My Piano Medley – Video


My Piano Medley
Hey guys! This is a piano medley that I arranged myself, I hope you like it! Here are the songs and the lyrics that I used: Intro to Safe and Sound - Taylor Swift Stay - Miley Cyrus "And I love you more, than I did before, and if today I don #39;t see your face, nothings changed, no one can take your place, it gets harder, every day, say you love me more than you did before, and I #39;m sorry that it #39;s this way, I #39;ll be coming home, I #39;ll be coming home, and if you ask me I will stay, I will stay" The One That Got Away - Katy Perry "In another life, I would be your girl ,we keep all our promises, be us against the world, in another life, I would make you stay, so I don #39;t have to say you were the one that got away" Boyfriend - Justin Bieber "If I was your boyfriend I #39;d never let you go, Id keep you on my arm girl, you #39;d never be alone, and I could be a gentleman, anything you want, if I was your boyfriend, I #39;d never let you go, never let you go" Alejandro - Lady Gaga "Don #39;t call my name, don #39;t call my name, Alejandro, I #39;m not your babe, I #39;m not your babe, Fernando" ET -- Katy Perry "You #39;re so hypnotizing, could you be the devil, could you be an angel, different DNA, they don #39;t understand you, you #39;re from a whole other world, a different dimension, you open my eyes, and I #39;m ready to go, lead me into the light" Haunted - Taylor Swift " #39;Come on, come on, don #39;t leave me like this, I thought I had you figured out, can #39;t breathe whenever you #39;re gone, can #39;t turn back now, I #39;m haunted ...From:hp7forlifeViews:29 0ratingsTime:05:02More inMusic

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Martin Rees – The Cosmic Perspective – Video


Martin Rees - The Cosmic Perspective
Martin Rees is a Fellow of Trinity College and Emeritus Professor of Cosmology and Astrophysics at the University of Cambridge. There are more than 100 billion galaxies scattered throughout the visible universe....Small galaxies have fewer than a billion stars. Large galaxies have more than a trillion. Abraham Lincoln -- "the fuel of interest to the fire of genius in the discovery... of new and useful things." Richard Feynman-"The same thrill, the same awe and mystery, comes again and again when we look at any question deeply enough. With more knowledge comes a deeper, more wonderful mystery, luring one on to penetrate deeper still. Never concerned that the answer may prove disappointing, with pleasure and confidence we turn over each new stone to find unimagined strangeness leading on to more wonderful questions and mysteries - certainly a grand adventure! " Carl Sagan-"Everybody starts out as a scientist." Every child has the scientist #39;s sense of wonder and awe. Too often we discourage this curiosity and wonder. "It is the supreme art of the teacher to awaken joy in creative expression and knowledge." "The most beautiful thing we can experience is the mysterious. It is the source of all true art and all science. He to whom this emotion is a stranger, who can no longer pause to wonder and stand rapt in awe, is as good as dead: his eyes are closed." "The important thing is not to stop questioning. Curiosity has its own reason for existing." Albert Einstein I do not know ...From:pangeaprogressreduxViews:4 1ratingsTime:04:43More inScience Technology

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DNA from "In Cold Blood" killers may help solve 1959 Florida murder

ORLANDO, Florida (Reuters) - A Florida detective trying to crack a 53-year-old unsolved murder case will ask a Kansas judge for permission to exhume and extract DNA from the bodies of two notorious killers made famous in Truman Capote's 1966 true-crime novel, "In Cold Blood."

Sarasota County Sheriff Detective Kim McGath told Reuters she believes the two men convicted for the 1959 murder of Herbert Clutter, his wife and two children in Holcomb, Kansas, might be responsible for a similar killing one month later of a family in Osprey, Florida.

Capote's celebrated book about the Clutter case, written in a new style associated more with fiction than journalism, is often credited with spawning the nonfiction novel genre.

The case of the Florida family, the Walkers, has long stumped investigators. Cliff Walker and his wife and their two toddler children were shot to death in their home near Sarasota, Florida.

McGath, who spent four years reviewing half-century old investigative files on both the Clutter and Walker murders, said the exhumation of killers Richard Hickok and Perry Smith, who were executed in 1965, could provide key clues.

The hope is that DNA can be obtained from the men's long buried remains to either rule them out or connect them to the Walker murders, McGath said.

"Certain things kind of kept jumping out to me that got my attention. Certain clues that came to the forefront," McGath said.

She noted the killers in both cases murdered entire families including children in their homes, which McGath said was unusual during the late 1950s.

The Clutter children were aged 15 and 16; the Walker children were 3 and 23 months. All of the victims were shot in the head or face, McGath said.

On the run from Kansas, Hickok and Smith, both ex-convicts, stayed briefly in Sarasota County, which includes the town of Osprey, and were in the area at the time of the Walker family killings, McGath said.

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DNA from "In Cold Blood" killers may help solve 1959 Florida murder

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When Science and Religion Agree – Video


When Science and Religion Agree
This is my take on the primate form and how it is a more refined product of prolonged life on this planet as land mammals. My latest theory is that we (humans) did not come from the same early "primordial soup" as all other beings on this planet. The idea is that we came long after (soon after primates formed) as a DNA "alien" (non-Earth born) strand in the form of a bacteria or other single celled organism (As the Matrix put it; "a virus") from a more recent comet collision like that in the Yucatan peninsula - Hence the birth of the Mayans and others who seem to have come from nowhere but biologically share an early primate ancestor before modern apes. So, we were not "chimps", per sé, but we changed the DNA make up of the Great Apes #39; ancestor to branch off from all the other primates to form humans. So far, this makes sense to me... http://www.panspermia.org http://www.abc.net.auFrom:GreenTreeNymphViews:1 0ratingsTime:08:45More inEducation

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When Science and Religion Agree - Video

Posted in DNA

3. Atoms, Cells and The Flow of Life SG – Video


3. Atoms, Cells and The Flow of Life SG
Understanding the significance of the structure of DNA is, as Francis Crick put it, to understand the "secret of life". This is a very important lecture providing a basis for much of the rest of this course and an understanding how life works. The first part of this lecture provides a perspective from atoms to cell biology as a basis for life on this planet. The second part shows how the information for life in DNA results in the proteins that control how life functions. From their original paper published in NATURE in 1953, Watson and Crick wryly wrote, "It has not escaped our notice that the specific pairing we have postulated immediately suggests a possible copying mechanism for the genetic material." This lecture also describes how biological information is copied. What is life?From:Albert KauschViews:0 0ratingsTime:01:39:52More inEducation

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4. Some Techniques in Biotechnology SG – Video


4. Some Techniques in Biotechnology SG
Techniques in molecular biology have played a large role in the basic and applied sciences of biotechnology. In this lecture, the technique of gene cloning is explained and how cloned sequences of DNA from different sources can be used to construct transgenes used in genetic modification. This techniques allows applications in Agricultural, Pharmaceutical and Medical Biotechnology that are explained later in the course.From:Albert KauschViews:0 0ratingsTime:30:05More inEducation

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4. Some Techniques in Biotechnology SG - Video

Posted in DNA

Episode 417 – Video


Episode 417
A rich man comes to Sundara #39;s house for Kashi. Kashi begs Sundara to not make her do the dirty job. Badal forcibly takes Kashi to the other room and sends the rich man inside. Kashi begs the man to help her. Just then, a lady inspector comes there with a constable to raid Sundara #39;s house. Kashi pushes the rich man aside and comes out. The lady inspector arrests Sundara and Badal, and asks Kashi to come to the police station. Meanwhile, Sanjay too is in the lock up due to the false allegation. Bhairavi and Abhay are about to get married. Bhairavi reminds Abhay that they have to find Sanjay #39;s child. The lady inspector makes an inquiry about Kashi. Sanjay is surprised to see Kashi there. He calls out to the inspector and tells her that Kashi is his wife. Abhay suggests that they can bring some other child before the court after 12 years but Bhairavi tells him that the court is going to do a DNA test of the child. Abhay tries to discourage Bhairavi from getting into the mess but Bhairavi is adamant. Bhairavi tells him that Sanjay #39;s baby #39;s wrist has a symbol of a `Tulsi #39; leaf. Sanjay tells Kashi that he is her husband. The inspector asks Kashi about it. Kashi tells the inspector that she recognizes Sanjay and he is a mentally ill patient. She says that his wife #39;s name is Bhairavi. She decides not to reveal that Sanjay and Bhairavi were going to adopt the baby which she has in her hands. Sanjay tries his best to stop her but in vain. Baba Kadam comes to Bappaji to apologize for ...From:zeemarathiViews:0 0ratingsTime:21:52More inShows

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Episode 417 - Video

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INFORM HER2 Dual ISH Training Lesson 1: The INFORM HER2 Dual ISH DNA Probe Cocktail – Video


INFORM HER2 Dual ISH Training Lesson 1: The INFORM HER2 Dual ISH DNA Probe Cocktail
INFORM HER2 Dual ISH Training Lesson 1: The INFORM HER2 Dual ISH DNA Probe Cocktail Assay presented by Ventana Medcial Systems, Inc.From:VentanaMarcomViews:0 0ratingsTime:18:50More inScience Technology

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INFORM HER2 Dual ISH Training Lesson 1: The INFORM HER2 Dual ISH DNA Probe Cocktail - Video

Posted in DNA

The Staby® Technology from Delphi Genetics Efficiently Applied To DNA-Vaccine

CHARLEROI, Belgium--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

During the inauguration of its new building, the Belgian Biotech Company Delphi Genetics SA announced that the first antibiotic-free DNA vaccine using the Staby technology was efficiently tested in vivo. Together with academic and Biotech key-players, Delphi Genetics is participating to the DNAVAC project funded by the Walloon Region (BioWin project). The aim of the project is to develop and produce antibiotic-free DNA vaccines targeting veterinary diseases. As a model, the consortium developed a DNA vaccine against the Aujezsky virus the causative agent of pseudo-rabies.

This virus was selected as it causes systematically an acute and lethal disease in susceptible species, thereby providing an excellent model to test the efficacy of a vaccine candidate. The results of the challenge performed by Dr Anca Reschner are very clear: all vaccinated animals using the Staby vectors were resistant to the lethal Aujeszky virus. said Prof. Alain Vanderplasschen from the University of Lige (Immunology-Vaccinology).

Cdric Szpirer PhD, Delphi Genetics co-Founder and CEO, explained: This is the first real DNA vaccine produced using the Staby technology. Several DNA vectors have been made in the past to generate production of antibodies, but this is the first time that in vivo tests were performed in order to evaluate efficiency against a disease. All production steps of the vaccine were performed efficiently avoiding completely the use of antibiotic-resistance genes as recommended by regulatory authorities (FDA, USDA, EMA). These results validate the use of Staby outside the field of protein production.

Indeed, a few weeks ago, on October, 8 Delphi Genetics announced a broad licensing agreement with a subsidiary of Merck & Co., Inc., known as MSD outside the United States and Canada, for the use of the StabyExpress technology to produce proteins in the areas of human and animal health. The same technology was licensed previously to Sanofi-Pasteur (2009) and GSK (2010) for production of proteins used in human vaccines.

As announced on January, 30, 2012, the DNAVAC project involves a consortium including Eurogentec SA, another Belgian Biotech company (part of Kaneka) in charge of large scale DNA production and purification, and two universities: the Catholic University of Louvain in charge of pharmaceutical and toxicity studies associated with the project and the University of Lige in charge of vaccinology and veterinary aspects.

About Delphi Genetics SA

Founded at the end of 2001, Delphi Genetics SA develops technologies for genetic engineering and protein expression using unique expertise in the domain of plasmid stabilisation systems. Since 2004, Delphi Genetics has been marketing innovative kits and services for researchers. Some of these kits contain the Staby technology that has since been licensed for industrial applications (see above). Indeed, the Staby technology can be applied to any industrial DNA or protein production process that involves bacterial fermentation. Delphi Genetics is involved in several research projects including adaptation of the technology to yeast and mammalian cells.

http://www.delphigenetics.com

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The Staby® Technology from Delphi Genetics Efficiently Applied To DNA-Vaccine

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OncoSec Medical to Present Data at DNA Vaccines 2012 Conference

SAN DIEGO, Dec. 04, 2012 /PRNewswire/ --OncoSec Medical Inc. (ONCS), a company developing its advanced-stage ImmunoPulse DNA-based immunotherapy and NeoPulse therapy to treat solid tumor cancers, announced it will be presenting at the DNA Vaccines 2012 Conference at the Loews Coronado Bay Resort in San Diego, California. OncoSec is a Silver Sponsor of the conference.

(Logo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20110314/MM64943LOGO)

The Company will conduct two presentations within the Cancer Immune Therapy Track on Thursday, December 6:

From 11:30 AM-12:00 PM PT, Richard Heller, Ph.D., director of the Frank Reidy Research Center for Bioelectrics at Old Dominion University, will speak on "Gene Electrotransfer for the Enhanced Delivery of Immunomodulating Agents." In this presentation, Dr. Heller will present data on electroporation and delivery of plasmids for cancer immunotherapy, a technology used in OncoSec's ImmunoPulse therapy.

From 12:00 PM-12:30 PM PT, Adil Daud, M.D., clinical professor of medicine and dermatology and director of the melanoma program at the University of California, San Francisco, will speak on "Clinical Studies of Melanoma Therapy." In this presentation, Dr. Daud will be reviewing previously presented interim data from OncoSec's ongoing Phase II trial for metastatic melanoma for which he is principal investigator.

The DNA Vaccines Conference brings in an array of researchers from all corners of the world to present new cutting-edge discoveries in DNA vaccines that have never before been presented or published at any other meeting. For more information about the conference, please visit: http://www.bioconferences.com/conferences/dna/index.aspx

About OncoSec Medical Inc.

OncoSec Medical Inc. isa biopharmaceutical companydeveloping its advanced-stage ImmunoPulse DNA-based immunotherapy and NeoPulse therapy to treat solid tumor cancers.ImmunoPulse and NeoPulse therapiesaddress an unmet medical needandrepresenta potential solution, for less invasive and less expensive therapies that are able to minimize detrimental effects resulting from currently available cancer treatments such as surgery, systemic chemotherapy or immunotherapy and other treatment alternatives. OncoSec Medical's core technology is based upon its proprietaryuse of anelectroporation platform todramatically enhancethedelivery and uptake of a locally delivered DNA-based immunocytokine (ImmunoPulse) or chemotherapeutic agent(NeoPulse). Treatment ofvarious solid cancersusing these powerfuland targetedanti-cancer agentshas demonstratedselective destruction of cancerous cellswhile sparing healthy normal tissues during early and late stage clinical trials. OncoSec's clinical programs include three Phase II clinical trials for ImmunoPulse targeting lethal skin cancers. More information is available athttp://www.oncosec.com/.

This press release contains forward looking statements within the meaning of the U.S. Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Any statements in this release that are not historical facts may be considered such "forward looking statements." Forward looking statements are based on management's current preliminary expectations and are subject to risks and uncertainties which may cause our results to differ materially and adversely from the statements contained herein. Some of the potential risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ from those predicted include our ability to raise additional funding, our ability to acquire, develop or commercialize new products, uncertainties inherent in pre-clinical studies and clinical trials, unexpected new data, safety and technical issues, competition and market conditions. These and additional risks and uncertainties are more fully described in OncoSec Medical's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Undue reliance should not be placed on forward looking statements which speak only as of the date they are made. OncoSec Medical disclaims any obligation to update any forward looking statements to reflect new information, events or circumstances after the date they are made, or to reflect the occurrence of unanticipated events.

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OncoSec Medical to Present Data at DNA Vaccines 2012 Conference

Posted in DNA

DNA Reveals the Last 20 Ethiopian Lions Are Genetically Distinct

Every day 20 unusual lions greet visitors at a tiny animal park in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. These lions, which have spent generations in captivity, are not like most African lions (Panthera leo leo). For one thing, they are slightly smaller than the wild lions found elsewhere on the continent. For another, the males carry distinctive black manes that extend from their shoulders to their stomachs and are much darker than those sported by other lions. And finally, new research reveals that these rare lions also have unique DNA, although not enough to declare them a separate species or subspecies.

I think they are genetically distinct enough to justify conservation efforts, says Michael Hofreiter, professor of evolutionary biology and ecology at the University of York in England and one of the authors of a study about the Ethiopian lions DNA that was published in the October European Journal of Wildlife Research. The research team came to its conclusions after running DNA tests on 15 of the zoos 20 lions, which revealed that the lions possess both microsatellite and mitochondrial DNA that is distinct from other African lions. (Because the five remaining lions were all juvenile progeny of the others, they were not tested.)

Hofreiter says these animals are not only genetically different but also phenotypically unique, indicating that their behavior is different from other lions. If any lions like them still exist in the wild, they probably occur in open forest habitat, rather than in savanna landscapes, he says.

The lions at the zoo all descend from a collection owned by Haile Selassie, the emperor of Ethiopia from 1930 to 1974 and the messiah of the Rastafarian movement. Selassie founded the zoo in 1948 with five males and two femalesanimals reportedly captured in southwestern Ethiopia, although no evidence backs up their exact source. Luckily, despite the low founder population, Hofreiter says neither the DNA nor the appearance of the animals shows any signs of inbreeding.

In a University of York press release, lead author Susann Bruche, who conducted the research with the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, but is now with Imperial College London, echoed the need for preserving these lions singular genetics. A great amount of genetic diversity in lions has most likely already been lost, largely due to human influences. Every effort should be made to preserve as much of the lions genetic heritage as possible.

The authors have called for renewed efforts to conserve this one-of-a-kind population. The first step, they recommend, is establishing a formal captive breeding program. At the moment they are hardly bred because of a lack of space, Hofreiter says. He reports that a new zoo is being built nearby that will give the animals significantly more room. It will have the possibility to keep two larger groups and allow the lions to live in more natural groups than is currently the case. The Leipzig Zoo, which also contributed to the DNA study, is consulting on the construction of the new zoo.

The current zoo is hardly sufficient for breeding efforts. The lions are kept in tiny cement and steel cages, with few opportunities for exercise or enrichment. Comments on TripAdvisor call the cages soul-killing and horrific. This 2011 video showcases the minimal conditions in which the lions live:

Conditions might be even worse behind the scenes. In 2006 the BBC reported that the zoo routinely poisoned lion cubs and sold their corpses to taxidermists because the institution lacked the money or space to care for the animals. Hofreiter discounted the report, although he points out that problems have existed. As far as we know, the story that cubs were killed is wrong, but it is true that previously cubs sometimes died soon after birth because of inadequate keeping conditions in the old zoo, and we cannot exclude that some of these were sold for preparation, he says.

In addition to the new zoo and, it is hoped, a better breeding program, the researchers plan to follow up on rumors that more of these rare lions might still be in remote parts of the country. There are areas in Ethiopia where these lions probably still exist in the wild, so we aim in the long run to obtain field samples and genetically type these, Hofreiter says. The political situation is not simple, however, and for all strands of research we would require more money than we have currently available.

Photos by Joerg Junhold and Klaus Eulenberger, Leipzig Zoo. Used with permission

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DNA Reveals the Last 20 Ethiopian Lions Are Genetically Distinct

Posted in DNA

First Photo of DNA

Fifty-nine years after James Watson and Francis Crick deduced the double-helix structure of DNA, a scientist has captured the first direct photograph of the twisted ladder that props up life.

Enzo Di Fabrizio, a physics professor at the Magna Graecia University in Catanzaro, Italy, snapped the picture using an electron microscope.

Previously, scientists had only seen DNA's structure indirectly. The double-corkscrew form was first discovered using a technique called X-ray crystallography, in which a material's shape is reconstructed based on how X-rays bounce after they collide with it.

But Di Fabrizio and his colleagues developed a plan to bring DNA out of hiding. They built a nanoscopic landscape of extremely water-repellant silicon pillars. When they added a solution that contained strands of DNA into this scene, the water quickly evaporated and left behind cords of bare DNA that stretched like tightropes between the tiny mesas.

They then shone beams of electrons through holes in the silicon bed, and captured high-resolution images of the illuminated molecules.

Di Fabrizio's images actually show a thread of several interwoven DNA molecules, as opposed to just two coupled strands. This is because the energy of the electrons used would be enough to destroy an isolated double helix, or a single strand from a double helix.

But with the use of more sensitive equipment and lower energy electrons, Di Fabrizio thinks that snapshots of individual double helices will soon be possible, reports New Scientist.

Molecules of DNA, or deoxyribonucleic acid, store the genetic instructions that govern all living organisms' growth and function.

Di Fabrizio's innovation will allow scientists to vividly observe interactions between DNA and some of life's other essential ingredients, such as RNA (ribonucleic acid). The results of Di Fabrizio's work were published in the journal NanoLetters.

Copyright 2012 Life's Little Mysteries, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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First Photo of DNA

Posted in DNA

DNA may help scientists find ‘dark matter,’ the glue that binds galaxies

That wonder molecule of life on Earth, DNA, is now being enlisted in the search for an exotic species zooming through the cosmos: dark matter.

As far back as the 1930s, astronomers watching distant galaxies saw that something was missing: There were not enough stars to account for the heavy gravity needed to whirl galaxies so quickly or smash them together so swiftly.

Graphic

Scientists cant see dark matter particles, but they think they may be able to capture evidence of them when they ping into other tiny things, like balls on a pool table. Previous ideas for capturing these interactions required huge spaces, but a group of scientists has come up with the idea for a detector that would fit on a large coffee table.

More health news

Jenny Gold | Kaiser Health News

A growing number of hospitals offer life specialists to help young patients cope with illness.

Consumers Union of United States

Exercise and meditation are among the ways to counter the effects of high-intensity jobs and family duties.

Linda Searing

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DNA may help scientists find ‘dark matter,’ the glue that binds galaxies

Posted in DNA

Arrest James D. Watson for fraud. – Video


Arrest James D. Watson for fraud.
1945 Rosalind Franklin graduated with a Ph.D. from Cambridge. Franklin sets out to examine DNA using X-ray crystallography. With this technique a crystal is exposed to x-rays in order to produce a diffraction pattern. it is possible to reconstruct the positions of the atoms in the molecules that comprise the basic unit of the crystal called the unit cell. 1948 Pauling diagrams Alpha Helix on paper Watson is now age 18 living on a farm in Indiana picking his nose. 1949 Franklin proves Pauling was right by taking a photo of the Alpha Helix. Watson is now thinking of going to college. 1950 A chemist by training, Franklin had established herself as a world expert in the structure of graphite and other carbon compounds before she moved to London. 1950 Nixon takes Pauling #39;s passport bans Pauling from traveling to science conf where Pauling was suppose to present his DNA research. Watson now 22, earns a PhD in Zoology in a farm town in Indiana gets drunk. Watson has never even heard of crystalline photography in 1950. 1951 Franklin works for John Randall at King #39;s College in London. Wilkins and Franklin set out to examine DNA using X-ray crystallography. With this technique a crystal is exposed to x-rays in order to produce a diffraction pattern. If the crystal is pure enough and the diffraction pattern is acquired very carefully, it is possible to reconstruct the positions of the atoms in the molecules that comprise the basic unit of the crystal called the unit cell. 1951 ...From:Paul KangasViews:0 0ratingsTime:05:09More inComedy

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Arrest James D. Watson for fraud. - Video

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Mistletoe-Seven Year Old Girl gets Mistletoe from Tree – Video


Mistletoe-Seven Year Old Girl gets Mistletoe from Tree
Mistletoe-Seven Year Old Girl gets Mistletoe from Tree Mistletoe is the common name for obligate hemi-parasitic plants in several families in the order Santalales. These plants grow attached to and penetrating within the branches of a tree or shrub by a structure called the haustorium, through which they absorb nutrients from the host plant.The name was originally applied to Viscum album (European Mistletoe, Santalaceae), the only species native in Great Britain and much of Europe. European mistletoe, Viscum album is readily recognized by its smooth-edged oval evergreen leaves borne in pairs along the woody stem, and waxy white berries in dense clusters of 2 to 6. In America the genus Viscum does not grow wild but the Eastern Mistletoe (in the genus Phoradendron) is similar, but has shorter, broader leaves and longer clusters of 10 or more berries. Viscum album is a poisonous plant that causes acute gastrointestinal problems including stomach pain, and diarrhea along with low pulse.[1] However, both European Mistletoe and the North American species, Phoradendron serotinum, are commercially harvested for Christmas decorations.[2] Later the name was further extended to other related species and even families, including Phoradendron serotinum (the Eastern Mistletoe of eastern North America, also Santalaceae). The largest family of Mistletoes, Loranthaceae, has 73 genera and over 900 species.[3] Subtropical and tropical climates have markedly more Mistletoe species; Australia ...From:trickshotcharityViews:0 0ratingsTime:01:00More inEntertainment

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Mistletoe-Seven Year Old Girl gets Mistletoe from Tree - Video

Posted in DNA