis, so a genetic element cannot be excluded," Allam said.

The new study suggests that genetics may be even more important than thought in causing atherosclerosis, and the mummies might hold clues to which genetic factors are involved.

Another possibility is that atherosclerosis can be brought on by chronic inflammation caused by a person's immune system responding to infection, which in turn can lead to inflammation of the blood vessel walls.

"The princess was known to have arthritis and inflammation of the joints," Allam noted. "Also, she had severe dental disease, which is another inflammation."

The US-Egyptian research team is undertaking further studies on a total of 72 mummies to investigate the individuals' genetic links, evidence of other health issues including arthritis and cancer, and whether their bones can reveal how active they were.

The team's most recent findings are published in the April issue of the Journal of the American College of Cardiology: Cardiovascular Imaging.

 
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Tessuti ... primordiali ...

Post n°848 pubblicato il 19 Aprile 2011 da diegobaratono

Da:"ScienceDaily"
South America's Oldest Textiles Identified With Carbon Dating

ScienceDaily (Apr. 13, 2011) — Textiles and rope fragments found in a Peruvian cave have been dated to around 12,000 years ago, making them the oldest textiles ever found in South America, according to a report in the April issue of Current Anthropology.

The items were found 30 years ago in Guitarrero Cave high in the Andes Mountains. Other artifacts found along with the textiles had been dated to 12,000 ago and even older. However, the textiles themselves had never been dated, and whether they too were that old had been controversial, according to Edward Jolie, an archaeologist at Mercyhurst College (PA) who led this latest research.

The cave had been disturbed frequently by human and geological activity, so it was possible that the textiles could have belonged to much more recent inhabitants. What's more, the prior radiocarbon dates for the site had been taken from bone, obsidian, and charcoal -- items that are known to sometimes produce inaccurate radiocarbon ages. According to Jolie, charcoal especially can produce dates that tend to overestimate a site's age.

"By dating the textiles themselves, we were able to confirm their antiquity and refine the timing of the early occupation of the Andes highlands," Jolie said. His team used the latest radiocarbon dating technique -- accelerated mass spectrometry -- to place the textiles at between 12,100 and 11,080 years old.

The textile items include fragments of woven fabrics possibly used for bags, baskets, wall or floor coverings, or bedding. They were likely left by settlers from lower altitude areas during "periodic forays" into the mountains, the researchers say. "Guitarrero Cave's location at a lower elevation in a more temperate environment as compared with the high Andean [plain] made it an ideal site for humans to camp and provision themselves for excursions to even higher altitudes," Jolie and his colleagues write.

These early mountain forays set the stage for the permanent settlements that came later -- after 11,000 years ago -- when the climate had warmed, glaciers receded, and settlers had a chance to adapt to living at higher altitudes.

Jolie's research also suggests that women were among these earliest high altitude explorers. Bundles of processed plant material found in the cave indicate that textile weaving occurred on site. "Given what we know about textile and basket production in other cultures, there's a good possibility that it would have been women doing this work," Jolie said.

"There's an assumption that these early forays into the mountains must have been made exclusively by men," he added. "It appears that might not be the case, though more work needs to be done to prove it."

 
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Giove, pianeta scioccante ...

Post n°847 pubblicato il 19 Aprile 2011 da diegobaratono

Da:"ScienceDaily.com"

Shocking Environment of Hot Jupiters

ScienceDaily (Apr. 15, 2011) — Jupiter-like worlds around other stars push shock waves ahead of them, according to a team of UK astronomers. Just as Earth's magnetic "bow-shock" protects us from the high-energy solar wind, these planetary shocks protect their atmospheres from their star's damaging emissions.

Team member Dr Aline Vidotto of the University of St Andrews presented a new model based on observations made with the SuperWASP (Wide Angle Search for Planets) project on April 18 at the National Astronomy Meeting in Llandudno, Wales.

In 2008, observations of WASP-12 detected a periodic dip in light as a large planet (catalogued as WASP-12b) passed in front of its host star. Planet hunting with transit instruments like SuperWASP allows astronomers to obtain a wealth of information about exoplanetary systems including their composition and size.

WASP-12b turns out to be one of the largest exoplanets found to date and completes each orbit around its parent star in just 26 hours. The planet is more than 250,000 km across, with its atmosphere swollen by the intense heat it receives from the star, making it a so-called 'hot Jupiter'.

Hot Jupiters are similar to the planet Jupiter in our own Solar System but located far closer to their host star (WASP-12b is 3.4 million km away from WASP-12 which compares with Earth-Sun distance of 150 million km). With such a small distance between them violent interactions between the star and the planet can take place.

As one of the largest hot Jupiters discovered to date, WASP-12b also gives a unique opportunity to observe the interactions between the planetary magnetic field and the host star's magnetic field. The very presence of a magnetic field reveals that the planet must have a conducting, rotating interior.

There is now tantalizing new evidence from Hubble Space Telescope data that a magnetosphere exists around WASP-12b. Observations of the planet taken in ultraviolet wavelengths by a team including scientists from the Open University reveal that the start of the dip in the light from the star during the transit of the planet is earlier in ultraviolet than visible light. Originally, this was thought to be caused by material flowing from the planet onto the star. The St Andrews group have however determined that the planet ploughs into a supersonic headwind and pushes a shock ahead it -- just like the one around a supersonic jet aircraft.

The St Andrews astronomers carried out simulations of a planet and its bow shock transiting a star and by investigating various shock geometries, orientations and densities have reproduced the dip in ultraviolet light observed in WASP-12b.

Team leader Dr Aline Vidotto commented on the new result. "The location of this bow shock provides us with an exciting new tool to measure the strength of planetary magnetic fields. This is something that presently cannot be done in any other way."

Joe Llama, a PhD student who carried out the simulations of the bow shock, said "Our models are able to reproduce the data from the Hubble Space telescope for a range of wind speeds implying that bow shocks could be far more commonplace than had been thought."

Bow shocks may also protect the atmospheres of hot Jupiters from their harsh environment. These planets are constantly bombarded with highly charged, energized particles from the wind from their parent stars, meaning that their atmosphere can be eroded. The presence of a magnetic field could greatly reduce the amount of stellar wind the planet is exposed to, effectively acting as a shield and helping the atmosphere survive.

Joe Llama concludes, "Although our model predicts a bow shock similar to that of the Earth, we are not expecting any messages from WASP-12b as it is too hot to support life. But the first hints that extrasolar planets have magnetosphere is a big step forward in understanding and identifying the habitable zones where we ultimately hope to find signs of life."

 
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Meno male, appena in tempo ...

Post n°846 pubblicato il 19 Aprile 2011 da diegobaratono

Da:"ANSA.it

Archeologia: sequestrato in Abruzzo tesoro da un mln
erano pronti per essere trasportati all'estero
18 aprile, 12:28
(ANSA) - MONTESILVANO (PESCARA), 18 APR - Vasi ceramici magno-greci ed etruschi e bronzi miniaturistici provenienti dall'Abruzzo in procinto di essere trasferiti all'estero. E' il bottino sequestrato a Montesilvano dai finanzieri del Comando Provinciale Roma con la collaborazione dei colleghi di Pescara ai trafficanti di opere d'arte.
Nel complesso sono stati trovati 175 manufatti del passato, il cui valore nell'indotto clandestino e' stimato in oltre un milione di euro. (ANSA).

 
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Questa è bella ...

Post n°845 pubblicato il 19 Aprile 2011 da diegobaratono

Da:"ANSA.it"

Collisione iceberg rivela specie marine
Tra cui spugne multicolori, pesci e grandissime stelle marine
18 aprile, 14:02

(ANSA) - SYDNEY, 18 APR - La collisione fra due grandi iceberg nell'Antartide orientale lo scorso anno ha portato alla luce specie marine sconosciute, tra cui spugne multicolori, pesci e stelle marine grandi quanto borchie di auto. Un iceberg di 78 km si era separato dal ghiacciaio di Mertz dopo essere stato speronato da un altro iceberg e ha esposto una sezione dell'Oceano meridionale prima coperta da centinaia di metri di ghiaccio. Per gli scienziati la possibilita' di comprendere i fenomeni del cambiamento climatico.

 
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Ma se così non fosse? ...

Post n°844 pubblicato il 19 Aprile 2011 da diegobaratono

Da:"ANSA.it"

Terremoto a Roma, impossibile prevederlo
INGV risponde sul sito alle domande sulla previsione del sisma dell'11 maggio
18 aprile, 20:11

ROMA -  Non c'e' nessun elemento scientificamente fondato per dire che a Roma ci sara' un terremoto il prossimo 11 maggio. In generale, anche se tutta l'Italia e' a rischio sismico, ''Roma ha una pericolosita' sismica modesta'': cosi' i sismologi dell'Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (Ingv) rispondono alle tante domande che stanno ricevendo in questi giorni sulla previsione del terremoto dell'11 maggio a Roma. D'altro canto, rilevano, dall'analisi delle carte di Raffaele Bendandi (l'autodidatta, morto nel '79 e vissuto a Faenza, al quale la previsione e' stata attribuita) ''non emerge nessuna previsione di un eventuale sisma a Roma per l'11 maggio di quest'anno''. ''Roma - spiegano gli esperti dell'Ingv - e' ubicata piuttosto ai margini della zona a maggiore sismicita' della penisola e quindi ha una pericolosita' sismica modesta. A parte piccoli terremoti locali molto rari, risente dei terremoti dell'Appennino centrale e di quelli dei Colli Albani, che sono meno forti''.

Va detto comunque, aggiungono, che ''la probabilita' che avvenga un forte terremoto in Italia centrale in un qualunque giorno dell'anno e' bassa, ma non e' nulla''. E' solo una credenza popolare quella secondo cui Roma non e' a rischio di terremoti per il suo sottosuolo e' pieno di cavita': ha origine da antiche teorie di Aristotele e Plinio il Vecchio, secondo cui i terremoti erano causati dai gas sotterranei e che le cavita' nel sottosuolo di Roma lasciassero uscire i gas all'esterno allentando la pressione. Altrettanto aleatori sono i principi su cui si basa la teoria di Bendandi, costruita su presunte forze generate dagli allineamenti di pianeti, Sole e Luna. Lo stesso Ingv sta collaborando alla sistemazione dei numerosi appunti di Bendandi (non ha mai pubblicato le sue teorie su riviste scientifiche) in collaborazione con l'istituzione culturale ''La Bendandiana''.

Prevedere i terremoti sulla base dei movimenti degli astri, osserva l'Ingv, non ha basi scientifiche perche' ''le forze causate dai corpi celesti sulla Terra sono piccole rispetto alle forze interne, quelle determinate dallo spostamento delle placche''. Ad oggi, infine, ''non e' possible prevedere i terremoti'' perche' la complessita' dei fenomeni che li generano non lo permette. ''Si possono pero' fare delle previsioni probabilistiche, cioe' si puo' stimare la probabilita' che si verifichi un terremoto di una certa magnitudo, in un determinato intervallo di tempo e in una certa area''.

 
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Terribile ...

Post n°843 pubblicato il 19 Aprile 2011 da diegobaratono

Da:"ANSA.it"
Apre caccia a foche in Canada, polemiche
Uccisioni inutili di cuccioli abbandonati sui ghiacci, mancato rispetto regole
18 aprile, 10:36
BRUXELLES - All'apertura della caccia alle foche in Canada, l'International Fund for Animal Welfare (Ifaw) lancia la sua denuncia sul mancato rispetto delle regole per una morte "umana" e di uccisioni inutili di cuccioli, poi abbandonati sui ghiacci.

"Abbiamo ampie prove - afferma Sheryl Fink, direttore del programma foche dell'Ifaw - che la procedura in tre fasi per assicurare una morte umana non viene seguita". L'organizzazione ha filmato diverse violazioni nell'uccisione dei cuccioli da parte dei cacciatori, compiute sulle coste di Newfoundland e del Labrador. "Abbiamo documentato le prove di cuccioli di foca di circa tre settimane uccisi e abbandonati sul ghiaccio, con la pelle intatta. E' una chiara violazione della legge e uno spreco inaccettabile e non etico di fauna selvatica".

"Dove sono i controlli?" si chiede la responsabile dell'Ifaw. "Quando i cacciatori di foche ignorano in maniera flagrante - conclude Fink - le regole quando vengono filmati, figuriamoci cosa accade quando non lo sono". Il governo canadese, riferisce l'Ifaw, insiste che la caccia é sia umana sia vitale per l'economia delle comunità locali. L'associazione invece denuncia che diversi documenti dimostrano il contrario e che le regole vengono frequentemente ignorate. Quest'anno inoltre, secondo gli animalisti, i cacciatori di foche stanno rimpiazzando la loro attività abituale con quella della pesca del granchio, più remunerativa.

"Non c'é ragione - aggiunge Fink - perché questa carneficina continui. Quello che abbiamo osservato quest'anno è semplicemente inaccettabile". Secondo le cifre fornite dall'Ifaw, ormai l'attività di caccia alle foche è anti-economica per gli stessi canadesi, visto che nel 2010 è stata sostenuta dal governo con 2,3 milioni di dollari, mentre il valore commerciale é stato di poco più di un milione di dollari.

 
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Vulcano riprende attività ...

Post n°842 pubblicato il 19 Aprile 2011 da diegobaratono

Da:"CNN.com"

Philippines' Taal Volcano shows new life

By the CNN Wire Staff
April 19, 2011 -- Updated 0027 GMT (0827 HKT)
STORY HIGHLIGHTS

Volcano in tourist area south of Manila is showing activity

There were 21 volcanic earthquakes from early Sunday to early Monday

(CNN) -- Volcanologists in the Philippines are closely monitoring a volcano on Luzon Island close to the capital, Manila, after a sudden spike in seismic activity.

Twenty one volcanic earthquakes were recorded at Taal Volcano from Sunday 8 a.m. to Monday 8 a.m.

One of the earthquakes was felt by local residents in Brgy Calauit at the southeast side of the island.

Scientists at the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (PHIVOLCS) say the quakes are an indication that magma is moving towards Taal's surface.

The main crater lake has been heating up since January.

PHIVOLCS Science Research Specialist Alex Ramos told CNN that scientists have seen "a slight intensification of steaming in the main crater lake."

He said emissions of carbon dioxide have risen from 1,875 tons per day in February to 4,670 tons at the end of March.

PHIVOLCS has raised its five step alert level to 2 around Taal and is warning people not to go near the crater lake or main Daang Kastila Trail due to the high concentration of toxic gases and a risk of steam explosions.

The popular tourist attraction is 65 kilometres (40 miles) south of the Manila.

An estimated 7,000 people live on the volcanic island which last erupted in 1977.

 
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Alla ricerca del clima perduto ...

Post n°841 pubblicato il 19 Aprile 2011 da diegobaratono

Da:"Reuters.com"

Costa Rica rock hunt goes far below Pacific Ocean

Credit: Reuters/Juan Carlos Ulate

PUNTARENAS, Costa Rica | Mon Apr 18, 2011 8:32am EDT

PUNTARENAS, Costa Rica (Reuters) - Scientists set off from Costa Rica on Sunday to drill a hole deep under the sea and directly extract rocks from record depths that could add to the understanding of climate change.

The rocks dug up from the lower part of Earth's crust in the coming weeks will be the closest anyone has come to the vast, churning part of the planet called the mantle, which lies between the crust and the core.

On a 140-meter (460-foot) ship that resembles an oil platform, the 30-member scientific team will bring back rocks from 2 kilometers (1.2 miles) beneath the sea off Costa Rica's Pacific coast.

"This will be a big step forward but we're still not getting to the mantle -- the mantle is still 3 kilometers (2 miles) away," said the expedition's co-chief, Damon Teagle, of Britain's University of Southampton.

An examination of rocks from the crust and mantle could shed light on how tectonic plates -- vast pieces of the Earth's crust -- formed and how they move. When the plates move against one another they can cause earthquakes.

Scientists also think details about the composition of the lower crust might help them better understand climate change.

The world's oceans trap greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide, making the oceans important for models that try to predict how these gases fuel climate changes from global warming to altered weather patterns.

Scientists speculate the rocks beneath the sea might also play a role in capturing carbon.

"This carbon which is eventually trapped in the rocks through interactions with the seawater is something we want to put some numbers on," said the mission's other co-chief, Benoit Ildefonse of Montpellier University in France.

This will be the team's fourth visit to the same hole off Costa Rica, which was picked because part of the crust is especially thin there. Drilling in the location started in 2002.

Getting to the mantle could still be a decade away, said Teagle, who compared the task to a moon mission.

"A certain amount of going to the moon was just about going to the moon," he said. "But they also brought back rocks."

 
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