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Home > News > Tags > tongue
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Blindness is arguably one of the things that have the ability to turn someone's life around. The disease carries a huge mental and physical strain on its victim, especially if the patient was not born blind. As such, finding a cure for its developed forms has been a long-standing goal for experts, one that has c... |
27 August 2009 18:41 GMT |
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Dentists usually look at the tongue and the gums to see what condition they’re in when we normally go in for a consult, but one doctor in the UK does more than just that. Dr. John Roberts has a Holistic Dentistry Practice in West Yorkshire where patients come in to have him look specifically at their tongues, w... |
21 July 2009 16:01 GMT |
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Experts at the Georgia Institute of Technology (Georgia Tech) have recently created an innovative system of controlling wheelchairs that is surely going to benefit those who suffer from paraplegia and other forms of paralysis and cannot move on their own. They've created a driving system for the prosthetics that... |
7 July 2009 06:22 GMT |
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According to Nwi website, a ten year-old boy from Hammond, Indiana, got his tongue stuck to a light pole on Wednesday. The local paper reports that, most likely, the kid was triple-dared by peers in a game. However, he won't forget this accident very soon, as freezing body parts to metal objects can be very pain... |
17 January 2009 05:43 GMT |
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Body art is controversial, and has many forms of manifestation, some more subtle, other more obvious, defying and even shocking. Tattoos are just one example of what happens when people take to their own skins to assert their personalities. Far from being a practice seen as exclusively reserved for sailors and bikers... |
13 June 2008 08:55 GMT |
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There's nothing faster on the ground than a cheetah on the hunt. The maximum speed is of 112 km (70 mi) per hour, but the average hunting speed is still of 72-90 km (46-56 mi) per hour. The elastic spine and the long legs allow the cheetah to make successive jumps 7 m (23 ft) in length each and in 2 seconds a ch... |
19 April 2008 05:13 GMT |
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Tongue is an organ specific to the vertebrates. And they can do a lot of things with their tongues...1. A blue whale weighing 60-70 tons (and the largest blue whales can double this weight) has a 3 tons tongue. It is by far the largest tongue in the animal world. And the whale tongue is not large because of the overa... |
12 April 2008 07:04 GMT |
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Despite the extreme long neck of the giraffe, the animal has the same number of neck (cervical) vertebrae like humans and most mammals: 7. In fact, as paradoxically as it sounds, the giraffe has the shortest neck relative to the foot length amongst all hoofed mammals! That's why they have to execute that clumsy ... |
10 March 2008 10:30 GMT |
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1.There is a whole order of fish, comprising 18 families, called anglerfish. The first spiny ray of the dorsal is located on the head and transformed into line and esca (bait), aimed for attracting prey to the mouth, imitating small marine creatures making the fish's food. The most famous fish of this order be... |
12 January 2008 08:53 GMT |
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Zac Efron really thinks he's God's gift to teenagers, doesn't he? Well, in some twisted way maybe he is, but I still think (allegedly) wearing fake eyelashes and putting on that much make-up is a definite turn-off when it comes to tween heartthrobs. The fact is, Zac definitely knows how to strut his st... |
11 January 2008 05:57 GMT |
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Some say that in a world of senses, taste is the queen. It is a pleasure, but also a protection that can tell the difference between what's good to eat and what could be harmful. Still, taste is so personal, that many have linked it to the personality of the individual. Some are sweet, others are not, and make a... |
7 November 2007 15:26 GMT |
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1. The Chameleons' closest relatives are ...the iguanas and dragon lizards (Agamidae). In fact, there are iguanas living in Americas called false chameleons, that resemble a lot the real chameleons of the Old World, and even have the ability of changing their color. The oldest known chameleon is the Mimeosaurus,... |
20 October 2007 07:53 GMT |
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It has already been predicted that by the end of the century, half of the languages spoken now worldwide will be gone. Not by evolving into another language (like Latin into Italian, Spanish, French or Romanian), but by being wiped out by other languages. A team has detected five global "hot spots" of indigenous lang... |
19 September 2007 04:35 GMT |
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Don't you believe that your body knows how your gut content tastes like? A team from the Department of Neuroscience at Mount Sinai School of Medicine has detected the same receptors for sweet taste in the tongue, T1R3 and the taste G protein gustducin, in the human intestines. These two sweet-sensing proteins ar... |
22 August 2007 06:35 GMT |
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This technique could turn Stephen Hawking into a hacker. The pressure waves in the ear induced by tongue movements could help paralyzed people interface with computers. This could help people experiencing quadriplegia due to spinal cord injuries (mainly because of car crash), about 6,000 new cases annually in US, but... |
3 August 2007 05:00 GMT |
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It is true that a whale's tongue can be 3 tons heavy but that of a humpback whale wrecked Wednesday on the steep, rocky shores of Admiralty Island (south of Juneau, southeast Alaska) was really unusual: its swollen tongue was the size of a small car!It is believed that a collision with a ship forced air into the... |
19 July 2007 04:22 GMT |
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We all know chameleons, especially for some of their performances, like the ability of changing color or for their special hunting technique. While the ability of changing color is not so singular in the animal world (many fishes, cephalopods like octopuses and squids, or even other lizards have it), their technique ... |
7 March 2007 11:02 GMT |
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