Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Giant George is world’s tallest dog on record

The 4-year-old Great Dane beat his ruff rival by three-quarters of an inch

TUCSON, Ariz. - A 250-pound blue Great Dane from Arizona gives new meaning to the term "big dog."

Guinness World Records says Giant George from Tucson is the tallest dog ever on record.
Guinness said Monday that he stands 3 feet, 7 inches tall from paw to shoulder, which is three-quarters of an inch taller than his closest rival — Titan, a white Great Dane from San Diego.
Guinness officials say there were conflicting reports about Giant George's height, so they sent a judge to verify it.
The 4-year-old is owned by David Nasser.

 

Mid, late 20s best age to have a baby

When is the ideal age to have or adopt a first baby? For most women it is between the ages of 25 to 34 years old.
Slightly more than 75 percent of women questioned in a joint survey by Forbes Woman.com and TheBump.com believe it is the perfect time to become a mother. Forty-two percent narrowed it down further to 25-29 years old, and 17 percent said there was no best age.
Women felt that by their mid-to-late 20s they were more likely to have established themselves in their career and financially, and were ready to take on a new role, according to the poll. A ticking biological clock was a factor for only 21 percent of women.
"Women are looking for a good balance." said Jenna Goudreau, of Forbes Woman.com who worked on the survey. "The number one factor in coming up with this ideal age bracket was career and financial security."
The poll included responses from 2,210 women, nearly half of whom were mothers. More than 50 percent of women without children said they planned to have two children, while slightly more than a third intended to have three or more.
"One of the things we were trying to do with the study is not only find the ideal age to become a mom but to become a mom and have a successful career, as half of the workforce are women now," Goudreau explained.
Although many women combined, or planned to combine, motherhood with a job, 62 percent believe having children has a negative impact on a career. But only 30 percent of working mothers said it had affected their own career.
"I did find that women who have their children younger tend not to earn as much money in their lifetimes," said Goudreau, adding that the younger women are when they have their first child, the less invested they tend to be in their career.

Scared straight after a health threat?

People vow to change their ways, but often not for very long

The medical tests are back. The cruel news is delivered: the numbers show trouble inside your body.

Instantly, you rocket from mildly anxious to scared straight. That’s how it feels, anyway. In the exam room, in that raw moment, you firmly renounce your bad health habits. You promise to adopt a low-fat, gym-heavy routine. You’ll live right, you tell the doctor — and yourself. You’ll stick to it. You swear.
Save it. Your doctor has heard it before. 
“I think every physician has,” said Dr. Steven Chang, a family practitioner at the University of California Davis Medical Center and a staff physician at RightHealth.com. He recalled diagnosing some patients with diabetes and collaborating with them on a new diet plan. “They will leave my office and I’ll immediately see them in the [hospital] cafeteria — eating a hamburger and French fries ... That’s difficult.”
What’s the true shelf life of a health scare? That can depend on individual willpower, the height of the internal emergency and whether someone feels or sees physical symptoms — like chest pain or blood after coughing. Tangible signs of sickness may inject deeper fear and more lasting improvements compared to, say, merely reading ugly stats on a sheet of paper (such as a high cholesterol count).
A text message poll of 100 U.S. family physicians, conducted by Truth On Call for msnbc.com, found that 47 percent of doctors said patients typically stick to their vow to live better for just a matter of weeks after a health scare, 25 percent said the good behavior lasts several months and just 7 percent said patients stick to their resolve for a year or longer. Nineteen percent said the effect of a health scare lasts just a few days and 2 percent said it doesn't last for even a day. 
Chang said he pins the typical duration of fright-induced lifestyle adjustments at three to six months. “Once you start an exercise regimen, if it peters out after a few months and if you don’t feel any different, the impetus to change may not be [as strong] as that initial shock.”
As Lori Hope found, drastic change is tough to maintain no matter how powerful your motivation.
“How long can we go vegan and macrobiotic? How long can we sustain that?” asked the former medical journalist. 
In 2002, after Hope was diagnosed with lung cancer, she stepped up her exercise routine. She already ate an organic diet but also added meditation and yoga to the list of things she tried to boost her health.
"I continued after my treatment, but that went away fairly quickly," she said, finding it her busy schedule made it impossible to do it all.


 

Dinosaurs had wrists like birds

Wrists and feathers in the lineage that led to birds preceded flight

The flexible wrists of birds that let them fold their wings have now been seen in dinosaurs well before flight, scientists find.

Dinosaurs such as Velociraptor might have partly folded their feathered arms to protect such plumage from harm's way, researchers explained. The wrists and the feathers in the lineage that led to birds then became more extreme, laying the groundwork for flight, they added.
Although birds are most known for their feathers, wings and toothless beaks, another distinctive feature is a wrist joint that is extremely flexible, although only in one direction. A bird can bend its wrist to the point where the side of the hand where the little finger would be can lie closely alongside the forearm, so any fingertips would point back almost towards the elbow, but the wrist cannot bend in the opposite direction, nor even fully straighten. 
This unique joint permits a bird to fold the wing when at rest, and to partly fold the wing during the upstroke in flight, greatly improving the efficiency of their flight. The question then is when and how this wrist evolved.
Evolution evidence
There is overwhelming evidence that birds evolved from predatory dinosaurs , the theropods, which include carnivores such as Velociraptor and giants such as Tyrannosaurus rex.
For instance, these hunters seemed to have possessed a similar way of breathing, and many also may have possessed feathers to keep them warm or to serve as courtship ornaments. The earliest theropods had wrists that were apparently relatively straight and inflexible, raising the questions of when and how the avian-style wrist developed.
A team of Canadian, British and Chinese researchers traced the gradual evolution of this wrist in roughly a dozen species of theropods, analyzing several well-preserved members of this group from 110 to 160 million years ago that included a wide range of body designs. They found that a wrist bone called the radiale slowly and progressively took on a wedge-like shape in the theropods more closely related to birds, such as Velociraptor and Deinondenychus.
As this bone changed its shape, the wrist would have become increasingly bird-like in its range of motion. 
This increase in the ability to fold the wrist took place alongside two other trends — an increase in arm length and an increase in the length of the feathers that adorned the arms of many theropods.
"If the wrist could not fold like this, the long feathers on the hand would drag on the ground, getting dirty or snagging on vegetation," said researcher David Hone, a paleontologist at the Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology of China in Beijing. "Protecting them would have been important for feathered dinosaurs in the past, as it is for birds today."
Cause or effect?
It remains unclear if the fold able wrist allowed dinosaurs to evolve longer feathers or if the evolution of longer feathers drove the need for more flexible wrists .
Still, it is clear "that wing-folding, or at least feathered arm folding, significantly preceded flight," said lead researcher Corwin Sullivan, a vertebrate paleontologist at the Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology in Beijing. "This pattern of flexibility originally evolved in a terrestrial context and just happened to be present and available for use when birds took to the air.
This discovery highlights the fact "that some characteristics that biologists used to think of as distinctively avian — feathers and air sacs are other good examples — are actually quite deeply rooted in theropod evolution," Sullivan added.


 

Giant snake preyed on baby dinosaurs

Fossil of Cretaceous Era snake was found coiled inside a dinosaur nest

Remains of an enormous snake have been discovered in a 67-million-year-old dinosaur nest, according to a new study. The snake was found coiled around a crushed dinosaur egg and next to what was left of a hatchling titanosaur.
This preserved moment in Cretaceous time provides the first direct evidence of the feeding behavior of a primitive snake, co-author Jason Head told Discovery News. Aside from this discovery, two other similar snake-egg pairings were also found at the site, located in what is now Gujarat in western India.
The 11.5-foot-long snake, described in the latest PLoS Biology, represents a new species, Sanajeh indicus, meaning "ancient-gaped one from the Indian subcontinent."
"It was not necessarily a specialized constrictor, but it clearly grabbed dinosaur hatchlings and gobbled them down," said Head, a paleontologist and assistant professor in the Department of Biology at the University of Toronto Mississauga.
"Sauropods laid their eggs in nests covering several hundred miles, so the newly hatched dinosaurs would have been like meatballs on a smorgasbord for the snakes," he added.
Dinosaur egg expert Dhananjay Mohabey from the Geological Survey of India first found the fossils in 1987. A formal agreement with the Government of India Ministry of Mines in 2004 allowed for additional study, fieldwork and other experts to come into the project. The best-preserved snake and nest set was brought to the University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology to facilitate analysis.
"The eggs were laid in loose sands and covered by a thin layer of sediment," said Mohabey. "We think that the hatch ling had just exited from its egg, and its movement attracted the snake."
Head added that, based on the geology of the site and the manner in which the fossils were preserved, a storm probably caused a sandy mudslide that buried the snake and remaining dinosaur hatchlings alive.
The parents, 70-foot-long titanosaur adults, were not present. "There was no evidence of parental care," Head said.
Even if these adult dinosaurs did encounter snakes, he doubts the lumbering plant-eating animals would have been very skillful at stomping out a fast moving snake.
He compared the scenario to modern sea turtles, which lay their eggs on the beach and then return to the ocean. When the turtle eggs hatch, "it's like a dinner bell for the ecosystem," Head said. The 1.6-foot-long baby dinosaurs would have been just as defenseless when facing large snake predators.
Snakes, therefore, probably helped to keep sauropod populations in check sometime after 100 million years ago, when snakes began to appear in the fossil record. The huge body of Sanajeh helped it to pack in such dinosaur meals.