Took A Walk Around The Strange And Remote Ice Age Features Of Brimham Rocks In Yorkshire Today. It’s

Took A Walk Around The Strange And Remote Ice Age Features Of Brimham Rocks In Yorkshire Today. It’s
Took A Walk Around The Strange And Remote Ice Age Features Of Brimham Rocks In Yorkshire Today. It’s
Took A Walk Around The Strange And Remote Ice Age Features Of Brimham Rocks In Yorkshire Today. It’s
Took A Walk Around The Strange And Remote Ice Age Features Of Brimham Rocks In Yorkshire Today. It’s
Took A Walk Around The Strange And Remote Ice Age Features Of Brimham Rocks In Yorkshire Today. It’s
Took A Walk Around The Strange And Remote Ice Age Features Of Brimham Rocks In Yorkshire Today. It’s
Took A Walk Around The Strange And Remote Ice Age Features Of Brimham Rocks In Yorkshire Today. It’s
Took A Walk Around The Strange And Remote Ice Age Features Of Brimham Rocks In Yorkshire Today. It’s
Took A Walk Around The Strange And Remote Ice Age Features Of Brimham Rocks In Yorkshire Today. It’s
Took A Walk Around The Strange And Remote Ice Age Features Of Brimham Rocks In Yorkshire Today. It’s

Took a walk around the strange and remote ice age features of Brimham Rocks in Yorkshire today. It’s a surreal landscape and it must have been just as strange to our prehistoric ancestors.

Brimham Rocks Photoset 1, Yorkshire, 27.5.19.

More Posts from Rocks-everywhere and Others

6 years ago
4 years ago

cave exploring, thailand

6 years ago
Yuanyang Rice Terraces

Yuanyang Rice Terraces

This aerial view of the mountains of Yuanyang Couny of the Yunnan province in south China presents a spectacular visual of the rice terraces that cover the landscape. Due to the scarcity of level ground, only about 5% of the land is used for agriculture. However, the Hani people, the predominant ethnic group of the region, have adapted very well.

Keep reading

6 years ago

Obi on Shane Madej’s instastory on April 29, 2019.

5 years ago
A Rose Of Jericho Three Hours After Being Watered Having Nearly returned To Is Previous, Alive, State!

A Rose of Jericho three hours after being watered having nearly returned to is previous, alive, state!

The Rose of Jericho(Anastatica hierochuntica) is a species of resurrection plant. These plants are characterized by their ability to use Poikilohydric mechanisms which enable them to survive extreme dehydration for years at a time.

5 years ago

Imagine your mum being so terrified of you becoming a poet like your dad that you accidentally become the world’s first computer programmer instead

6 years ago
A Highland Coo And Her Calf Wandering Down An Empty Road, Argyll And The Isles, Scotland. Credit: Andy

A Highland Coo and her calf wandering down an empty road, Argyll and the Isles, Scotland. Credit: Andy Maclachlan.

6 years ago
Every Morning When I Go In The Kitchen She Yells At Me Nonstop So I Have To Put The Spoon On Her Head

every morning when i go in the kitchen she yells at me nonstop so i have to put the spoon on her head

5 years ago

How is Biotechnology Preparing us to Live on the Moon and Mars?

The adventures awaiting astronauts on future long-duration missions have technologists researching sustainable ways to live away from Earth. We’re using what we know from almost 20 years of a continuous human presence on the International Space Station and looking at new technologies to prepare for extended stays on the Moon and Mars.

image

Biotechnology – technology that uses living organisms to make products that provide a new use – is key to this research.

With biotechnology, we’re developing new ways to manufacture medicines, build habitats and more in space. Here are some ways biotechnology is advancing spaceflight and how the same research is reaping benefits on Earth.

image

Healthy astronauts

Planning ways to supply food for a multi-year mission on the Moon or Mars may require making food and nutrients in space. Our scientists are testing an early version of a potential solution: get microorganisms to produce vital nutrients like those usually found in vegetables. Then, whenever they’re needed, astronauts can drink them down. 

The microorganisms are genetically engineered to rapidly produce controlled quantities of essential nutrients. Because the microorganisms and their food source both have a long shelf-life at room temperature and only need water to be activated, the system provides a simple, practical way to produce essential nutrients on-demand. The same kind of system designed for space could also help provide nutrition for people in remote areas of our planet.

Our researchers are evaluating the first batches of BioNutrient samples that came back to Earth after an experimental run on the International Space Station.

image

Because space travel takes a toll on the human body, we’re also researching how biotechnology can be used to advance the field of regenerative medicine. 

Related cells that are joined together are collectively referred to as tissue, and these cells work together as organs to accomplish specific functions in the human body. Blood vessels around the cells vascularize, providing nutrients to the tissue to keep it healthy. 

Our Vascular Tissue Challenge offers a $500,000 prize to be divided among the first three teams that successfully create thick, metabolically-functional human vascularized organ tissue in a controlled laboratory environment. The vascularized, thick-tissue models resulting from this challenge will function as organ analogs, or models, that can be used to study deep space environmental effects, such as radiation, and to develop strategies to minimize the damage to healthy cells.  

Plant factories

Humans have relied on plants’ medicinal qualities for thousands of years for everything from alleviating minor ailments to curing serious diseases. Now, researchers are trying to simplify the process of turning plants into medicine (i.e. how to make it compact and portable). If successful, the cost of biomanufacturing pharmaceuticals on Earth could go down, and plants could produce medicines in space.

How Is Biotechnology Preparing Us To Live On The Moon And Mars?

Creating medicine on demand isn’t something we typically do, so we’re turning to experts in the field for help. Researchers at the University of California, Davis are transforming plants into mini-medicine factories for future Mars missions. They’re genetically altering an ordinary type of lettuce so that it produces a protein called parathyroid hormone. This hormone is an approved drug for treating osteoporosis, a common condition where bones become weak and brittle.

image

This type of research is vital to long duration spaceflight. When astronauts land on Mars, they’ll need to be strong—ready to explore. The length of the flight in zero gravity to get there and lower gravity on the surface could have a negative impact on human bones. Having the technologies needed to treat that possibility, and other unanticipated health effects of long duration spaceflight, is crucial.

Growing habitats

Vitamins aren’t the only thing astronauts could be growing on Mars; we’re exploring technologies that could grow structures out of fungi.

An early-stage research project underway at our Ames Research Center is prototyping technologies that could “grow” habitats on the Moon, Mars and beyond out of life – specifically, fungi and the unseen underground threads that make up the main part of the fungus. These tiny threads build complex structures with extreme precision, networking out into larger structures like mushrooms. With the right conditions, they can be coaxed into making new structures – ranging from a material similar to leather to the building blocks for a planetary home.

The myco-architecture project envisions a future where astronauts can construct a habitat out of the lightweight fungi material. Upon arrival, by unfolding a basic structure made up of dormant fungi and simply adding water, the fungi would grow around that framework into a fully functional human habitat – all while being safely contained to avoid contaminating the external environment.

image

Recycling waste

Once astronauts arrive on the surface of the Moon or a more distant planet, they’ll have to carefully manage garbage. This waste includes some stuff that gets flushed on Earth.

Today, we’re already using a recycling system on the space station to turn urine into drinking water. Poop on the other hand is contained then disposed of on spacecraft returning to Earth. That won’t be possible on more distant journeys, so, we’re turning to biomanufacturing for a practical solution.

Biology can serve as an effective recycling factory. Microorganisms such as yeast and algae feed on all kinds of things classified as “mission waste.” Processing their preferred form of nourishment generates products that can serve as raw materials used to make essential supplies like nutrients, medicines, plastic and fuel.

image

By taking a careful look at biological processes, we hope to develop new, lightweight systems to leverage that biology to do some helpful in-space manufacturing.

From Space to Earth

Biotechnology is preparing us for longer space missions to the Moon and then Mars – farther from Earth than humans have ever traveled before. As we prepare for those exciting missions, we’re also conducting research on the space station for the primary benefit of everyone on Earth.

January is National Biotechnology Month. To learn more about some of the ways NASA is using biotechnology to solve challenges in space and improve life on Earth, visit this link. 

Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com

5 years ago
Big Thach Nature Park, Russia By Alexander Khoroshilov

Big Thach Nature Park, Russia by Alexander Khoroshilov


Tags
Loading...
End of content
No more pages to load
  • zaratoustra53
    zaratoustra53 liked this · 8 months ago
  • soosoophen-blog
    soosoophen-blog liked this · 3 years ago
  • mintlord
    mintlord liked this · 4 years ago
  • starforger-moved
    starforger-moved liked this · 4 years ago
  • an-abyss-called-life
    an-abyss-called-life liked this · 4 years ago
  • keenwhispersrebel
    keenwhispersrebel reblogged this · 4 years ago
  • oceans-21
    oceans-21 reblogged this · 5 years ago
  • scoobysnaxforcrev
    scoobysnaxforcrev liked this · 5 years ago
  • mkmcb
    mkmcb liked this · 5 years ago
  • secretcherimaybe
    secretcherimaybe liked this · 5 years ago
  • sundavr
    sundavr liked this · 5 years ago
  • cavememory
    cavememory reblogged this · 5 years ago
  • allosauroid
    allosauroid liked this · 5 years ago
  • beartoothed-flatnosed
    beartoothed-flatnosed reblogged this · 5 years ago
  • betterplacestobe
    betterplacestobe reblogged this · 5 years ago
  • icenose
    icenose reblogged this · 5 years ago
  • deflecto
    deflecto reblogged this · 5 years ago
  • mirrsd
    mirrsd reblogged this · 5 years ago
  • dimens1ons
    dimens1ons liked this · 5 years ago
  • son-of-the-antlered-ones
    son-of-the-antlered-ones liked this · 5 years ago
  • andyandnormski
    andyandnormski reblogged this · 5 years ago
  • coolhandsnail
    coolhandsnail liked this · 5 years ago
  • toyouthereisnoequal
    toyouthereisnoequal liked this · 5 years ago
  • ivy-avaamethystrose
    ivy-avaamethystrose liked this · 5 years ago
  • allpaintingnowaiting
    allpaintingnowaiting liked this · 5 years ago
  • symppho
    symppho reblogged this · 5 years ago
  • symppho
    symppho liked this · 5 years ago
  • rootsnclaws
    rootsnclaws reblogged this · 5 years ago
  • beefstrugglenoff
    beefstrugglenoff liked this · 5 years ago
  • sirene-petite
    sirene-petite reblogged this · 5 years ago
  • omgitsajessaroo
    omgitsajessaroo liked this · 5 years ago
  • greciacataleyace
    greciacataleyace liked this · 5 years ago
  • udendeandre
    udendeandre liked this · 5 years ago
  • guenterw
    guenterw liked this · 5 years ago
  • socialheartburn
    socialheartburn liked this · 5 years ago
  • dearheartofmars
    dearheartofmars liked this · 5 years ago
  • cmps-e-b
    cmps-e-b liked this · 5 years ago
  • sydnwr
    sydnwr reblogged this · 5 years ago
  • sydnwr
    sydnwr liked this · 5 years ago
  • theconstellationsinyourskin
    theconstellationsinyourskin liked this · 5 years ago
  • humongousalienlightfestival
    humongousalienlightfestival liked this · 5 years ago
  • mayhem-says-miaow
    mayhem-says-miaow liked this · 5 years ago
  • consumebeans
    consumebeans liked this · 5 years ago
rocks-everywhere - science, plants, cats, music, and more
science, plants, cats, music, and more

225 posts

Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags