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Collection Quotes - I
1. Common sense is the collection of prejudices acquired by age eighteen. - Albert Einstein
2. I love people. Everybody. I love them, I think, as a stamp collector loves his collection. Every story, every incident, every bit of conversation is raw material for me. - Sylvia Plath
3. Science is built up of facts, as a house is with stones. But a collection of facts is no more a science than a heap of stones is a house. - Henri Poincare
4. The Black Mamba collection of watches is me: It is my alter ego, so to speak. As I mentioned before, it is sharp, cutting edge and sleek which are characteristics I try to apply when I'm out there on the basketball court. - Kobe Bryant
5. I think this is the most extraordinary collection of talent, of human knowledge, that has ever been gathered at the White House - with the possible exception of when Thomas Jefferson dined alone. - John F. Kennedy
6. I am a collection of thoughts and memories and likes and dislikes. I am the things that have happened to me and the sum of everything I've ever done. I am the clothes I wear on my back. I am every place and every person and every object I have ever come across. I am a bag of bones stuck to a very large rock spinning a thousand miles an hour. - Macaulay Culkin
7. A battery by definition is a collection of cells. So the cell is a little can of chemicals. And the challenge is taking a very high-energy cell, and a large number of them, and combining them safely into a large battery. - Elon Musk
8. I'm in a business where no one cares about anything except how well your last collection sold. - Calvin Klein.
Q: What happened after an explosion at a French cheese factory?
A: All that was left was de brie.
* * *
Q: What do you call cheese that is sad?
A: Blue cheese.
* * *
Q: How do you get a mouse to smile?
A: Say cheese!
* * *
Q: What do you call cheese that isn't yours?
A: Nacho Cheese!
* * *
Q: Which genre of music appeals to most cheeses?
A: R'n'Brie.
* * *
Nasal block
Gist
To unclog your nose, use steam inhalation, saline nasal sprays/washes, or a humidifier to moisten passages, drink plenty of fluids, apply a warm compress to your face, or try gentle sinus massage techniques; elevating your head while sleeping also helps, and for quick relief, decongestant sprays (use sparingly) or oral meds can work, but always prioritize hydration and natural methods first.
To cure a blocked nose, use home remedies like steam inhalation, warm compresses, and saline rinses to loosen mucus, stay hydrated with fluids, and use a humidifier to add moisture; for faster relief, try decongestant sprays (use sparingly) or medications, but see a doctor if symptoms persist as it could be allergies or infection.
Summary
If you have the common cold or flu, the uncomfortable stuffed-up feeling you are experiencing is called nasal congestion, also known as a stuffy nose. When you’re all stuffed up, the simple act of breathing can be difficult. On top of that, you might feel tired and just plain dreary.
But what is nasal congestion, exactly? Nasal congestion (or “stuffy nose”) is often called “rhinitis” by healthcare providers. “Rhino” is a Greek prefix meaning the nose, and “–itis” refers to inflammation. Therefore, rhinitis is the inflammation of the linings of the nasal cavity.
Symptoms of Nasal Congestion
When your nose feels stuffy, you may find it hard to breathe. The inflammation leads to swollen nasal passages that constrict air flow, making it harder to breathe through your nose. The inflammation and swelling also makes it harder to get mucus out of your nose, so you may also have a build-up of mucus, as well. It causes you to feel stuffed up, which is why it’s also referred to as a stuffy nose.
The congested feeling may also be accompanied by other cold symptoms, like runny nose or headache. These symptoms can make it hard for you to perform your routine activities, and overall make you feel tired.
What Causes Nasal Congestion?
You may think your stuffy nose is the result of too much thick mucus. However, nasal congestion usually occurs because of a swelling of the tissues that line your nose.
This swelling happens when blood vessels in your nasal tissues become dilated, to get the immune response cells to the nose to fight the virus that has entered the body.
Nasal congestion causes include:
* A Virus. The viruses that cause the common cold or flu often enter the body directly through your nose. Once there, they begin to multiply inside the lining of your nasal passages. The body’s response to the infection leads to inflammation that brings nasal congestion.
* Allergies. If you experience certain allergies, you may find that your nose is frequently stuffy. Certain triggers, such as dust, pollen, and pet dander, can cause an allergic response, which causes swelling of your nasal tissues and leads to nasal congestion.
How Long Does Nasal Congestion Last?
If your nasal congestion is from a cold or flu, it will likely last as long your cold or flu (anywhere from five to 10 days) or even longer. If your nasal congestion is the result of allergies, it may last longer, depending on your exposure to that particular allergen.
How to Treat Nasal Congestion Symptoms
When you have nasal congestion, it can stop you in your tracks. Constant sniffling or mouth breathing may make it more difficult to focus on the day ahead of you. While there’s no cure for nasal congestion from the cold or flu, you can treat the symptoms so you can feel better while your body rids itself of the cold or flu virus.
Many over-the-counter cold and flu medicines treat multiple symptoms. Make sure to identify what other symptoms you may be experiencing along with nasal congestion, if any, so you can choose the product that’s right for your situation.
Details
Nasal congestion is the partial or complete blockage of nasal passages, leading to impaired nasal breathing, usually due to membranes lining the nose becoming swollen from inflammation of blood vessels, or an excess of mucus in the sinuses caused by illnesses like the common cold.
Background
In about 85% of cases, nasal congestion leads to mouth breathing rather than nasal breathing. According to Jason Turowski, MD of the Cleveland Clinic, "we are designed to breathe through our noses from birth—it's the way humans have evolved." This is referred to as "obligate nasal breathing."
Nasal congestion can interfere with hearing and speech. Significant congestion may interfere with sleep, cause snoring, and can be associated with sleep apnea or upper airway resistance syndrome. In children, nasal congestion from enlarged adenoids has caused chronic sleep apnea with insufficient oxygen levels and hypoxia. The problem usually resolves after surgery to remove the adenoids and tonsils; however, the problem often relapses later in life due to craniofacial alterations from chronic nasal congestion.
Causes
* Allergies, like hay fever, allergic reaction to pollen or grass
* Common cold, influenza or COVID-19
* Rhinitis medicamentosa, a condition of rebound nasal congestion brought on by extended use of topical decongestants (e.g., oxymetazoline, phenylephrine, xylometazoline, and naphazoline nasal sprays)
* Sinusitis or sinus infection
* Narrow or collapsing nasal valve
* Pregnancy may cause women to suffer from nasal congestion due to the increased amount of blood flowing through the body.
* Nasal polyps
* Gastroesophageal reflux disease (theorized to cause chronic rhinosinusitis- the "airway reflux paradigm").
Nasal obstruction
Nasal obstruction characterized by insufficient airflow through the nose can be a subjective sensation or the result of objective pathology. It is difficult to quantify by subjective complaints or clinical examinations alone, hence both clinicians and researchers depend both on concurrent subjective assessment and on objective measurement of the nasal airway.
Prevalence of kyphosis has been linked to nasal obstruction in a study.
Treatment
According to WebMD, congestion can be addressed through the use of a humidifier, warm showers, drinking fluids, using a neti pot, using a nasal saline spray, and sleeping with one's head elevated. It also recommends several over-the-counter decongestants and antihistamines. A 2012 study concluded that combining nasal sprays with "nasal breathing exercises" (NBE) led to improvement of symptoms. Though it may seem an odd recommendation, crying may also be helpful.
The Cleveland Clinic also states that congestion may be a sign of a deviated septum, a condition that needs to be addressed by a doctor.
Additional Information
Nasal congestion happens when something irritates tissues lining the inside of your nose. The irritation sets off a chain reaction of inflammation, swelling and mucus production, making it hard to take in air through your nose. Left untreated, nasal congestion may cause sinusitis, nasal polyps or middle ear infections.
What is nasal congestion (stuffy nose)?
Nasal congestion happens when something irritates tissues lining the inside of your nose. The irritation sets off a chain reaction of inflammation, swelling and mucus production, making it hard to take in air through your nose. Nasal congestion typically clears after a few days, but congestion that lasts for a week or more may be a sign of an infection. Left untreated, nasal congestion may cause sinusitis, nasal polyps or middle ear infections.
How does nasal congestion affect my body?
A stuffy nose is nothing to sneeze at. If your nose is congested or stuffy, you may:
* Have trouble breathing through your nose.
* Have mucus flowing from your nose, also known as a runny nose.
* Start breathing through your mouth because you can’t take in air through your nose. This is mouth breathing.
* Babies who have nasal congestion may have trouble nursing or taking a bottle.
Sometimes, nasal congestion is the first sign your body is fighting a viral or bacterial infection. Rarely, a tumor or polyp in your nose may make your nose feel congested.
Who does it affect?
At any given time, about 12% of the U.S. population has nasal congestion.
Symptoms and Causes:
What are nasal congestion symptoms?
Nasal congestion may cause additional symptoms such as:
* Sneezing.
* Cough.
* Headache.
What triggers nasal congestion?
The short answer is many things trigger nasal congestion. That’s because your nose is on the front line when it comes to protecting your body from intruders. Your nose takes in air that may carry dirt, particles and allergens. The inside of your nose houses a battalion of hair and cilia (tiny hair-like structures) that snare intruders, sending them to your nostrils. When you sneeze or blow your nose, you’re kicking intruders out of your system. Sometimes, your nose hair and cilia don’t catch all intruders. When that happens, the tissue lining the inside of your nose becomes inflamed and starts to swell. Then, your immune system kicks in, flooding your nose with mucus that’s intended to wash away intruders. Swollen nasal tissues and mucus combine to block your nose, making your condition worse.
What are the most common causes of nasal congestion?
Nasal congestion often happens with conditions such as rhinitis. There are two kinds of rhinitis — allergic rhinitis (hay fever) and nonallergic rhinitis.
Allergic rhinitis
Allergic rhinitis or hay fever is how your body reacts to allergens. Allergens are tiny particles in the air. Common allergens include:
* Pollen: When trees and plants bloom in the spring, summer and fall, they produce pollen that may make its way to your nose, setting off an allergic reaction.
* Dust mites: Even the cleanest environments may have dust mites that live in carpeting, furniture and bedding.
* Mold: Mold sends out spores that may cause allergic reactions.
* Pet dander: Some people are very allergic to dander from furry friends.
Nonallergic rhinitis
Nonallergic rhinitis — and nasal congestion — happens when inflammation makes fluid buildup in your nasal tissues, making them swell. This inflammation may happen because you have a viral illness or you’ve been exposed to certain triggers. Triggers may be:
* Environmental: Stress, exposure to smoke, paint fumes or spicy food are examples of substances that can cause nasal congestion.
* Medications: You can develop nasal congestion if you take certain medications for high blood pressure or pain.
* Hormonal: Hormonal changes like going through puberty or being pregnant may trigger nasal congestion.
* Infections: Sinus infections (sinusitis) or the common cold may cause nasal congestion.
* Enlarged adenoids: Adenoids are glands located just behind your nasal passage. They help trap germs. Sometimes, adenoids swell, causing nasal congestion.

2467) Eiffel Tower
Gist
The Eiffel Tower is famous for being an engineering marvel, the former tallest structure in the world, and a powerful, romantic symbol of Paris and France, initially built for the 1889 World's Fair but becoming a beloved icon through its unique design, stunning lights, and representation of French ingenuity and culture.
The most famous tourist attraction in France (and one of the best known in the world), the Eiffel Tower is 135 years old and is still considered a symbol of modernity and avant-garde in Paris.
Summary
On March 31, 1889, the Eiffel Tower is dedicated in Paris in a ceremony presided over by Gustave Eiffel, the tower’s designer, and attended by French Prime Minister Pierre Tirard, a handful of other dignitaries and 200 construction workers.
In 1889, to honor of the centenary of the French Revolution, the French government planned an international exposition and announced a design competition for a monument to be built on the Champ-de-Mars in central Paris. Out of more than 100 designs submitted, the Centennial Committee chose Eiffel’s plan of an open-lattice wrought-iron tower that would reach almost 1,000 feet above Paris and be the world’s tallest man-made structure. Eiffel, a noted bridge builder, was a master of metal construction and designed the framework of the Statue of Liberty that had recently been erected in New York Harbor.
Eiffel’s tower was greeted with skepticism from critics who argued that it would be structurally unsound, and indignation from others who thought it would be an eyesore in the heart of Paris. Unperturbed, Eiffel completed his great tower under budget in just two years. Only one worker lost his life during construction, which at the time was a remarkably low casualty number for a project of that magnitude. The light, airy structure was by all accounts a technological wonder and within a few decades came to be regarded as an architectural masterpiece.
The Eiffel Tower is 984 feet tall and consists of an iron framework supported on four masonry piers, from which rise four columns that unite to form a single vertical tower. Platforms, each with an observation deck, are at three levels. Elevators ascend the piers on a curve, and Eiffel contracted the Otis Elevator Company of the United States to design the tower’s famous glass-cage elevators.
The elevators were not completed by March 31, 1889, however, so Gustave Eiffel ascended the tower’s stairs with a few hardy companions and raised an enormous French tricolor on the structure’s flagpole. Fireworks were then set off from the second platform. Eiffel and his party descended, and the architect addressed the guests and about 200 workers. In early May, the Paris International Exposition opened, and the tower served as the entrance gateway to the giant fair.
The Eiffel Tower remained the world’s tallest man-made structure until the completion of the Chrysler Building in New York in 1930. Incredibly, the Eiffel Tower was almost demolished when the International Exposition’s 20-year lease on the land expired in 1909, but its value as an antenna for radio transmission saved it. It remains largely unchanged today and is one of the world’s premier tourist attractions.
Details
The Eiffel Tower is a wrought-iron lattice tower on the Champ de Mars in Paris, France. It is named after the engineer Gustave Eiffel, whose company designed and built the tower from 1887 to 1889.
Locally nicknamed "La dame de fer" (French for "Iron Lady"), it was constructed as the centrepiece of the 1889 World's Fair, and to crown the centennial anniversary of the French Revolution. Although initially criticised by some of France's leading artists and intellectuals for its design, it has since become a global cultural icon of France and one of the most recognisable structures in the world. The tower received 5,889,000 visitors in 2022. The Eiffel Tower is the most visited monument with an entrance fee in the world: 6.91 million people ascended it in 2015. It was designated a monument historique in 1964, and was named part of a UNESCO World Heritage Site ("Paris, Banks of the Seine") in 1991.
The tower is 330 metres (1,083 ft) tall, about the same height as an 81-storey building, and the tallest structure in Paris. Its base is square, measuring 125 metres (410 ft) on each side. During its construction, the Eiffel Tower surpassed the Washington Monument to become by far the tallest human-made structure in the world, a title it held for 41 years until the Chrysler Building in New York City was finished in 1930. It was the first structure in the world to surpass both the 200-metre and 300-metre mark in height. Due to the addition of a broadcasting aerial at the top of the tower in 1957, it is now taller than the Chrysler Building by 5.2 metres (17 ft). Excluding transmitters, the Eiffel Tower is the second tallest free-standing structure in France after the Millau Viaduct.
The tower has three levels for visitors, with restaurants on the first and second levels. The top level's upper platform is 276 m (906 ft) above the ground—the highest public observation deck in the European Union. Tickets can be purchased to ascend by stairs or lift to the first and second levels. The climb from ground level to the first level is over 300 steps, as is the climb from the first level to the second, making the entire ascent a 600-step climb. Although there is a staircase to the top level, it is usually accessible only by lift. On this top, third level, is a private apartment built for Gustave Eiffel, who decorated it with furniture made by Jean Lachaise and invited friends such as Thomas Edison.
Additional Information
Eiffel Tower, wrought-iron structure in Paris that is among the most famous landmarks in the world. It is also a technological masterpiece in building-construction history. It was designed and built (1887–89) by Gustave Eiffel and named in his honor.
Background and construction
When the French government was organizing the International Exposition of 1889 to celebrate the centenary of the French Revolution, a competition was held for designs for a suitable monument. More than 100 plans were submitted, and the Centennial Committee accepted that of the noted bridge engineer Gustave Eiffel. Eiffel’s concept of a 300-meter (984-foot) tower built almost entirely of open-lattice wrought iron aroused amazement, skepticism, and no little opposition on aesthetic grounds. When completed, the tower served as the entrance gateway to the exposition.
Nothing remotely like the Eiffel Tower had ever been built; it was twice as high as the dome of St. Peter’s in Rome or the Great Pyramid of Giza. In contrast to such older monuments, the tower was erected in only about two years (1887–89), with a small labor force, at slight cost. Making use of his advanced knowledge of the behavior of metal arch and metal truss forms under loading, Eiffel designed a light, airy, but strong structure that presaged a revolution in civil engineering and architectural design. And, after it opened to the public on May 15, 1889, it ultimately vindicated itself aesthetically.
Description and dimensions
The Eiffel Tower stands on four lattice-girder piers that taper inward and join to form a single large vertical tower. As they curve inward, the piers are connected to each other by networks of girders at two levels that afford viewing platforms for tourists. By contrast, the four semicircular arches at the tower’s base are purely aesthetic elements that serve no structural function. Because of their unique shape, which was dictated partly by engineering considerations but also partly by Eiffel’s artistic sense, the piers required elevators to ascend on a curve; the glass-cage machines designed by the Otis Elevator Company of the United States became one of the principal features of the building.
After the 1889 fair closed, Eiffel realized that the only way to save his monument would be to find new and profitable uses for it. He supervised changes to accommodate a meteorological station in 1890, a military telegraph station in 1903, and a laboratory for studying aerodynamics in 1909. Further modifications were made for the expositions of 1900, 1925, and 1937. Additions made for television transmission added about 20 meters (66 feet) to the height.
The tower stands 300 meters (984 feet) high. It rests on a base that is 5 meters (17 feet) tall, and the TV antenna atop the tower gives it a total elevation of 330 meters (1,083 feet). The Eiffel Tower was the tallest structure in the world until the topping off of the Chrysler Building in New York City in 1929.
Tourist attraction
The Eiffel Tower is arguably the most popular paid attraction in world. Some seven million people visit it each year. The tower features a museum, several restaurants, and the Gustave Eiffel Reception Room, which provides space for business conferences, expositions, cultural events, and social gatherings. In addition, several eateries and various shops are housed in the tower. An observation deck is located just under the antenna, at a height of 276 meters (906 feet).

Neural Network
Gist
A neural network is a machine learning model inspired by the human brain, consisting of interconnected nodes (neurons) in layers that process data, learn patterns, and make decisions or predictions, powering applications like image recognition, NLP, and voice assistants. These adaptable systems learn from examples, adjusting connections (weights) to improve accuracy without explicit rule programming, mimicking how biological brains process information.
In neuroscience, a biological neural network is a physical structure found in brains and complex nervous systems – a population of nerve cells connected by synapses. In machine learning, an artificial neural network is a mathematical model used to approximate nonlinear functions.
Summary
In the context of biology, a neural network is a population of biological neurons chemically connected to each other by synapses. A given neuron can be connected to hundreds of thousands of synapses. Each neuron sends and receives electrochemical signals called action potentials to its connected neighbors. A neuron can serve an excitatory role, amplifying and propagating signals it receives, or an inhibitory role, suppressing signals instead.
Populations of interconnected neurons that are smaller than neural networks are called neural circuits. Very large interconnected networks are called large scale brain networks, and many of these together form brains and nervous systems.
Signals generated by neural networks in the brain eventually travel through the nervous system and across neuromuscular junctions to muscle cells, where they cause contraction and thereby motion.
Neural network (machine learning)
In machine learning, a neural network or neural net (NN), also called artificial neural network (ANN), is a computational model inspired by the structure and functions of biological neural networks.
A neural network consists of connected units or nodes called artificial neurons, which loosely model the neurons in the brain. Artificial neuron models that mimic biological neurons more closely have also been recently investigated and shown to significantly improve performance. These are connected by edges, which model the synapses in the brain. Each artificial neuron receives signals from connected neurons, then processes them and sends a signal to other connected neurons. The "signal" is a real number, and the output of each neuron is computed by some non-linear function of the totality of its inputs, called the activation function. The strength of the signal at each connection is determined by a weight, which adjusts during the learning process.
Typically, neurons are aggregated into layers. Different layers may perform different transformations on their inputs. Signals travel from the first layer (the input layer) to the last layer (the output layer), possibly passing through multiple intermediate layers (hidden layers). A network is typically called a deep neural network if it has at least two hidden layers.
Artificial neural networks are used for various tasks, including predictive modeling, adaptive control, and solving problems in artificial intelligence. They can learn from experience, and can derive conclusions from a complex and seemingly unrelated set of information.
Details
Neural networks are machine learning models that mimic the complex functions of the human brain. These models consist of interconnected nodes or neurons that process data, learn patterns and enable tasks such as pattern recognition and decision-making.
Neural networks are capable of learning and identifying patterns directly from data without pre-defined rules. These networks are built from several key components:
* Neurons: The basic units that receive inputs, each neuron is governed by a threshold and an activation function.
* Connections: Links between neurons that carry information, regulated by weights and biases.
* Weights and Biases: These parameters determine the strength and influence of connections.
* Propagation Functions: Mechanisms that help process and transfer data across layers of neurons.
* Learning Rule: The method that adjusts weights and biases over time to improve accuracy.
Learning in neural networks follows a structured, three-stage process:
* Input Computation: Data is fed into the network.
* Output Generation: Based on the current parameters, the network generates an output.
* Iterative Refinement: The network refines its output by adjusting weights and biases, gradually improving its performance on diverse tasks.
In an adaptive learning environment:
* The neural network is exposed to a simulated scenario or dataset.
* Parameters such as weights and biases are updated in response to new data or conditions.
* With each adjustment, the network’s response evolves allowing it to adapt effectively to different tasks or environments.
Importance of Neural Networks
* Identify Complex Patterns: Recognize intricate structures and relationships in data; adapt to dynamic and changing environments.
* Learn from Data: Handle vast datasets efficiently; improve performance with experience and retraining.
* Drive Key Technologies: Power natural language processing (NLP); enable self-driving vehicles; support automated decision-making systems.
* Boost Efficiency: Streamline workflows and processes; enhance productivity across industries.
* Backbone of AI: Serve as the core driver of artificial intelligence progress; continue shaping the future of technology and innovation.

2466) Blood falls
Gist
Blood Falls is truly one of the most exciting spots to visit in Antarctica, which is best visited by boat. It gets its name because it's a waterfall that happens to be a shockingly-bright red color, similar to blood. However, the red color is thought to come from iron.
Blood Falls is a unique landform, as it did not originate from glacial melted water typically found in other continental glaciers. Instead a cascade of iron rich hypersaline water, originally trapped underground for millions of years, escaped to the Earth's surface via fissures under Taylor Glacier in East Antarctica.
Summary:
Where is Blood Falls located?
• Blood Falls, is located in Taylor Valley.
• Taylor Valley is one of the McMurdo Dry Valleys (MDV) in the Transantarctic Mountains. It is located between Asgard Range in the north and Kukri Hills in the south, containing numerous glaciers, lakes and rivers.
• Approximately 29 kilometres long, Taylor Valley extends from the retreating Taylor Glacier in the west to McMurdo Sound in the east.
• Subglacial water flows to Earth’s surface from the terminus of Taylor Glacier onto ice covered Lake Bonney in Taylor Valley.
What is the environment surrounding Blood Falls?:
Climate
Taylor Valley, one of the McMurdo Dry Valleys (MDV), encounters a freezing desert environment. Located in a rain shadow area behind mountains, the valleys experience low precipitation, mean annual temperature -19.8°C, and strong katabatic winds that reach 320 kilometres per hour. The winds evaporate all moisture, hence hindering the formation of ice and snow that covers most of Antarctica.
Taylor Valley and the other MDV encompass the largest ice-free region in Antarctica, with a combined area of Sq km 4500. The average moisture is less than 6mmpa, generally falling in the form of snow and summer glacial melt.
How was Blood Falls formed?
During a geological period called the Pliocene Epoch, about five million years ago, global warming caused East Antarctica’s ice sheets to melt and sea levels to rise about 20 metres. Taylor Valley was flooded and developed into a deep fiord.
• Around 5 million years ago sea levels rose, flooding East Antarctica. This created a salty inland lake
• Around 3 million years later, glaciers formed over the saline lake
• Around 2 million years ago a sub-glacial lake of saltwater became trapped and isolated. The frozen glacier surrounding the lake acted as a ‘time capsule’, preserving microbial species.
Research from University of Alaska, calculates that salt water took approximately 1.5 million years to finally reach Blood Falls as it made its way through fissures and channels in the glacier.
What caused the red colour in Blood Falls?
• Earliest explorers noticed the stain at the terminus of the glacier and speculated that red algae was responsible for the bright colour. Investigations later found the water was unsuitable for the growth and survival of algae.
• In 2009, scientists discovered the red colour was due to high levels of iron oxide in saltwater from a network of subglacial rivers and a subglacial lake.
Details
Blood Falls is an outflow of an iron(III) oxide–tainted plume of saltwater, flowing from the tongue of Taylor Glacier onto the ice-covered surface of West Lake Bonney in the Taylor Valley of the McMurdo Dry Valleys in Victoria Land, East Antarctica.
Iron-rich hypersaline water sporadically emerges from small fissures in the ice cascades. The saltwater source is a subglacial pool of unknown size overlain by about 400 metres (1,300 ft) of ice, several kilometers from its tiny outlet at Blood Falls.
The reddish deposit was found in 1911 by the Australian geologist Thomas Griffith Taylor, who first explored the valley that bears his name. The Antarctica pioneers first attributed the red color to red algae, but later it was proven to be due to iron oxides.
Geochemistry
Poorly soluble hydrous ferric oxides are deposited at the surface of ice after the ferrous ions present in the unfrozen saltwater are oxidized in contact with atmospheric oxygen. The more soluble ferrous ions initially are dissolved in old seawater trapped in an ancient pocket remaining from the Antarctic Ocean when a fjord was isolated by the glacier in its progression during the Miocene period, some 5 million years ago, when the sea level was higher than today.
Unlike most Antarctic glaciers, the Taylor Glacier is not frozen to the bedrock, probably because of the presence of salts concentrated by the crystallization of the ancient seawater imprisoned below it. Salt cryo-concentration occurred in the deep relict seawater when pure ice crystallized and expelled its dissolved salts as it cooled down because of the heat exchange of the captive liquid seawater with the enormous ice mass of the glacier. As a consequence, the trapped seawater was concentrated in brines with a salinity two to three times that of the mean ocean water. A second mechanism sometimes also explaining the formation of hypersaline brines is the water evaporation of surface lakes directly exposed to the very dry polar atmosphere in the McMurdo Dry Valleys. The analyses of stable isotopes of water allow, in principle, to distinguish between both processes as long as there is no mixing between differently formed brines.
Hypersaline fluid, sampled fortuitously through a crack in the ice, was oxygen-free and rich in sulfate and ferrous ion. Sulfate is a remnant geochemical signature of marine conditions, while soluble divalent iron was likely liberated under reducing conditions from the subglacial bedrock minerals weathered by microbial activity.
Microbial ecosystem
Chemical and microbial analyses both indicate that a rare subglacial ecosystem of autotrophic bacteria developed that metabolizes sulfate and ferric ions. According to geomicrobiologist Jill Mikucki at the University of Tennessee, water samples from Blood Falls contained at least 17 different types of microbes, and almost no oxygen. An explanation may be that the microbes use sulfate to respire with ferric ions and metabolize the trace levels of organic matter trapped with them. Such a metabolic process had never before been observed in nature.
A puzzling observation is the coexistence of ferrous and sulfate ions under anoxic conditions. No sulfide anions are found in the system. This suggests an intricate and poorly understood interaction between the sulfur and the iron biochemical cycles.
In December 2014, scientists and engineers led by Mikucki returned to Taylor Glacier and used a probe called IceMole, designed by a German collaboration, to melt into the glacier and directly sample the salty water (brine) that feeds Blood Falls.
Samples were analyzed, and revealed a cold (−7 °C (19 °F)), iron-rich (3.4 mM) subglacial brine (8% sodium chloride). From these samples, scientists isolated and characterized a type of bacteria capable of growing in salty water (halophilic), that thrives in the cold (psychrophile), and is heterotrophic, which they assigned to the genus Marinobacter. DNA bioinformatic analysis indicated the presence of at least four gene clusters involved in secondary metabolism. Two gene clusters are related to the production of aryl polyenes, which function as antioxidants that protect the bacteria from reactive oxygen species. Another gene cluster seems to be involved in terpene biosynthesis, most likely to produce pigments. Other bacteria identified are Thiomicrospira sp., and Desulfocapsa sp.
Implications for the Snowball Earth hypothesis
According to Mikucki et al. (2009), the now-inaccessible subglacial pool was sealed off 1.5 to 2 million years ago and transformed into a kind of "time capsule", isolating the ancient microbial population for a sufficiently long time to evolve independently of other similar marine organisms. It explains how other microorganisms could have survived when the Earth (according to the Snowball Earth hypothesis) was entirely frozen over.
Ice-covered oceans might have been the only refugium for microbial ecosystems when the Earth apparently was covered by glaciers at tropical latitudes during the Proterozoic eon about 650 to 750 million years ago.
Implications for astrobiology
This unusual place offers scientists a unique opportunity to study deep subsurface microbial life in extreme conditions without the need to drill deep boreholes in the polar ice cap, with the associated contamination risk of a fragile and still-intact environment.
The study of harsh environments on Earth is useful to understand the range of conditions to which life can adapt and to advance assessment of the possibility of life elsewhere in the Solar System, in places such as Mars or Europa, an ice-covered moon of Jupiter. Scientists of the NASA Astrobiology Institute speculate that these worlds could contain subglacial liquid water environments favorable to hosting elementary forms of life, which would be better protected at depth from ultraviolet and cosmic radiation than on the surface.
Additional Information
Amid Antarctica’s vast stretches of glittering white snow and ethereal blue glacier ice is the famous Blood Falls. It’s situated at the terminus of Taylor Glacier in the McMurdo Dry Valleys. Blood Falls is an iron-rich, hypersaline discharge phenomenon. And it spews bold streaks of bright-red brine from within the glacier onto the ice-covered surface of Lake Bonney.
Australian geologist Griffith Taylor was the first explorer to happen upon Blood Falls in 1911. It was during one of the earliest Antarctic expeditions. At the time, Taylor (incorrectly) attributed the color to the presence of red algae. The cause of this color was a mystery for nearly a century. But now we know that the iron-rich liquid turns red when it breaches the surface and oxidizes. In fact, this is the same process that gives iron a reddish hue when it rusts.
Blood Falls, named for its ruddy color, is not in fact a gush of blood from some unseen wound.
The color was initially chalked up to red algae, but a study in the Journal of Glaciology has uncovered its true origin using radar to scan the layers of ice from which the river pours.
The discovery came at the hands of a team of scientists, including National Geographic emerging explorer Erin C Pettit.
Located in Antarctica’s McMurdo Dry Valleys, the falls pour forth from Taylor Glacier, and the liquid bubbles up from fissures in the glacier’s surface. The flow was previously a mystery, as the mean temperature is 1.4 degrees Fahrenheit (-17 degrees Celsius) and little glacial melting can be seen at the surface.
Imaging from underneath the glacier helped solve the mystery, revealing a complex network of subglacial rivers and a subglacial lake—all filled with brine high in iron, giving the falls its reddish tint.
According to the study, the makeup of the brine explains the fact that it flows instead of freezes.
“The brine remains liquid within the subglacial and englacial environments through latent heat of freezing coupled with elevated salt content,” the study explains.
Iron-Filled, Salty Water
The lake under the glacier has an unusually salty consistency, and because saltwater has a lower freezing point than pure water and releases heat as it freezes, it melts the ice, enabling the rivers to flow.
This means that the glacier can support flowing water and also that this is the coldest glacier on Earth with constantly flowing water—though this water is so filled with iron that it looks like something else entirely.
The study also measured the amount of iron-rich brine in the river water and found the brine content increased as the measurements drew closer to the falls.
Water temperature and brine content were also found to be related: Cracks of various sizes in the glacier let brine into the glacier. Then the brine (pictured here in red to represent the amount of iron present in the water) begins to freeze, and the latent heat warms the ice around it, upping the brine concentration in the center of the cracks.

Q: How did Reese eat her cereal?
A: Witherspoon.
* * *
Q: How many vampires are in this room?
A: I don't know, I cant Count Choculas.
* * *
Q: Did you hear about Tony The Tiger's murder?
A: Police suspect a cereal killer.
* * *
Q: What do snowmen eat for breakfast?
A: Frosted Flakes.
* * *
Q: What do you call a person that chops up cereal?
A: A cereal killer.
* * *
2465) Brainstem
Gist
The brainstem is the structure that connects the cerebrum of the brain to the spinal cord and cerebellum. It is composed of three sections in descending order: the midbrain, pons, and medulla oblongata.
The brainstem is the vital stalk-like structure connecting the cerebrum and cerebellum to the spinal cord, controlling essential life functions like breathing, heart rate, blood pressure, and consciousness, while also relaying sensory/motor signals and housing nuclei for most cranial nerves (III-XII). It's made of three parts—the midbrain, pons, and medulla oblongata—and is crucial for sleep, balance, swallowing, vision, hearing, and facial movement.
Summary
The brainstem (or brain stem) is the posterior stalk-like part of the brain that connects the cerebrum with the spinal cord. In the human brain, the brainstem is composed of the midbrain, the pons, and the medulla oblongata. The midbrain is continuous with the thalamus of the diencephalon through the tentorial notch, and sometimes the diencephalon is included in the brainstem.
The brainstem is very small, making up around only 2.6 percent of the brain's total weight. It has the critical roles of regulating heart and respiratory function, helping to control heart rate and breathing rate. It also provides the main motor and sensory nerve supply to the face and neck via the cranial nerves. Ten pairs of cranial nerves come from the brainstem. Other roles include the regulation of the central nervous system and the body's sleep cycle. It is also of prime importance in the conveyance of motor and sensory pathways from the rest of the brain to the body, and from the body back to the brain. These pathways include the corticospinal tract (motor function), the dorsal column-medial lemniscus pathway (fine touch, vibration sensation, and proprioception), and the spinothalamic tract (pain, temperature, itch, and crude touch).
Clinical significance
Diseases of the brainstem can result in abnormalities in the function of cranial nerves that may lead to visual disturbances, pupil abnormalities, changes in sensation, muscle weakness, hearing problems, vertigo, swallowing and speech difficulty, voice change, and co-ordination problems. Localizing neurological lesions in the brainstem may be very precise, although it relies on a clear understanding on the functions of brainstem anatomical structures and how to test them.
Brainstem stroke syndrome can cause a range of impairments including locked-in syndrome.
Duret haemorrhages are areas of bleeding in the midbrain and upper pons due to a downward traumatic displacement of the brainstem.
Cysts known as syrinxes can affect the brainstem, in a condition, called syringobulbia. These fluid-filled cavities can be congenital, acquired or the result of a tumor.
Criteria for claiming brainstem death in the UK have developed in order to make the decision of when to stop ventilation of somebody who could not otherwise sustain life. These determining factors are that the patient is irreversibly unconscious and incapable of breathing unaided. All other possible causes must be ruled out that might otherwise indicate a temporary condition. The state of irreversible brain damage has to be unequivocal. There are brainstem reflexes that are checked for by two senior doctors so that imaging technology is unnecessary. The absence of the cough and gag reflexes, of the corneal reflex and the vestibulo-ocular reflex need to be established; the pupils of the eyes must be fixed and dilated; there must be an absence of motor response to stimulation and an absence of breathing marked by concentrations of carbon dioxide in the arterial blood. All of these tests must be repeated after a certain time before death can be declared.
Details
Your brainstem connects your brain to your spinal cord. It sits at the bottom of your brain and includes the midbrain, pons and medulla oblongata. Your brainstem sends messages to the rest of your body to regulate balance, breathing, heart rate and more.
What is the brainstem?
Your brainstem connects your brain to your spinal cord. It sits near the bottom of your brain. It helps regulate vital body functions that you don’t have to think about, like breathing and your heart rate. Your brainstem also helps with your balance, coordination and reflexes.
It’s part of your central nervous system and has three parts that work together. Each part does a specific job to help you adapt to your environment, move and function.
Function:
What is the function of the brainstem?
Your brainstem sends messages back and forth between your brain and other parts of your body. It regulates many involuntary actions — functions your body performs automatically, like:
* Balance.
* Blood pressure.
* Breathing.
* Eye movements.
* Facial movements and sensations.
* Hearing.
* Heart rate.
* Sleep and wakefulness.
* Swallowing.
* Taste.
What are brainstem reflexes?
Brainstem reflexes are your body’s immediate and involuntary motor responses that help you survive and adapt to changes in your environment. You aren’t consciously thinking about performing these actions. Instead, your brainstem automatically tells your body to do them.
Brainstem reflexes include:
* Cardiovascular reflexes: A group of reflexes that regulate your heartbeat and blood pressure.
* Gag reflex: This reflex protects your airways.
* Swallowing reflex: This reflex moves food and liquids from your mouth to your stomach.
* Pupillary light reflex: This adjusts the size of your pupil (the black center of your eye) to adapt to lighting changes.
* Vestibulo-ocular reflex: This reflex steadies your eyes when you move your head or the rest of your body.
* Respiratory reflexes: A group of reflexes that regulate breathing, coughing and sneezing.
Anatomy:
Where is the brainstem located?
Your brainstem is located near the bottom of your brain, at the back of your skull. It connects your brain to your spinal cord.
What are the three parts of the brainstem?
Your brainstem is made up of three parts:
* Midbrain: The top part of your brainstem. The midbrain is involved in several functions, including motor control, particularly eye movements and processing of vision and hearing.
* Pons: The middle portion of your brainstem that coordinates face and eye movements, facial sensations, hearing and balance.
* Medulla oblongata: The bottom part of your brainstem that regulates your breathing, heartbeat, blood pressure and swallowing.
Your brainstem also contains your reticular activating system (RAS). The RAS is a network of neurons (nerve cells that carry electrical signals and chemicals through your brain). It works with your thalamus to manage your:
* Wakefulness (alertness).
* Awareness of your surroundings.
* Sleep and wake cycles.
Brainstem cranial nerves
Your brainstem contains 10 of the 12 cranial nerves (nerves that start in your brain) including cranial nerves 3 through 12. They help with your movements, sensations, taste and hearing.
What does the brainstem look like?
Your brainstem looks like a flower stalk or a stem of a plant. It’s a tube-like structure made of neural (or nervous system) tissue. It’s about 2 to 3 inches (5 to 7 centimeters) long.
Additional Information
Brainstem is area at the base of the brain that lies between the deep structures of the cerebral hemispheres and the cervical spinal cord and that serves a critical role in regulating certain involuntary actions of the body, including heartbeat and breathing. The brainstem is divided into three sections in humans: the midbrain (mesencephalon), the pons (metencephalon), and the medulla oblongata (myelencephalon).
The brainstem houses many of the control centres for vital body functions, such as swallowing, breathing, and vasomotor control. All of the cranial nerve nuclei, except those associated with olfaction and vision, are located in the brainstem, providing motor and sensory function to structures of the cranium, including the facial muscles, tongue, pharynx, and larynx, as well as supplying the senses of taste, equilibrium, and hearing. The brainstem also has nuclei important for sympathetic and parasympathetic autonomic functions. All efferent and afferent pathways between the cerebrum and cerebellum course through the brainstem, and many of them decussate, or cross, within this structure.
Because of the important neural structures concentrated in this small portion of the nervous system, even very small lesions of the brainstem may have profound effects. Speech disorders, vestibular disturbance, abnormal consciousness, dysphagia, and respiratory disturbance are a few examples of possible outcomes of brainstem disorders. Such disorders can be caused by trauma, tumours, strokes, infections, and demyelination (multiple sclerosis). Complete loss of brainstem function is regarded by some experts as equivalent to brain death.

Ventilator
Gist
A ventilator is a life-support machine that helps or takes over breathing for people who can't breathe adequately on their own, delivering oxygen to the lungs and removing carbon dioxide, used during surgery, severe illness (like pneumonia, COVID-19, COPD) or injury, and for long-term conditions, allowing the body to rest and heal. It acts as an "external set of lungs," supporting critical functions until the patient's own respiratory system recovers or for ongoing management.
You can be on a ventilator for a few hours (during surgery) to days, weeks, months, or even years, depending entirely on the reason you need it, with the goal always being to get you off as soon as your lungs are strong enough. Short-term use (days) is common for acute issues, while long-term (weeks/months/years) often involves a tracheostomy (neck tube) for chronic conditions or severe lung failure, like ARDS or muscle diseases.
Summary
Mechanical ventilators have played an important, if controversial, role in the treatment of patients with severe coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)—helping critically ill persons breathe in the near term, but with potentially harmful trade-offs for lung function over the long term. For COVID-19 patients the possibility of long-term harm is only beginning to surface, raising questions about how ventilators work and why they pose a risk to patients.
Mechanical ventilators are automated machines that do the work of breathing for patients who are unable to use their lungs. Ventilators commonly are used when patients are experiencing severe shortness of breath, such as that caused by respiratory infection or by conditions such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). They may also be used in persons with traumatic brain injury or stroke, when the nervous system is no longer able to control breathing.
Ventilators work by delivering oxygen directly to the lungs, and they can also be programmed to pump out carbon dioxide for patients who are unable to exhale on their own. The ventilator delivers oxygen via a tube that is inserted through the patient’s nose or mouth in a procedure known as intubation or that is placed directly into the trachea, or windpipe, in a surgical procedure known as tracheostomy. The opposite end of the tube is connected to a machine (the ventilator) that pumps a mixture of air and oxygen through the tube and into the lungs. The air is warmed and humidified before it goes into the body. The ventilator further plays a vital role in maintaining positive air pressure to help prevent small air sacs (alveoli) in the lungs from collapsing.
Ventilators are set to pump air into the lungs a certain number of times per minute. The patient’s heart rate, respiratory rate, and blood pressure are monitored constantly. Doctors and nurses use this information to maths the patient’s health and to make necessary adjustments to the ventilator. When a patient shows signs of recovery from infection or injury, the doctor may decide to begin the process of ventilator weaning, a trial in which the patient is given a chance to breathe on his or her own but is still connected to the ventilator in case it is needed. Once a patient is weaned from the ventilator, the breathing tube is removed.
Ventilators are not cures for infection, and their use poses serious risks to patients. While on a ventilator, patients are unable to cough and clear potentially infectious agents from their airways. As a result, some patients develop ventilator-associated pneumonia, in which bacteria enter the lungs. Sinus infections can also occur. Other problems include oxygen toxicity and excess air pressure, which can cause significant damage to lung tissue. In addition, the longer a person is on a ventilator, the greater the degree of respiratory muscle atrophy that will occur. This can make it difficult for patients to breathe on their own. Activities like climbing stairs or even walking short distances may become impossible, resulting in long-term disability and reduced quality of life.
Details
A ventilator is a type of breathing apparatus, a class of medical technology that provides mechanical ventilation by moving breathable air into and out of the lungs, to deliver breaths to a patient who is physically unable to breathe, or breathing insufficiently. Ventilators may be computerized microprocessor-controlled machines, but patients can also be ventilated with a simple, hand-operated bag valve mask. Ventilators are chiefly used in intensive-care medicine, home care, and emergency medicine (as standalone units) and in anesthesiology (as a component of an anesthesia machine).
Ventilators are sometimes called "respirators", a term commonly used for them in the 1950s (particularly the "Bird respirator"). However, contemporary medical terminology uses the word "respirator" to refer to a face-mask that protects wearers against hazardous airborne substances.
Function
In its simplest form, a modern positive pressure ventilator, consists of a compressible air reservoir or turbine, air and oxygen supplies, a set of valves and tubes, and a disposable or reusable "patient circuit". The air reservoir is pneumatically compressed several times a minute to deliver room-air, or in most cases, an air/oxygen mixture to the patient. If a turbine is used, the turbine pushes air through the ventilator, with a flow valve adjusting pressure to meet patient-specific parameters. When over pressure is released, the patient will exhale passively due to the lungs' elasticity, the exhaled air being released usually through a one-way valve within the patient circuit called the patient manifold.
Ventilators may also be equipped with monitoring and alarm systems for patient-related parameters (e.g., pressure, volume, and flow) and ventilator function (e.g., air leakage, power failure, mechanical failure), backup batteries, oxygen tanks, and remote control. The pneumatic system is nowadays often replaced by a computer-controlled turbopump.
Ventilator pressures labeled
Modern ventilators are electronically controlled by a small embedded system to allow exact adaptation of pressure and flow characteristics to an individual patient's needs. Fine-tuned ventilator settings also serve to make ventilation more tolerable and comfortable for the patient. In Canada and the United States, respiratory therapists are responsible for tuning these settings, while biomedical technologists are responsible for the maintenance. In the United Kingdom and Europe the management of the patient's interaction with the ventilator is done by critical care nurses.
The patient circuit usually consists of a set of three durable, yet lightweight plastic tubes, separated by function (e.g. inhaled air, patient pressure, exhaled air). Determined by the type of ventilation needed, the patient-end of the circuit may be either noninvasive or invasive.
Noninvasive methods, such as continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) and non-invasive ventilation, which are adequate for patients who require a ventilator only while sleeping and resting, mainly employ a nasal mask. Invasive methods require intubation, which for long-term ventilator dependence will normally be a tracheotomy cannula, as this is much more comfortable and practical for long-term care than is larynx or nasal intubation.
Safety-critical system
As failure may result in death, mechanical ventilation systems are classified as safety-critical systems, and precautions must be taken to ensure that they are highly reliable, including their power supply. Ventilatory failure is the inability to sustain a sufficient rate of CO2 elimination to maintain a stable pH without mechanical assistance, muscle fatigue, or intolerable dyspnea. Mechanical ventilators are therefore carefully designed so that no single point of failure can endanger the patient. They may have manual backup mechanisms to enable hand-driven respiration in the absence of power (such as the mechanical ventilator integrated into an anaesthetic machine). They may also have safety valves, which open to atmosphere in the absence of power to act as an anti-suffocation valve for spontaneous breathing of the patient. Some systems are also equipped with compressed-gas tanks, air compressors or backup batteries to provide ventilation in case of power failure or defective gas supplies, and methods to operate or call for help if their mechanisms or software fail. Power failures, such as during a natural disaster, can create a life-threatening emergency for people using ventilators in a home care setting. Battery power may be sufficient for a brief loss of electricity, but longer power outages may require going to a hospital.
Additional Information
A ventilator, sometimes called a mechanical ventilator, is a machine that helps you breathe when you're sick, injured, or sedated for an operation. It pumps oxygen-rich air into your lungs. It also helps you breathe out carbon dioxide, a harmful waste gas your body needs to get rid of.
Even while they help you breathe, ventilators sometimes lead to complications. These problems can result from the ventilator itself, or from things that are more likely to happen when you're on a ventilator.
Ventilator vs. respirator
People sometimes use the word respirator to mean the same thing as ventilator. The CDC defines a respirator as a mask or device that protects you from dangerous particles in the air. But a respirator can also describe a device that helps you breathe, like a ventilator.
Ventilator vs. intubation
Ventilators and intubation are often used together, but they aren't the same. Intubation is a procedure in which a health care worker places a tube down your throat to move air in and out of your lungs. This tube can then be hooked up to a bag or a ventilator machine.
Types of Ventilators
There are several types of ventilation. Your doctor will determine which is best for your situation.
1. Noninvasive ventilation
Noninvasive ventilation involves using a face mask that connects to the ventilator. You breathe into the mask, which straps around your head. Two common noninvasive ventilation devices are continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) and bilevel positive airway pressure (BiPAP) machines, both used by people with sleep apnea.
2. Invasive ventilation
With invasive ventilation, you have a tube in your airway that connects to a ventilator machine. The tube can either enter through your mouth (intubation) or through an incision a doctor cuts into your neck (tracheostomy).
3. Mechanical ventilator
A mechanical ventilator is a machine that keeps your airways open and delivers oxygen to help you breathe. It's considered a form of life support.
4. Face mask ventilator
A face mask ventilator is a form of noninvasive ventilation. It essentially means you wear a face mask to get oxygen. It may be used to deliver anesthesia as well as to help you breathe.
5. Manual resuscitator bag
A manual resuscitator bag provides air by hand. Someone pumps the bag to help air go in and out of your lungs. The bag can attach to a face mask ventilator or a tube if you're intubated. This may be an option if a mechanical ventilator isn't available or stops working.
6. Tracheostomy ventilator
With a tracheostomy ventilator, the machine attaches to a tube that doctors have inserted into an opening in your neck.
How Does a Ventilator Work?
A ventilator connects to a face mask or to a tube in your nose, mouth, or throat. It blows oxygen-rich air into your windpipe through the tube. Before it travels to your windpipe, the air passes through a humidifier, which keeps it warm and moist. The ventilator may also breathe out for you, or you may do it on your own.
The machine maintains a constant low pressure to prevent the air sacs in your lungs from collapsing.
The ventilator can be set to take a certain number of breaths for you per minute. Your doctor also may program it to kick in when you need help. In this case, the machine will blow air into your lungs automatically if you haven't taken a breath in a set amount of time.

Collected and Collecting Quotes
1. When I was a kid, when I was 16, 17, I'd come home from high school, and my dad collected all of Barbra Streisand's records. And she was very young then. I think she probably had three records out, and she was 21, and we had them all. And I knew every single song, every breath, every elision, every swell. And I sang along to it. - Meryl Streep
2. As more and more money is coming into the formal economy, one can look at more attractive tax rates and lower tax slabs. Even if half the people who were in the informal sector move in to the formal economy and more taxes get collected, more money can be spent on the welfare. - Piyush Goyal
3. In science there is only physics; all the rest is stamp collecting. - Lord Kelvin
4. Collecting more taxes than is absolutely necessary is legalized robbery. - Calvin Coolidge
5. It only stands to reason that where there's sacrifice, there's someone collecting the sacrificial offerings. Where there's service, there is someone being served. The man who speaks to you of sacrifice is speaking of slaves and masters, and intends to be the master. - Ayn Rand
6. Collecting is my passion. - Ursula Andress
7. One of the things I have been preaching around the world is collecting taxes in an equitable manner, especially from the elites. - Hillary Clinton
8. I actually like snakes! When I was young, I was a boy scout nature camp counselor, and one of our projects was collecting snakes and creating an environment for them, so I'm quite familiar with snakes and think they're fantastic creatures. - Harrison Ford.
2464) Canada - The Country With The Longest Coastline In The World
Gist
While the common name is simply Canada, its historical full name, used at Confederation in 1867, was the Dominion of Canada, a term dropped from official use with the Canada Act in 1982, though it's still sometimes referenced. Today, "Canada" is the legal name, reflecting its status as a sovereign nation, constitutional monarchy, and parliamentary democracy.
Is Canada a good place to live?
Yes, Canada is widely considered a very good place to live due to its high quality of life, safety, strong social programs (like universal healthcare and education), multiculturalism, and abundant natural beauty, but it comes with challenges like high living costs in major cities, long winter seasons, and potential integration difficulties for newcomers.
Summary
Canada, is the second largest country in the world in area (after Russia), occupying roughly the northern two-fifths of the continent of North America.
Despite Canada’s great size, it is one of the world’s most sparsely populated countries. This fact, coupled with the grandeur of the landscape, has been central to the sense of Canadian national identity, as expressed by the Dublin-born writer Anna Brownell Jameson, who explored central Ontario in 1837 and remarked exultantly on “the seemingly interminable line of trees before you; the boundless wilderness around you; the mysterious depths amid the multitudinous foliage, where foot of man hath never penetrated…the solitude in which we proceeded mile after mile, no human being, no human dwelling within sight.” Although Canadians are comparatively few in number, they have crafted what many observers consider to be a model multicultural society, welcoming immigrant populations from every other continent. In addition, Canada harbours and exports a wealth of natural resources and intellectual capital equaled by few other countries.
Canada is officially bilingual in English and French, reflecting the country’s history as ground once contested by two of Europe’s great powers. The word Canada is derived from the Huron-Iroquois kanata, meaning a village or settlement. In the 16th century, French explorer Jacques Cartier used the name Canada to refer to the area around the settlement that is now Quebec city. Later, Canada was used as a synonym for New France, which, from 1534 to 1763, included all the French possessions along the St. Lawrence River and the Great Lakes. After the British conquest of New France, the name Quebec was sometimes used instead of Canada. The name Canada was fully restored after 1791, when Britain divided old Quebec into the provinces of Upper and Lower Canada (renamed in 1841 Canada West and Canada East, respectively, and collectively called Canada). In 1867 the British North America Act created a confederation from three colonies (Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and Canada) called the Dominion of Canada. The act also divided the old colony of Canada into the separate provinces of Ontario and Quebec. Dominion status allowed Canada a large measure of self-rule, but matters pertaining to international diplomacy and military alliances were reserved to the British crown. Canada became entirely self-governing within the British Empire in 1931, though full legislative independence was not achieved until 1982, when Canada obtained the right to amend its own constitution.
Canada shares a 5,525-mile- (8,890-km-) long border with the United States (including Alaska)—the longest border in the world not patrolled by military forces—and the overwhelming majority of its population lives within 185 miles (300 km) of the international boundary. Although Canada shares many similarities with its southern neighbour—and, indeed, its popular culture and that of the United States are in many regards indistinguishable—the differences between the two countries, both temperamental and material, are profound. “The central fact of Canadian history,” observed the 20th-century literary critic Northrop Frye, is “the rejection of the American Revolution.” Contemporary Canadians are inclined to favour orderly central government and a sense of community over individualism; in international affairs, they are more likely to serve the role of peacemaker instead of warrior, and, whether at home or abroad, they are likely to have a pluralistic way of viewing the world. More than that, Canadians live in a society that in most legal and official matters resembles Britain—at least in the English-speaking portion of the country. Quebec, in particular, exhibits French adaptations: more than three-fourths of its population speaks French as their primary language. The French character in Quebec is also reflected in differences in religion, architecture, and schooling. Elsewhere in Canada, French influence is less apparent, confined largely to the dual use of French and English for place names, product labels, and road signs. The French and British influences are supplemented by the cultures of the country’s Native American peoples (in Canada often collectively called the First Nations) and Inuit peoples, the former being far greater in number and the latter enjoying semiautonomous status in Canada’s newest territory, Nunavut. In addition, the growing number of immigrants from other European countries, Southeast Asia, and Latin America has made Canada even more broadly multicultural.
Canada has been an influential member of the Commonwealth and has played a leading role in the organization of French-speaking countries known as La Francophonie. It was a founding member of the United Nations and has been active in a number of major UN agencies and other worldwide operations. In 1989 Canada joined the Organization of American States and signed a free trade agreement with the United States, a pact that was superseded in 1992 by the North American Free Trade Agreement (which also includes Mexico). A founding member (1961) of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, Canada is also a member of the Group of Seven (G7), which includes the world’s seven largest industrial democracies and, as the Group of Eight (G8), had included Russia until it was indefinitely suspended from membership in 2014.
The national capital is Ottawa, Canada’s fourth largest city. It lies some 250 miles (400 km) northeast of Toronto and 125 miles (200 km) west of Montreal, respectively Canada’s first and second cities in terms of population and economic, cultural, and educational importance. The third largest city is Vancouver, a centre for trade with the Pacific Rim countries and the principal western gateway to Canada’s developing interior. Other major metropolitan areas include Calgary and Edmonton, Alberta; Quebec city, Quebec; and Winnipeg, Manitoba.
Details
Canada is a country in North America. Its ten provinces and three territories extend from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific Ocean and northward into the Arctic Ocean, making it the second-largest country by total area, with the longest coastline of any country. Its border with the United States is the longest international land border. The country is characterized by a wide range of both meteorologic and geological regions. With a population of over 41 million, it has widely varying population densities, with the majority residing in its urban areas and large areas being sparsely populated. Canada's capital is Ottawa and its three largest metropolitan areas are Toronto, Montreal, and Vancouver.
Indigenous peoples have continuously inhabited what is now Canada for thousands of years. Beginning in the 16th century, British and French expeditions explored and later settled along the Atlantic coast. As a consequence of various armed conflicts, France ceded nearly all of its colonies in North America in 1763. In 1867, with the union of three British North American colonies through Confederation, Canada was formed as a federal dominion of four provinces. This began an accretion of provinces and territories resulting in the displacement of Indigenous populations, and a process of increasing autonomy from the United Kingdom. This increased sovereignty was highlighted by the Statute of Westminster, 1931, and culminated in the Canada Act 1982, which severed the vestiges of legal dependence on the Parliament of the United Kingdom.
Canada is a parliamentary democracy and a constitutional monarchy in the Westminster tradition. The country's head of government is the prime minister, who holds office by virtue of their ability to command the confidence of the elected House of Commons and is appointed by the governor general, representing the monarch of Canada, the ceremonial head of state. The country is a Commonwealth realm and is officially bilingual (English and French) in the federal jurisdiction. It is very highly ranked in international measurements of government transparency, quality of life, economic competitiveness, innovation, education and human rights. It is one of the world's most ethnically diverse and multicultural nations, the product of large-scale immigration. Canada's long and complex relationship with the United States has had a significant impact on its history, economy, and culture.
A developed country, Canada has a high nominal per capita income globally and its advanced economy ranks among the largest in the world by nominal GDP, relying chiefly upon its abundant natural resources and well-developed international trade networks. Recognized as a middle power, Canada's support for multilateralism and internationalism has been closely related to its foreign policies of peacekeeping and aid for developing countries. Canada promotes its domestically shared values through participation in multiple international organizations and forums.
Geography
By total area (including its waters), Canada is the second-largest country. By land area alone, Canada ranks fourth, due to having the world's largest area of fresh water lakes. Stretching from the Atlantic Ocean in the east, along the Arctic Ocean to the north, and to the Pacific Ocean in the west, the country encompasses 9,984,670 square kilometres (3,855,100 sq mi) of territory. Canada also has vast maritime terrain, with the world's longest coastline of 243,042 kilometres (151,019 mi). In addition to sharing the world's largest land border with the United States—spanning 8,891 kilometres (5,525 mi)—Canada shares a land border with Greenland (and hence the Kingdom of Denmark) to the northeast, on Hans Island, and a maritime boundary with France's overseas collectivity of Saint Pierre and Miquelon to the southeast. Canada is also home to the world's northernmost settlement, Canadian Forces Station Alert, on the northern tip of Ellesmere Island—latitude 82.5°N—which lies 817 kilometres (508 mi) from the North Pole. In latitude, Canada's most northerly point of land is Cape Columbia in Nunavut at 83°6′41″N, with its southern extreme at Middle Island in Lake Erie at 41°40′53″N. In longitude, Canada's land extends from Cape Spear, Newfoundland, at 52°37'W, to Mount St. Elias, Yukon Territory, at 141°W.
Canada can be divided into seven physiographic regions: the Canadian Shield, the Interior Plains, the Great Lakes–St. Lawrence Lowlands, the Appalachian region, the Western Cordillera, Hudson Bay Lowlands, and the Arctic Archipelago. Boreal forests prevail throughout the country, ice is prominent in northern Arctic regions and through the Rocky Mountains, and the relatively flat Canadian Prairies in the southwest facilitate productive agriculture. The Great Lakes feed the St. Lawrence River (in the southeast) where the lowlands host much of Canada's economic output. Canada has over 2,000,000 lakes—563 of which are larger than 100 square kilometres (39 sq mi)—containing much of the world's fresh water. There are also fresh-water glaciers in the Canadian Rockies, the Coast Mountains, and the Arctic Cordillera. Canada is geologically active, having many earthquakes and potentially active volcanoes.
Climate
Average winter and summer high temperatures across Canada vary from region to region. Winters can be harsh in many parts of the country, particularly in the interior and Prairie provinces, which experience a continental climate, where daily average temperatures are near −15 °C (5 °F), but can drop below −40 °C (−40 °F) with severe wind chills. In non-coastal regions, snow can cover the ground for almost six months of the year, while in parts of the north snow can persist year-round. Coastal British Columbia has a temperate climate, with a mild and rainy winter. On the east and west coasts, average high temperatures are generally in the low 20s °C (70s °F), while between the coasts, the average summer high temperature ranges from 25 to 30 °C (77 to 86 °F), with temperatures in some interior locations occasionally exceeding 40 °C (104 °F).
Much of Northern Canada is covered by ice and permafrost. The future of the permafrost is uncertain because the Arctic has been warming at three times the global average as a result of climate change in Canada. Canada's annual average temperature over land has risen by 1.7 °C (3.1 °F), with changes ranging from 1.1 to 2.3 °C (2.0 to 4.1 °F) in various regions, since 1948. The rate of warming has been higher across the North and in the Prairies. In the southern regions of Canada, air pollution from both Canada and the United States—caused by metal smelting, burning coal to power utilities, and vehicle emissions—has resulted in acid rain, which has severely impacted waterways, forest growth, and agricultural productivity. Canada is one of the largest greenhouse gas emitters globally, with emissions increased by 16.5 percent between 1990 and 2022.
Additional Information
Canada is a vast and rugged land. From north to south it spans more than half the Northern Hemisphere. From east to west it stretches almost 4,700 miles (7,560 kilometers) across six time zones. It is the second largest country in the world, but it has only one-half of one percent of the world's population.
Canada features black-blue lakes, numerous rivers, majestic western mountains, rolling central plains, and forested eastern valleys. The Canadian Shield, a hilly region of lakes and swamps, stretches across northern Canada and has some of the oldest rocks on Earth.
Canada's far north lies in the frozen grip of the Arctic, where ice, snow, and glaciers dominate the landscape. Few trees grow here, and farming is not practical. Native Canadians, called First Nations people, live in this region by hunting and fishing.
Canada's remote north and extensive forests are home to wildlife, from bears, wolves, beavers, deer, mountain lions, and bighorn sheep to smaller animals like raccoons, otters, and rabbits. The country's lakes and rivers, which contain about 20 percent of all fresh water on Earth, are full of fish such as trout and salmon.
Canada's prairies in the south are home to bison and pronghorn antelope. Farther north are Canada's sprawling evergreen forests, which have lots of wildlife, including moose and black bears. Even farther north is the cold, bare tundra, where herds of caribou and musk ox live.
Canadians work hard to protect the native wildlife. Canada has 41 national parks and three marine conservation areas. Nevertheless, species like wolves, lynx, and Atlantic fish have been overhunted and overfished.

2463) Flight Data Recorder
Gist
A flight data recorder (FDR), part of the "black box," is a rugged device that records crucial aircraft operational data (altitude, speed, heading, etc.) and audio (CVR) for accident investigation, designed to survive extreme impacts, heat, and water to help determine crash causes and improve aviation safety, with modern units capturing 25+ hours of info in bright orange, crash-survivable casings with locator beacons.
A flight data recorder (FDR; also ADR, for accident data recorder) is an electronic device employed to record instructions sent to any electronic systems on an aircraft. The data recorded by the FDR are used for accident and incident investigation.
Summary
A flight recorder is an electronic recording device placed in an aircraft for the purpose of facilitating the investigation of aviation accidents and incidents. The device may be referred to colloquially as a "black box", an outdated name which has become a misnomer because they are required to be painted bright orange, to aid in their recovery after accidents.
There are two types of flight recording devices: the flight data recorder (FDR) preserves the recent history of the flight by recording of dozens of parameters collected several times per second; the voice recorder (CVR) preserves the recent history of the sounds in the math, including the conversation of the pilots. The two devices may be combined into a single unit. Together, the FDR and CVR document the aircraft's flight history, which may assist in any later investigation.
The two flight recorders are required by the International Civil Aviation Organization to be capable of surviving conditions likely to be encountered in a severe aircraft accident. They are specified to withstand an impact of 3400 g and temperatures of over 1,000 °C (1,830 °F) by EUROCAE ED-112. They have been a mandatory requirement in commercial aircraft in the United States since 1967. After the unexplained disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 in 2014, commentators have called for live streaming of data to the ground, as well as extending the battery life of the underwater locator beacons.
Details
Flight Data Recorder (FDR) - device used to record specific aircraft performance parameters. The purpose of an FDR is to collect and record data from a variety of aircraft sensors onto a medium designed to survive an accident.
An FDR has historically been one of two types of "flight recorder" carried on aircraft, the other being a math voice recorder (CVR). Where both types of recorder are fitted, they are now sometimes combined into a single unit (ICAO Definition: Combination recorders). Combination recorders need to meet the flight recorder equipage requirements as specifically detailed in ICAO Annex 6 - Operation of Aircraft.
These combination recorders are sometimes referred to as Digital Voice and Data Recorders (DVDR). Some models originally recorded 25 hours of flight data and two hours of audio. However, rules adopted by the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) and the European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) require 25 hours of audio for commercial aircraft with a maximum takeoff weight of 27,000 kg (60,000 lbs) or more, manufactured after January 1, 2021.
Some regulators require a minimum of two DVDRs. For example, U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) regulations state: "Two separate recorders are required for airplanes. Therefore, a single combination CVR/DFDR may not serve as both the required DFDR and the required CVR." However, the FAA allows one combination unit on rotorcraft, as long as no single electrical failure can disable both the CVR and DFDR functions. The FAA also plans a 25-hour CVR requirement.
Other ICAO Requirements
According to the provisions in ICAO Annex 6 - Operation of Aircraft, Vol 1 and Vol. III, a Type I FDR shall shall record the parameters required to determine accurately the aeroplane flight path, speed, attitude, engine power, configuration and operation. Types II and IIA FDRs shall record the parameters required to determine accurately the aeroplane flight path, speed, attitude, engine power and configuration of lift and drag devices.
The detailed list of parameters to be recorded by FDRs is provided in section 6.3 “Flight recorders” and at Attachement D to Annex 6, Vol. I. Furthermore, provisions in section 6.3 specify the aircraft equipage requirements depending on the maximum certificated takeoff mass and the date of first issue of the individual certificate of airworthiness. For example, provision 6.3.6 of Annex 6, Vol. I states that, all aeroplanes of a maximum certificated takeoff mass of over 5,700 kg for which the individual certificate of airworthiness is first issued after 1 January 2005 shall be equipped with a Type IA FDR.
According to ICAO SARPS, combination recorders (FDR/CVR) can only be used to meet the flight recorder equipage requirements as specifically indicated in ICAO Annex 6 (Vol I and Vol III, Attachment D).
Annex 6 amendments that took effect in 2019 state that FDR and CVR data may be used only for safety-related purposes with appropriate safeguards, and for criminal proceedings.
Other FAA Requirements
U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) requirements regarding FDRs for transport category aircraft include the following provisions:
* The FDR receives electrical power from a bus that provides maximum reliability without jeopardising service to essential or emergency loads.
* The FDR remains powered for as long as possible without jeopardising emergency operation of the airplane.
* There is an aural or visual means for preflight checking of the recorder for proper recording of data in the storage medium.
* Any single electrical failure does not disable both the FDR and the CVR.
* Each recorder must be bright orange or bright yellow, must have reflective tape attached, and have an underwater locating device.
* The FDR is supplied with flight data that meets specified accuracy requirements.
Objective
The recorder is installed in the most crash survivable part of the aircraft, usually the tail section. The data collected in the FDR system can help investigators determine whether an accident was caused by pilot error, by an external event (such as windshear), or by an airplane system problem. Furthermore, these data have contributed to airplane system design improvements and the ability to predict potential difficulties as airplanes age. An example of the latter is using FDR data to monitor the condition of a high-hours engine. Evaluating the data could be useful in making a decision to replace the engine before a failure occurs.
Additional Information
A flight recorder is an instrument that records the performance and condition of an aircraft in flight. Governmental regulatory agencies require these devices on commercial aircraft to make possible the analysis of crashes or other unusual occurrences. Flight recorders actually consist of two functional devices, the flight data recorder (FDR) and the voice recorder (CVR), though sometimes these two devices are packaged together in one combined unit. The FDR records many variables, not only basic aircraft conditions such as airspeed, altitude, heading, vertical acceleration, and pitch but also hundreds of individual instrument readings and internal environmental conditions. The CVR records verbal communication between crew members within the aircraft’s math as well as voice transmissions by radio. Aircraft sounds audible in the math are also caught on the recorder. Flight recorders are commonly carried in the tail of the aircraft, which is usually the structure that is subject to the least impact in the event of a crash. In spite of the popular name black box, flight recorders are painted a highly visible vermilion colour known as “international orange.”
The voice and instrument data processed by the flight recorder are stored in digital format on solid-state memory boards. At least 2 hours of math sound and up to 25 hours of flight data are stored, new data continuously replacing the old. The memory boards are housed within a box or cylinder called the crash-survivable memory unit. This is the only truly survivable component of the flight recorder; the other components, such as the data processor, are not necessary for retrieval of data. Consisting of a heavy stainless steel shell wrapped within layers of insulating material and covered by an aluminum housing, a memory unit is expected to survive impacts of 3,400 g (units of gravitational acceleration), flame temperatures as high as 1,100 °C (2,000 °F), and pressures encountered at 6,000 metres (20,000 feet) underwater. In the event of a crash at sea, flight recorders are equipped with a sonar device that is designed to emit an ultrasonic locator signal for at least 30 days.
In 1939 French engineers François Hussenot and Paul Beaudouin invented a flight recorder, the “type HB” (later called the “hussenograph”), that recorded altitude and speed information on a piece of photographic film. During World War II, analyzing crashes of military aircraft became important. In the United Kingdom, engineers Len Harrison and Vic Husband developed a system that recorded aircraft data on copper foil and could survive a crash. In Finland, engineer Veijo Hietala in 1942 developed a unit nicknamed the “Mata-Hari” that recorded test-flight data on photosensitive paper, which sometimes survived a crash. The U.S. Army Air Forces experimented with recording math voice data on a magnetic wire.
As civil aviation developed in the years after World War II, “crash-survivable” flight recorders came to be seen as a valuable tool in analyzing aviation disasters and contributing to the design of safer aircraft. However, truly serviceable flight recorders that had any chance of surviving plane crashes were not produced until several years after the war. A series of disastrous crashes of De Havilland Comet jetliners in 1953–54 spurred David Warren, a scientist at Australia’s Aeronautical Research Laboratory (ARL), to design the first combined FDR and CVR. The recording medium for Warren’s ARL Flight Memory Unit was steel wire of the type then being used in magnetic audio recorders. Warren’s invention became the basis for subsequent flight recorders. Although Warren’s recorder, as produced commercially by S. Davall & Son beginning in 1960, was housed in an egg-shaped casing that was painted red, the term black box, which arose during World War II as slang for sensitive aircraft components that were encased in black metal boxes, was applied to the device.
Parallel developments occurred elsewhere in the world. In the United States, James J. Ryan, an engineer employed by General Mills, in 1953 developed the VGA Flight Recorder, which sensed changes in velocity (V), gravitational forces (G), and altitude (A) and inscribed the measurements on a slowly moving strip of aluminum foil. As released in 1953 and sold by General Mills to the Lockheed Aircraft Company, the entire apparatus was enclosed in a yellow-painted spherical shell. Numerous other devices were produced employing various recording media, from metal strips to, eventually, magnetic tape.
During the 1960s, crash-protected FDRs and CVRs became mandatory on airliners around the world. Most flight recorders employed magnetic tape, but during the 1990s a great advancement came with the advent of solid-state memory devices. Memory boards are more survivable than recording tape, and the data stored on them can be retrieved quickly by a computer carrying the proper software. A complete picture can be created of conditions on the aircraft during the recorded period, including a computer-animated diagram of the aircraft’s positions and movements. Verbal exchanges and math sounds retrieved from CVR data are transcribed into documents that are made available to investigators along with the actual recordings. The release of these materials to the public is strictly regulated.

Collect Quotes - II
1. I love inventing names, but I also collect unusual names, so that I can look through my notebook and choose one that suits a new character. - J. K. Rowling
2. I have no problem with commitment - you can't have a real relationship without it. I can flip on a switch in my brain, and even if the next Brad Pitt is standing next to me, I won't look at him. But I can also turn that switch off, and then I collect attractive boys. - Megan Fox
3. I am what we call a 'karma yogi' in Sanskrit. A karma yogi is somebody who believes in data. I collect a lot of data. - N. R. Narayana Murthy
4. We have to keep our feet on ground, stay humble, and collect all praise, well-wishes, and prayers because these will help us in future. - Inzamam-ul-Haq
5. When I was a youngster, we did not have access to handpumps, so we used to collect buckets of water from the well and over time I was used to carry a lot of buckets. I also played a lot of Kabaddi and my thighs are really powerful because I used to pedal 25 kilometres every day, which assisted me in the movie 'Dharam Veer.' - Dharmendra.
Hi,
#9824.
Hi,
#6318.
Hi,
2673.
Q: What is a cheerleader's favorite cereal?
A: Cheerios.
* * *
Q: Why does a Northwestern Wildcats fan pour his cereal on a plate?
A: He lost his bowls.
* * *
Q: What do you call a person who opens 3 different boxes of cereal at once?
A: A cereal adulterer.
* * *
Q: How does Salvador Dali start his mornings?
A: With a bowl of "Surreal".
* * *
Q: What do cats eat for breakfast?
A: Mice Krispies.
* * *
Collect Quotes - I
1. We shall heal our wounds, collect our dead and continue fighting. - Mao Zedong
2. My only saving grace is that I actually collect things that nobody else is interested in. - Phil Collins
3. But in truth, should I meet with gold or spices in great quantity, I shall remain till I collect as much as possible, and for this purpose I am proceeding solely in quest of them. - Christopher Columbus
4. Unlike my opponent, I will not let oil companies write this country's energy plan, or endanger our coastlines, or collect another $4 billion in corporate welfare from our taxpayers. - Barack Obama
5. If you find a solution with the Cube, it doesn't mean you find everything. It's only a starting point. You can work on and find something else: you can improve your solution, you can make it shorter, you can go deeper and deeper and collect knowledge and many other things. - Erno Rubik
6. For many years I enjoyed the pleasure of cruising on my yacht all summer long and these were my best holidays. In mid-May, we'd start in St Tropez. I'd collect my bikinis from my home there and then we'd go up to Cannes for the Film Festival, on to Monte Carlo for the Grand Prix and then to Italy. - Ivana Trump
7. I'm very sensitive to the English language. I studied the dictionary obsessively when I was a kid and collect old dictionaries. Words, I think, are very powerful and they convey an intention. - Drew Barrymore
8. Even if you have $20,000 to buy an item, you still try to get a good price at antique stores. I collect furniture, rugs, paintings, frames. It's my hobby to go around to shops and markets. - Ursula Andress.
Q. Where do cauliflowers hang out?
A. In the Gobi desert.
* * *
Q: What happened to the vegetable on the street corner?
A: She was arrested for being a Cauli-girl.
* * *
Q: Where did the cauliflower go to have a few drinks?
A: The Salad Bar!
* * *
A guy walks into the doctor's office.
A banana stuck in one of his ears, a cauliflower in the other ear, and a carrot stuck in one nostril.
The man says, "Doc, this is terrible. What's wrong with me?"
The doctor says, "Well, first of all, you need to eat more sensibly."
* * *
Pons
Gist
The pons is a crucial part of the brainstem (linking the cerebrum to the cerebellum and spinal cord) that manages unconscious functions like breathing, sleep cycles, and relaying sensory/motor signals, containing nerve pathways and nuclei for facial sensation, hearing, balance, and other head/face functions, and is also the name of a popular dictionary/translation service.
The main function of the pons, a part of the brainstem, is to act as a relay station, connecting the cerebrum and cerebellum, and controlling vital functions like breathing, sleep cycles, facial expressions, and relaying sensory/motor signals for hearing, taste, balance, and movement coordination. It helps regulate arousal, fine motor control, and maintains equilibrium, essentially bridging communication between different parts of the brain and the body for essential processes.
Summary
Pons is the portion of the brainstem lying above the medulla oblongata and below the cerebellum and the cavity of the fourth ventricle. The pons is a broad horseshoe-shaped mass of transverse nerve fibres that connect the medulla with the cerebellum. It is also the point of origin or termination for four of the cranial nerves that transfer sensory information and motor impulses to and from the facial region and the brain. The pons also serves as a pathway for nerve fibres connecting the cerebral cortex with the cerebellum.
The pons, while involved in the regulation of functions carried out by the cranial nerves it houses, works together with the medulla oblongata to serve an especially critical role in generating the respiratory rhythm of breathing. Active functioning of the pons may also be fundamental to rapid eye movement (REM) sleep.
Details
The pons (from Latin pons, 'bridge') is the part of the brainstem that, in humans and other mammals, lies inferior to the midbrain, superior to the medulla oblongata, and anterior to the cerebellum.
The pons is also called the pons Varolii ('bridge of Variolus'), after the Italian anatomist and surgeon Costanzo Varolio (1543–1575). The pons contains neural pathways and nerve tracts that conduct signals from the brain down to the cerebellum and medulla, as well as pathways that carry the sensory signals up into the thalamus.
Structure
The pons in humans measures about 2.5 centimetres (0.98 in) in length. It is the part of the brainstem situated between the midbrain and the medulla oblongata. The horizontal medullopontine sulcus demarcates the boundary between the pons and medulla oblongata on the ventral aspect of the brainstem, and the roots of cranial nerves 6, 7, and 8 emerge from the brainstem along this groove. The junction of pons, medulla oblongata, and cerebellum forms the cerebellopontine angle. The superior pontine sulcus separates the pons from the midbrain. Posteriorly, the pons curves on either side into a middle cerebellar peduncle.
A cross-section of the pons divides it into a ventral and a dorsal area. The ventral pons is known as the basilar part, and the dorsal pons is known as the pontine tegmentum.
The ventral aspect of the pons faces the clivus, with the pontine cistern intervening between the two structures. The ventral surface of the pons features a midline basilar sulcus along which the basilar artery may or may not course. There is a bulge to either side of the basilar sulcus, created by the pontine nuclei that are interweaved amid the descending fibres within the substance of the pons. The superior cerebellar artery winds around the upper margin of the pons.
Vasculature
Most of the pons is supplied by the pontine arteries, which arise from the basilar artery. A smaller portion of the pons is supplied by the anterior and posterior inferior cerebellar arteries.
Development
During embryonic development, the metencephalon develops from the rhombencephalon and gives rise to two structures: the pons and the cerebellum. The alar plate produces sensory neuroblasts, which will give rise to the solitary nucleus and its special visceral afferent (SVA) column; the cochlear and vestibular nuclei, which form the special somatic afferent (SSA) fibers of the vestibulocochlear nerve, the spinal and principal trigeminal nerve nuclei, which form the general somatic afferent column (GSA) of the trigeminal nerve, and the pontine nuclei, which relay to the cerebellum.
Basal plate neuroblasts give rise to the abducens nucleus, which forms the general somatic efferent fibers (GSE); the facial and motor trigeminal nuclei, which form the special visceral efferent (SVE) column; and the superior salivatory nucleus, which forms the general visceral efferent fibers (GVE) of the facial nerve.
Nuclei
A number of cranial nerve nuclei are present in the pons:
* mid-pons: the principal sensory nucleus of trigeminal nerve (5)
* mid-pons: the motor nucleus for the trigeminal nerve (5)
* lower down in the pons: abducens nucleus (6)
* lower down in the pons: facial nerve nucleus (7)
* lower down in the pons: vestibulocochlear nuclei (vestibular nuclei and cochlear nuclei) (8)
Function
Functions of these four cranial nerves (5–8) include regulation of respiration; control of involuntary actions; sensory roles in hearing, equilibrium, and taste; and in facial sensations such as touch and pain, as well as motor roles in eye movement, facial expressions, chewing, swallowing, and the secretion of saliva and tears.
The pons contains nuclei that relay signals from the forebrain to the cerebellum, along with nuclei that deal primarily with sleep, respiration, swallowing, bladder control, hearing, equilibrium, taste, eye movement, facial expressions, facial sensation, and posture.
Within the pons is the pneumotaxic center consisting of the subparabrachial and the medial parabrachial nuclei. This center regulates the transition from inhalation to exhalation.
The pons is implicated in sleep paralysis, and may also play a role in generating dreams.
Clinical significance
Central pontine myelinolysis is a demyelinating disease that causes difficulty with sense of balance, walking, sense of touch, swallowing and speaking. In a clinical setting, it is often associated with transplant or rapid correction of blood sodium. Undiagnosed, it can lead to death or locked-in syndrome.
Additional Information
Your pons is a part of your brainstem, a structure that links your brain to your spinal cord. It handles unconscious processes and jobs, such as your sleep-wake cycle and breathing. It also contains several junction points for nerves that control muscles and carry information from senses in your head and face.
Your pons is the second-lowest section of your brainstem, just above your medulla oblongata. It forms a key connection between your brain above it and your medulla oblongata and spinal cord below it.
Your pons is a key merging point for several of your cranial nerves, which are nerves with direct connections to your brain. Those nerve connections are vital, helping with several of the senses on or in your head, plus your ability to move various parts of your face and mouth.
Function:
What is the function of the pons?
Your pons is a part of your brainstem, which links your brain to your spinal cord. That makes your pons a vital section of your nervous system, providing a route for signals to travel to and from your brain. Several neurotransmitters in your pons facilitate brain function, particularly sleep.
Key jobs
Your pons handles several important jobs on its own.
* It influences your sleep cycle. Your pons sets your body’s level of alertness when you wake up.
* It manages pain signals. Your pons relays and regulates the signals that give you the sensation of pain from anywhere in your body below your neck.
* It works with other brain structures. Your pons is a key connection point to your cerebellum, another key part of your brain that handles balance and movement. It also works cooperatively with other parts of your brainstem that manage your breathing.
Cranial nerve connections
In addition, your pons contains several key junctions for four of your 12 cranial nerves, which are nerves that directly connect to your brain. Your cranial nerves (which use Roman numerals for their numbering) that connect to the pons are:
* Trigeminal nerve (Cranial Nerve V): Your trigeminal (try-gem-in-all) nerve provides the sense of touch and pain for your face and controls the muscles you use for chewing.
* Abducens nerve (CN VI): Your abducens (ab-DO-sens) nerve is one of the muscles that control eye movement. Damage to this nerve can cause double vision (diplopia).
* Facial nerve (CN VII): This nerve controls most of your facial expressions and your sense of taste from the front of your tongue.
* Vestibulocochlear nerve (CN VIII): Your vestibulocochlear (vest-ib-you-lo-co-klee-ar) nerve branches into your vestibular nerve and cochlear nerve. Your vestibular (vest-ib-you-lar) nerve gives you your sense of balance. Your cochlear (co-klee-ar) nerve gives you your sense of hearing.
How does it help with other organs?
Your pons helps with other organs by relaying sensory input and directly controlling some of your body’s unconscious processes. Those include your sleep-wake cycle and your breathing. Your ability to feel pain is also something your pons handles, and that sensation of pain can help you react to limit or prevent injuries.
Anatomy:
Where is the pons located?
Your pons is one of the lowermost structures in your brain, located near the bottom of your skull. It’s just above your medulla oblongata, which then connects to your spinal cord through the opening at the bottom of your skull.
What does it look like?
Your pons is a beige or off-white color. Its shape is much like the upper stem of a branch of cauliflower.
How big is it?
Pons’ dimensions are:
* Height: 1.06 inches tall (27 millimeters [mm]).
* Width: 1.49 inches (38 mm).
* Depth: 0.98 inches (25 mm).
What is it made of?
Like the rest of your brain and nervous system, your pons consists of various types of nervous system cells and structures. The nuclei (the plural term for “nucleus”) are nerves or clusters of brain cells that have the same job or connect to the same places.
Making up the nuclei are the following types of cells (with more about them below):
* Neurons: These cells make up your brain and nerves, transmitting and relaying signals. They can also convert signals into either chemical or electrical forms.
* Glial cells: These are support cells in your nervous system. While they don’t transmit or relay nervous system signals, they help the neurons that do.
Neurons
Neurons are the cells that send and relay signals through your nervous system, using both electrical and chemical signals. Each neuron consists of the following:
* Cell body: This is the main part of the cell.
* Axon: This is a long, arm-like part that extends outward from the cell body. At the end of the axon are several finger-like extensions where the electrical signal in the neuron becomes a chemical signal. These extensions, called synapses, lead to nearby nerve cells.
* Dendrites: These are small branch-like extensions (their name comes from a Latin word that means “tree-like”) on the cell body. Dendrites are the receiving point for chemical signals from the synapses of other nearby neurons.
* Myelin: This thin, fatty layer surrounds the axon of many neurons and acts as a protective covering.
Neuron connections are incredibly complex, and the dendrites on a single neuron may connect to thousands of other synapses. Some neurons are longer or shorter, depending on their location in your body and what they do.
Glial cells
Glial (pronounced glee-uhl) cells have many different purposes, helping develop and maintain neurons when you’re young and managing how the neurons work throughout your entire life. They also protect your nervous system from infections, control the chemical balance in your nervous system and create the myelin coating on the neurons’ axons. Your nervous system has 10 times more glial cells than neurons.

Hi,
#2541. What does the medical term Glycemic load mean?
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#9823.