What I learnt this week 28: Climate Engineering concerns, Airborne Algae, Georgetown Canada, Bone Bridges & Dangerous Good Bacteria!

in #science6 years ago

Today I'll attempt to be more concise once again with each day of learning. Writing is easy, keeping it short and informative is a whole 'nother ball game...

Monday: Don't stop, engineering


Something like this

This week's journey (lol) starts with battling climate change. There are many ideas and solutions to this, and the only thing really holding us back is politics. Or so you'd think.

Climate Engineering is a concept that sounds great in theory, but in practice, potentially devastating. We have more to learn than just figuring out which colour we want our political parties to wearing.

Climate engineering can come in many ways, but the most common idea is to spray sulphur dioxide into the atmosphere which would create clouds, thus cooling the earth.

The study looking into this assumed, when the technology is ready in a decade or two, that about 500 million tons of sulphur dioxide would be dumped into the atmosphere every year for about 50 years, creating sulphuric acid clouds.

This sounds scary but by comparison that's about 1/4 of the amount a large volcanic eruption throws into the air, and the exchange would be a temperature drop of about 1°C.

But each dump would only last a year. The problem is if we stop. If halting this process was abrupt, the effects on wildlife and plantlife would be devastating. It would be like throwing a polar bear into a sandy desert, with temperatures rapidly rising pretty much immediately.

For animals it would force animals that can to rapidly migrate, and for plants, well, they can't do anything at all. The complications would be great. The solution? To make sure we stop gradually. And we would stop. climate engineering is only a temporary measure while we stop using fossil fuels and generally buck up our ideas.

You can read more here

Tuesday: Airborne Algae


Deadly stuff

During my post about the dead sea, I demonstrated how the lake actually harbours quite a bit of life. Microscopic individuals for the most part, but once every decade or so, algal blooms would burst into action, leaving a blanket of red life.

Well, these blooms are common everywhere, but they're not great, especially in the case of blue-green blooms. They suck oxygen from the water, block out sunlight and perhaps worst of all, release toxins. All of this is exacerbated by run=off from agricultural waste material that helps them thrive and bloom all the more.

The toxins they release are a type of aerosol similar to spray can aerosols and a study shows that around wave-breaking areas like the shoreline, they can indeed be launched into the air causing atmospheric pollution - though it only really needs wind speeds of about 7 miles per hour.

Once in the air, the toxins can travel thousands of miles, so everyone near coastlines have both drinking and breathing to worry about! Come to life, my pretty hypochondriacs!

You can read more here

Wednesday: Georgetown, Canada


Outta the way, Great Barrier Reef

When you look at the world map, you might understand that South America was once in contact with Africa among other ancient connections before the continents started drifting apart.

One that you might not expect, however, is Australia being connected with North America. Evidence?

Well, in Georgetown, Australia, a bunch of rocks there do not identify with any rocks found in the rest of Australia, but strike an uncanny resemblance to those in Canada.

The story is pieced together as such: Rocks from Georgetown, Canada were deposited in shallow waters about 1.7 billion years ago, in the age of the supercontinent Nuna. This Georgetown then broke off from North America and floated over to Australia, colliding with the region of Mount Isa some 100 million years later.

This also created a small, perhaps now imperceptible mountain range, of which there is some evidence.

So Australians, if you ever want to secede, just move to Georgetown and point out that it has belonged to Canada since Ancient times!

You can read more here

Thursday: Break a Leg

The older you get, the more bones you happen to break. It's a fact of life. I've never come close to breaking a bone however, so the very thought of that level of pain terrifies me daily.

But we're still actually figuring out how they actually occur. In the elderly, we have been told by new research to re-think what's actually going on.

Typically, we think of old people being slow and weak before buckling over, landing funny and snapping a leg in half or something. But Engineers show that this might be in the wrong order.

What seems to be the case according to one study is something more like the collapse of a bridge. Microcracks within the bones grow slowly over time from constant loading - like trucks over a bridge. At some point, that crack gets to such a point that there's more crack than bone, and to risk mixing metaphors here, the bridge gives way.

In this case, a fall might actually be the result of a broken bone, rather than the other way around.

I can see some benefit to growing this understanding. Perhaps, like bridges, we can learn to patch up the microcracks, or better yet, prevent them by emphasizing and increase in bone quality. With up to 30% of elderly suffering major injuries from such falls, well... I don't wanna break a bone! Save me!

You can read more here

Friday: Gut bakterien ist schlecht

Bilingual puns? There's no stopping me. This is one of those studies where I can't help but wonder how on earth they even conjured up the idea to get them into this position of discovery in the first place.

Much of our gut bacteria is either beneficial or just harmlessly chilling out.

Enterococci is one such bacteria, and is known to be quite resilient. These bacteria are found in all mammalian guts including our own and has recently been noted as problematic, since its increasing toughness has lead to resistance of multiple drugs.

This wouldn't usually be an issue in the case of Enterococci, but recently when looking at cow dung (as you do), they found a new strain carried a toxing strikingly similar to that which causes botulism. For those who don't know, botulism can kill.

This new Botulism toxins the 9th discovered so far, and comes along only a few months after the same team discovered one in August. It's another 50 years into the past before we come across the previous one.

Now before we panic, I did say drug resistant, but this bacteria still succumbs to several antibiotics. Not only that but it was only found in one sample, from an animal that was not suffering from botulism. Furthermore, deliberately inserting it into rats had no effect until the researchers deliberately manipulated it to become the effective neurotoxin we fear so much.

There is concern though. It seems that gene transfer could more easily send this toxin to more dangerous, antibiotic resistant bacteria via plasmids, the same way it would have passed on to enterococci. When that day comes, it could be a real problem.

Well, let's just hope it's designed to target some annoying, unimportant animal like, I dunno, humans.

You can read more here

And that's all for now! Lessons learnt: All good bacteria should be wiped out, the lazier I am, the less chance I have of breaking a bone in the future, Australia is merely a district of Canada, Algae will kill us all and climate engineering will kill us all.

Thanks for reading!

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waooww !! what a way you write this amazing blog about science <3 thank you man for your information :) I want to see more in future so i am following you keep in touch have a great day :)

Thanks for the follow!

@mobbs great post very informative! I watched a show on netflix about climate change and apparently they are only treating about 10% of the problem by changing what people do for example cfc gas and petrol etc, but what they still have not addressed and refuse to address is that 90% of the problem is directly linked to livestock farming especially the huge factory farms! The reason they don't address this is same as always down to profit!
Great post cant wait to read your next one!
upvoted resteemed and followed!

It is indeed a bit problem. I think there is a pretty great solution that is seeing rapid progress though - Lab-created meat: real meat created in the lab without a single animal being raised or killed. At one point a single burger was about $20,000, now they're more like $10... Soon we'll see them in restaurants!

Yes making great headway with stem cells in that department. I just hope they sort it quick oe else well all be eating bugs! nutritious but gross! lol

very interesting your post. I really like your summary on climate engineering, it is something very interesting that we should know, thanks for the information. I congratulate you

Thanks for reading =D

The study looking into this assumed, when the technology is ready in a decade or two, that about 500 million tons of sulphur dioxide would be dumped into the atmosphere every year for about 50 years, creating sulphuric acid clouds.

This would result in acid rains. Imagine when dilute Trioxocarbonate vi acid begins to fall as rain.
I've learnt a lot from what you learnt buddy.

but no more acid rain than you'd get with a volcano, and it would be evenly distributed and thus safely diluted - that's the idea anyway. Plus, it's only sulphur dioxide, not sodium etc

You're absolutely correct buddy

Adding to the article on geriatric fractures, there always the saying in clinics "did the fracture cause the fall, or the fall cause the fracture"... I guess that is touching on this concept!

I suppose the very concept itself is nothing new, and this news was simply adding more weight behind the concept? Either way it's new to me!

This Georgetown then broke off from North America and floated over to Australia

I ain't gonn' believe this.. "broke off"?

a fall might actually be the result of a broken bone, rather than the other way around.

Wow! I thought we break bones because we fall. Well, funnily enough, I had fallen off a height before because I had a muscle cramp, lol. Not a great height though but I think this might mean we fall because of a broken bone.

There's no way am gonn' let an algae kill me, I'lll rather kill myself, Lol. Nice one, mobbs.

Sorry, my accent was affected by the Kevin Hart in Jumanji.. Lol

Lol broke off is kind of a colloquial term, continental plates drift around all the time, it's not unusual for land masses to divide and part ways from each other!

I thought we break bones because we fall.

Well we do =P but with some elderly people who 'just fall', it could be the other way round. Of course, for some people they fall because algae made them sick =P

Still haven't seen jumanji yet, don't spoil it!

Lol... I ain't spoiling it.

Beautiful compilation @mobbs
But my concern is on the airborne algae . This is dangerous especially to those who live around the coastal region where this is found.
Lord have mercy!

interesting.thanks alot.

Quite challenging content you managed to provide .
Glad to hear this things being shared on steemit .
You have a very interesting way of presenting things , it makes me understand the entire story . Your taughts that are presented are so connected one to each other , it makes me understand the context and points . I appreciate for how fluent you are and the passion to share with the community .