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Marco Rubio, confirmado como nuevo secretario de Estado: el hispano que logra el puesto más alto en una Administración en EEUU

Al contrario que el presidente electo, es un neoconservador republicano tradicional en política exterior y un firme partidario de la OTAN. Aunque habla español perfectamente no suele hacerlo en público. Leer




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Tulsi Gabbard, que acusó a Ucrania y a EEUU de tener 30 laboratorios secretos para crear virus, dirigirá el espionaje estadounidense

Esta simpatizante de Putin no tiene ninguna experiencia en Inteligencia Leer




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¿Pagan suficientes impuestos los ricos en EEUU?

Ya hace tiempo que Warren Buffet, un inversor con un olfato tan afinado para los negocios que está considerado el tercer hombre más rico del mundo, pide a gritos pagar más impuestos. Con un artículo en The New York Times, ha vuelto a azuzar la polémica sobre la carga impositiva de las rentas altas. 




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Siami as SeeU

Last week I did a cosplay shoot with long-time friend and model Siami as Vocaloid SeeU (seen here on the right). We shot at the Melbourne Convention and Exhibition centre, which turned out to be a perfect location. We were assisted by Grace, and I took a few casual shots of both of the girls […]




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EEUU teme a los coches 'conectados' que usen tecnología china o rusa

Alega riesgos para la seguridad nacional, como que esa tecnología permita "recopilar datos sensibles o manipular de forma remota coches en movimiento" Leer




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Trump 'dispara' a todo lo que se mueva fuera de EEUU

El político republicano, en la carrera por volver a la Casa Blanca, amenaza con aranceles del 200% a la legendaria John Deere si traslada producción a México Leer




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Más de 22.000 motoristas muertos en EEUU por no ser obligatorio el uso del casco

Una investigación que abarca el periodo 1976-2022 recuerda que este elemento de seguridad sólo se exige en una tercera parte del país. En el último año analizado, fallecieron 6.222 motociclistas en EEUU, la cifra más alta de la historia Leer




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Telefónica Venezolana pagará 85 millones de multa para cerrar un caso de soborno en EEUU

Sería por el pago a funcionarios del Gobierno venezolano para conseguir así acceso a divisas en una subasta Leer




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Blinken viaja de emergencia a Bruselas para debatir la ayuda a Ucrania tras la elección de Trump como presidente de EEUU

La elección de Trump el 5 de noviembre, sumada a una crisis política en Alemania, aumentó los temores en Europa sobre el futuro de la asistencia a Kiev Leer




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España lidera la venta azulejera a EEUU pese a encarecerse un 42,6%

Tile of Spain revalida su posicionamiento como proveedor cerámico al gigante americano pero advierte de las consecuencias de encarecerse más que el italiano por la falta de ayudas Leer




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El ex embajador en EEUU, Javier Rupérez, abandona La Mirada Crítica tras una brutal bronca: "¡Este es un gilipollas perdido!"

Javier Rupérez, ex embajador español en EEUU, ha protagonizado uno de los momentos más tensos en la historia del programa de Ana Terradillos. Tras un brutal enfrentamiento con varios colaboradores se ha marchado en pleno directo con "ahí se quedan" Leer




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Appreciating van Leeuwenhoek: The Cloth Merchant Who Discovered Microbes

Appreciating van Leeuwenhoek: The Cloth Merchant Who Discovered Microbes

Imagine trying to cope with a pandemic like COVID-19 in a world where microscopic life was unknown. Prior to the 17th century, people were limited by what they could see with their own two eyes. But then a Dutch cloth merchant changed everything.

His name was Antonie van Leeuwenhoek, and he lived from 1632 to 1723. Although untrained in science, Leeuwenhoek became the greatest lens-maker of his day, discovered microscopic life forms and is known today as the “father of microbiology.”

Visualizing ‘animalcules’ with a ‘small see-er’

Leeuwenhoek opened the door to a vast, previously unseen world. J. Verolje/Wellcome Collection, CC BY

Leeuwenhoek didn’t set out to identify microbes. Instead, he was trying to assess the quality of thread. He developed a method for making lenses by heating thin filaments of glass to make tiny spheres. His lenses were of such high quality he saw things no one else could.

This enabled him to train his microscope – literally, “small see-er” – on a new and largely unexpected realm: objects, including organisms, far too small to be seen by the naked eye. He was the first to visualize red blood cells, blood flow in capillaries and sperm.

Drawings from a Leeuwenhoek letter in 1683 illustrating human mouth bacteria. Huydang2910, CC BY-SA

Leeuwenhoek was also the first human being to see a bacterium – and the importance of this discovery for microbiology and medicine can hardly be overstated. Yet he was reluctant to publish his findings, due to his lack of formal education. Eventually, friends prevailed upon him to do so.

He wrote, “Whenever I found out anything remarkable, I thought it my duty to put down my discovery on paper, so that all ingenious people might be informed thereof.” He was guided by his curiosity and joy in discovery, asserting “I’ve taken no notice of those who have said why take so much trouble and what good is it?”

When he reported visualizing “animalcules” (tiny animals) swimming in a drop of pond water, members of the scientific community questioned his reliability. After his findings were corroborated by reliable religious and scientific authorities, they were published, and in 1680 he was invited to join the Royal Society in London, then the world’s premier scientific body.

Leeuwenhoek was not the world’s only microscopist. In England, his contemporary Robert Hooke coined the term “cell” to describe the basic unit of life and published his “Micrographia,” featuring incredibly detailed images of insects and the like, which became the first scientific best-seller. Hooke, however, did not identify bacteria.

Despite Leuwenhoek’s prowess as a lens-maker, even he could not see viruses. They are about 1/100th the size of bacteria, much too small to be visualized by light microscopes, which because of the physics of light can magnify only thousands of times. Viruses weren’t visualized until 1931 with the invention of electron microscopes, which could magnify by the millions.

An image of the hepatitis virus courtesy of the electron microscope. E.H. Cook, Jr./CDC via Associated Press

A vast, previously unseen world

Leeuwenhoek and his successors opened up, by far, the largest realm of life. For example, all the bacteria on Earth outweigh humans by more than 1,100 times and outnumber us by an unimaginable margin. There is fossil evidence that bacteria were among the first life forms on Earth, dating back over 3 billion years, and today it is thought the planet houses about 5 nonillion (1 followed by 30 zeroes) bacteria.

Some species of bacteria cause diseases, such as cholera, syphilis and strep throat; while others, known as extremophiles, can survive at temperatures beyond the boiling and freezing points of water, from the upper reaches of the atmosphere to the deepest points of the oceans. Also, the number of harmless bacterial cells on and in our bodies likely outnumber the human ones.

Viruses, which include the coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 that causes COVID-19, outnumber bacteria by a factor of 100, meaning there are more of them on Earth than stars in the universe. They, too, are found everywhere, from the upper atmosphere to the ocean depths.

A visualization of the human rhinovirus 14, one of many viruses that cause the common cold. Protein spikes are colored white for clarity. Thomas Splettstoesser, CC BY-SA

Strangely, viruses probably do not qualify as living organisms. They can replicate only by infecting other organisms’ cells, where they hijack cellular systems to make copies of themselves, sometimes causing the death of the infected cell.

It is important to remember that microbes such as bacteria and viruses do far more than cause disease, and many are vital to life. For example, bacteria synthesize vitamin B12, without which most living organisms would not be able to make DNA.

Likewise, viruses cause diseases such as the common cold, influenza and COVID-19, but they also play a vital role in transferring genes between species, which helps to increase genetic diversity and propel evolution. Today researchers use viruses to treat diseases such as cancer.

Scientists’ understanding of microbes has progressed a long way since Leeuwenhoek, including the development of antibiotics against bacteria and vaccines against viruses including SARS-CoV-2.

But it was Leeuwenhoek who first opened people’s eyes to life’s vast microscopic realm, a discovery that continues to transform the world.

By Richard Gunderman, Chancellor's Professor of Medicine, Liberal Arts, and Philanthropy, Indiana University. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

 

sb admin Tue, 04/06/2021 - 10:49
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Masacre en Tumaco, renuncias masivas en EEUU y operación retorno

En este episodio, La Luciérnaga se enciende para revisar el crimen contra indígenas de Tumaco. También, revisamos las renuncias masivas en Estados Unidos por una canción de Beyoncé. Además, lo acompañamos en el regreso a las luego del puente de San Pedro.La Luciérnaga un espacio de humor, análisis y opinión de Caracol Radio que acompaña desde hace 30 años a sus oyentes en el regreso a casa.





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Regards sur le réel : documentaires belges du 20e siècle = Belgische documentaires uit de 20ste eeuw = Belgian documentaries from the 20th century (1963-2000) / written and directed by Edmond Bernhard [DVD].

[Belgium] : Cinémathèque royale de Belgique, [2015]




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Las academias nacionales de EEUU alertan de la prevalencia del abuso sexual en ciencia

Es necesario un cambio cultural para evitar seguir perjudicando a las investigadoras




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UEFA eEURO 2020 draw made

The UEFA eEURO 2020 draw has been made, featuring all 55 UEFA associations.




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Emerging technologies in computing : Second International Conference, iCETiC 2019, London, UK, August 19-20, 2019 : proceedings / Mahdi H. Miraz, Peter S. Excell, Andrew Ware, Safeeullah Soomro, Maaruf Ali (eds.)




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Rooftop urban agriculture / Francesco Orsini, Marielle Dubbeling, Henk de Zeeuw, Giorgio Gianquinto, editors




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Narratives of kingship in Eurasian empires, 1300-1800 / by Richard van Leeuwen

Rotch Library - PN56.5.K44 L44 2017




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Marriage record of Penalver, Domingo and Valdes, Yuoeeuta




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Leeuwenhoek's legatees and Beijerinck's beneficiaries: a history of medical virology in the Netherlands / Gerard van Doornum, Ton van Helvoort, Neeraja Sankaran

Online Resource




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Las academias nacionales de EEUU alertan de la prevalencia del abuso sexual en ciencia

Es necesario un cambio cultural para evitar seguir perjudicando a las investigadoras




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Mediated messages: periodicals, exhibitions and the shaping of postmodern architecture / edited by Véronique Patteeuw and Léa-Catherine Szacka

Rotch Library - NA682.P67 M43 2018