
The Final Colony - Author Lacerant Plainer
Science Fiction writer, Lacerant Plainer
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The Final Colony - Author Lacerant Plainer has been shared in 434 public circles
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Latest postings
2013-06-18 10:40:21 (0 comments, 0 reshares, 5 +1s)
Super Awesome Profiles/Pages On Google+ (17th June. 2013 GMT)
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2013-06-18 07:06:59 (0 comments, 7 reshares, 29 +1s)
You are more bacteria than you are you : We are practically walking petri dishes, rife with bacterial colonies from our skin to the deepest recesses of our guts. All the bacteria living inside you would fill a half-gallon jug; there are 10 times more bacterial cells in your body than human cells, according to Carolyn Bohach, a microbiologist at the University of Idaho (U.I.)
Starting in the mouth, nose or other orifices, these microbes travel through the esophagus, stomach and / or intestines—locations where most of them set up camp.
This is an extract from an article in NYT, as part of a Univ of Colorado research: As part of a new citizen-science initiative called the American Gut project, the lab sequenced my microbiome — that is, the genes not of “me,” exactly, but of the several hundred microbial species with whom I share this body. These bacteria, which number around ... more »

2013-06-17 15:51:50 (0 comments, 1 reshares, 13 +1s)
Dry ice moves on Mars
(This is a mix of the caption to the video and the article at the bottom)
Is frozen carbon dioxide a key to features in some Martian gullies? To find out, scientists grabbed a bag of dry ice and took a road trip.
NASA research indicates hunks of frozen carbon dioxide -- dry ice -- may glide down some Martian sand dunes on cushions of gas similar to miniature hovercraft, plowing furrows as they go.
"I have always dreamed of going to Mars," said Serina Diniega, a planetary scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., and lead author of a report published online by the journal Icarus. "Now I dream of snowboarding down a Martian sand dune on a block of dry ice."
Researchers deduced this process could explain one enigmatic class of gullies seen on Martian sand dunes by examining images from NASA's... more »


2013-06-17 15:45:55 (5 comments, 4 reshares, 25 +1s)
Bait ball - The Science of swarms Thanks to new observation technologies, powerful software, and statistical methods, the mechanics of collectives are being revealed. Indeed, enough physicists, biologists, and engineers have gotten involved that the science itself seems to be hitting a density-dependent shift. Without obvious leaders or an overarching plan, this collective of the collective-obsessed is finding that the rules that produce majestic cohesion out of local jostling turn up in everything from neurons to human beings. Behavior that seems impossibly complex can have disarmingly simple foundations. And the rules may explain everything from how cancer spreads to how the brain works and how armadas of robot-driven cars might someday navigate highways. The way individuals work together may actually be more important than the way they work alone.
_British Wildlife photographer... more »


2013-06-17 07:52:54 (2 comments, 7 reshares, 13 +1s)
Amazing recent posts on Science on G+ http://goo.gl/OKZO2 community
Post on Art in Science ( +Khalil A. Cassimally ) : http://goo.gl/I8he1
Post on Caffiene ( +Health Psychology of San Diego ) : http://goo.gl/uXJTJ
Post on self healing material ( +William Carter and ) : http://goo.gl/0uwZT
First fluorescent protein identified in a vertebrate ( +Biosciencia) : http://goo.gl/WGwUv
From Superman to science ( +Chris Worth) : http://goo.gl/n8C21
Meet Snowflake, the albino gorilla! ( +BioMed Central ) : http://goo.gl/Kczm7
#science #scienceeveryday #scienceongplus #posts


2013-06-16 10:29:41 (10 comments, 7 reshares, 53 +1s)
The hoverbike : Its not new, its just looking much better.
The hovering drones would not fly as efficiently as helicopters because of their shorter rotor blades, but their enclosed rotors have the advantage of a much smaller size and safety near humans. "They are less efficient than a helicopter, which has the benefit of larger diameter rotors," De Roche explained. "They do have unique performance advantages, though, as they have demonstrated flight within trees, close to walls and under bridges." Aerofex has currently limited human flight testing to a height of 15 feet and speeds of about 30 mph, but more out of caution rather than because of any technological limits. Older versions of the hover vehicles could fly about as fast as helicopters, De Roche said.
Article Link: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/hover-bike-lets-you-drive-jedi-956125

