2008年3月21日金曜日

alternative style: funisia dorothea



Early life on Earth - no predators, plenty of sex

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Sexual reproduction may be nearly as old as animal life itself, according to researchers who discovered a new species of organism that lived 540 million years ago.

The tube-like creatures called Funisia dorothea anchored themselves in abundant flocks onto the shallow, sandy seabed of what is now the Australian outback.

Nothing appears to have evolved yet to eat them, so they lived peaceful lives, reproducing sexually at times and by asexual methods such as budding at other times, Mary Droser of the University of California Riverside and colleagues reported in the journal Science.

They behaved very much like modern corals, sponges and other multicellular animals, Droser said in a telephone interview.

"They would have been hitting you mid-calf as you walked in these very dense clusters," she said. "Almost always, organisms that do this do it as a result of sexual reproduction."

Dense clusters allow eggs and sperm floated in the water to meet up safely.

The fossilized remains also show the creatures formed buds that grew into full-sized animals, something that coral and sponges do today.

"They were complicated enough to have different modes of reproduction and a fairly complex ecosystem in general," Droser said.

They lived in dense groups of similar size and aged animals, like mussels and oysters do. "It is common modern ecological strategy, and these guys were doing it in the earliest animal ecosystems on this planet," she said.

"We think of these strategies as having been in response to competition and in response to predation."

But there is no evidence of predators. Nothing had yet evolved with teeth or even bones.

Multicellular animal life is believed to have arisen around 600 million years ago.

Funisia dorothea's name comes from the word for rope in Latin and dorothea after Dorothy, Droser's mother.

"She's come with me on digs and done all the cooking and taken care of the kids," Droser said. "It seemed the right thing to do."

(Reporting by Maggie Fox; Editing by Will Dunham and Eric Beech)
http://uk.news.yahoo.com/rtrs/20080321/tsc-uk-sex-1df2b7e.html
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Research shows Earth's earliest animal ecosystem was complex and included sexual reproduction

UC-Riverside paleontologist makes discovery using fossils excavated in South Australian outback

RIVERSIDE, Calif. - Two paleontologists studying ancient fossils they excavated in the South Australian outback argue that Earth's ecosystem has been complex for hundreds of millions of years - at least since around 565 million years ago, which is included in a period in Earth's history called the Neoproterozoic era.

Until now, the dominant paradigm in the field of paleobiology has been that the earliest multicellular animals were simple, and that strategies organisms use today to survive, reproduce and grow in numbers have arisen over time due to several factors. These factors include evolutionary and ecological pressures that both predators and competition for food and other resources have imposed on the ecosystem.

But in describing the ecology and reproductive strategies of Funisia dorothea, a tubular organism preserved as a fossil, the researchers found that the organism had multiple means of growing and propagating - similar to strategies used by most invertebrate organisms for propagation today.

Funisia dorothea grew in abundance, covering the seafloor, during the Neoproterozoic, a 100 million-year period ending around 540 million years ago in Earth's history, during which no predators were around. Mary Droser, one of the paleontologists involved in the study and a professor of Earth sciences at UC Riverside, first discovered the rope-resembling organism in 2005 near Ediacara, South Australia (the site of the excavations), and gave it its name (Funisia after "rope" in Latin; dorothea after Dorothy, Droser's mother).

"How Funisia appears in the fossils clearly shows that ecosystems were complex very early in the history of animals on Earth - that is, before organisms developed skeletons and before the advent of widespread predation," said Droser, who was joined in the research by James G. Gehling of the South Australia Museum.

Study results appear in the March 21 issue of Science.

Droser and Gehling observed that Funisia appears as 30 cm-long tubes in the fossils. They also observed that the tubes commonly occur in closely-packed groups of five to fifteen individuals, displaying a pattern of propagation that often accompanies animal sexual reproduction.

"In general, individuals of an organism grow close to each other, in part, to ensure reproductive success," said Droser, the first author of the research paper and the chair of the Department of Earth Sciences. In Funisia, we are very likely seeing sexual reproduction in Earth's early ecosystem - possibly the very first instance of sexual reproduction in animals on our planet."

According to Droser and Gehling, the clusters of similarly sized individuals of Funisia are strongly suggestive of "spats," huge numbers of offspring an organism gives birth to at once. Besides producing spats, the individual tubular organisms reproduced by budding, and grew by adding bits to their tips.

"Among living organisms, spat production results almost always from sexual reproduction and only very rarely from asexual reproduction," Droser said.

Rachel Wood, a paleontologist at the University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom, who was not involved in the research, said the finding shows that fundamental ecological strategies were already established in the earliest known animal communities, some 570 million years ago.

The fact that Funisia shows close-packed growth on the sea floor allows us to infer that this organism also reproduced sexually, producing a limited number of larval spatfalls," she said. "This is how many primitive animals, such as sponges and corals, reproduce and grow today. So although we do not know the affinities of many of these oldest animals, we do know that their communities were structured in very similar ways to those that exist today."

Scientists believe that a clear picture of the early ecosystem on our planet can inform us how early life evolved, what it looked like, and how organisms respond to environmental and other changes.

The nature of the early ecosystem also clues us on what to look for on other planets in our search for extraterrestrial life," Droser said.

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http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2008-03/uoc--rse031908.php

2008年3月16日日曜日

stenberg brothers






http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Georgii_and_Vladimir_Stenberg
http://www.moma.org/exhibitions/1997/sternbergbrothers/index.html
http://www.moma.org/exhibitions/1997/sternbergbrothers/stenbergbrosworks.html
http://eng.plakaty.ru/remarks?rem_id=9
http://eng.plakaty.ru/authors
http://eng.plakaty.ru/authors?id=78&sort=lname
http://eng.plakaty.ru/authors?id=79&sort=lname
http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/fa20010310a1.html

http://sovietposter.blogspot.com/

2008年3月15日土曜日

ura tadashi



http://www.gleamix.jp/
http://www.gleamix.jp/cl/

japan art: bunch

http://www.hidekiowa.com/
http://www.nullartless.com/
http://www.nullartless.com/sk/
...

sugihara enka





http://enkarock.com/
http://starcollector.jp/manga/gari/gari.htm

2008年3月9日日曜日

China: Area & Population: Hypothetical calculation



*China
Population (2007): 1,321,851,888 (estimate) = around 1,321,850,000
Population (2004): 1,298,847,624 = around 1,298,850,000
Area: 9,598,086 km2 or 9,640,821 km2 or 9,602,716 km2 = around 9,600,000 km2

Hypothetically minus below controversial or potentially controversial regions:

-Xinjiang Uyghur A. R.
Area: 1,660,000 km2
Population (2004): 19,630,000

-Tibet A. R.
Area: 1,228,400 km2
Population (2004): 2,740,000

-Inner Mongolia A. R.
Area: 1,183,000 km2
Population (2004): 23,840,000

-Guangxi A. R.
Area: 236,700 km2
Population (2004): 48,890,000

-Ningxia A. R.
Area: 66,000 km2
Population (2004): 5,880,000

@@@
Net area - A.R. area = 5,225,900
Net population '04 - A.R. population = 1,197,870,000
@@@

-Heilongjiang
Area: 460,000 km2
Population (2004): 38,170,000

-Jilin
Area: 187,400 km2
Population (2004): 27,090,000

-Liaoning
Area: 145,900 km2
Population (2004): 42,170,000

@@@

-Sichuan
Area: 485,000
Population (2004): 87,250,000

-Qinghai
Area: 721,000
Population (2004): 5,390,000

-Gansu
Area: 454,000
Population (2004): 26,190,000

-Yunnan
Area: 394,100
Population (2004): 44,150,000

@@@
Net area - A.R. area - Other area = 2,378,500
Net population '04 - A.R. population - Other population = 927,460,000
@@@

Net Population (2004):
1,298,850,000 ("full") (world ranking: 1st)
1,197,870,000 ("mid") (2nd)
927,460,000 ("core") (2nd)

Net Area:
9,600,000 km2 ("full") (world ranking: 4th)
5,225,900 km2 ("mid") (7th)
2,378,500 km2 ("core) (12th)

2008年3月7日金曜日

tragedy, once again


Une petite fille de la famille d'Alaa Hisham Abu Dheim, l'auteur de la fusillade, tient son portrait devant la maison familiale de Jérusalem-Est.
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http://www.lemonde.fr/proche-orient/article/2008/03/06/une-fusillade-dans-une-ecole-religieuse-juive-fait-au-moins-huit-morts-a-jerusalem_1019774_3218.html#ens_id=891944

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=527968&in_page_id=1770&ct=5

http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3516199,00.html

2008年3月4日火曜日

Children's book




Czech children's book on-line store (jp):
http://kulicka.ocnk.net/

blog: Czech children's book store:
http://kulicka.jugem.jp/

blog: kyukyoku-eizo-kenkyujo:
http://bp.cocolog-nifty.com/bp/

International Library of Children's Literature:
http://www.kodomo.go.jp/index.jsp
http://www.kodomo.go.jp/event/exb/index.html

2008年3月2日日曜日

French ad poster



http://www.guyantique.com/
http://www.guyantique.com/savignac.html