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For more than twenty years scientists have been seeking to understand the mystery of the "sixth sense" of direction. By trying out ideas and solving problems one by one, they are now getting closer to one answer. One funny idea is that animals might have a built-in compass (指南針). Our earth itself is a big magnet (磁體). So a little magnetic needle that swings freely lines itself with the big earth magnet to point north and south. When people discovered that idea about a thousand years ago and invented the compass, it allowed sailors to navigate (航海) on ocean voyages, even under cloudy skies. Actually the idea of the living compass came just from observing animals in nature. Many birds migrate twice a year between their summer homes and winter homes. Some of them fly for thousands of kilometers and mostly at night. Experiments have shown that some birds can recognize star patterns. But they can keep on course even under cloudy skies. How can they do that? A common bird that does not migrate but is great at finding its way home is the homing pigeon. Not all pigeons can find their way home. Those that can are very good at it, and they have been widely studied. One interesting experiment was to attach little magnets to the birds' heads to block their magnetic sense-just as a loud radio can keep you from hearing a call to dinner. On sunny days, that did not fool the pigeons. Evidently they can use the sun to tell which way they are going. But on cloudy days, the pigeons with magnets could not find their way. It was as if the magnets had blocked their magnetic sense. Similar experiments with the same kind of results were done with honeybees. These insects also seem to have a special sense of direction. In spite of the experiments, the idea of an animal compass seemed pretty extraordinary. How would an animal get the magnetic stuff for a compass? An answer came from an unexpected source. A scientist was studying bacteria that lived in the mud of ponds and marshes. He found accidentally little rod-like bacteria that all swam together in one direction-north. Further study showed that each little bacterium had a chain of dense particles inside, which proved magnetic. The bacteria had made themselves into little magnets that could line up with the earth's magnet. The big news was that a living thing, even a simple bacterium, can make magnetite. That led to a search to see whether animals might have it. By using a special instrument called magnetometer, scientists were able to find magnetite in bees and birds, and even in fish. In each animal, except for the bee, the magnetic stuff was always in or close to the brain. Thus, the idea of a built-in animal compass began to seem reasonable. | |||||||||||
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科目:高中英語 來源:期末題 題型:閱讀理解
Can people change their skin colour without suffering like pop king Michael Jackson? Perhaps yes.
Scientists have found the gene that determines skin colour.
The gene comes in two versions, one of which is found in 99 per cent of Europeans. The other is
found in 93 to 100 per cent of Africans, researchers at Pennsylvania State University report in the latest
issue of Science.
Scientists have changed the colour of a dark-striped zebrafish to uniform gold by inserting a version
of the pigment (色素) gene into a young fish. As with humans,zebrafish skin colour is determined by
pigment cells, which contain melanosomes (黑色素). The number, size and darkness of melanosomes
per pigment cell determines skin colour.
It appears that, like the golden zebrafish,light-skinned Europeans also have a mutation (變異) in the
gene for melanosome production. This results in less pigmented skin.
However, Keith Cheng leader of the research team, points out that the mutation is different in human
and zebrafish genes.
Humans acquired dark skin in Africa about l.5 million years ago to protect bodies from ultra-violet rays
of the sun (太陽光紫外線), which can cause skin cancer.
But when modern humans leave Africa to live in northern latitudes, they need more sunlight on their
skin to produce vitamin D. So the related gene changes, according to Cheng.
Asians have the same verslon of the gene as Africans, so they probably acquired their light skin through
the action of some other gene that affects skin colour, said Cheng.
The new discovery could lead to medical treatments for skin cancer. It also could lead to research into
ways to change skin colour without damaging it like chemical treatment did on Michael Jackson.
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