Terrence Stamp is an awesome actor.TIL the same guy who played Chancellor Valorum in The Phantom Menace voiced the Prophet of Truth in Halo 3.
https://www.nasa.gov/content/goddar...s-how-much-saharan-dust-feeds-amazon-s-plants
This trans-continental journey of dust is important because of what is in the dust, Yu said. Specifically the dust picked up from the Bodélé Depression in Chad, an ancient lake bed where rock minerals composed of dead microorganisms are loaded with phosphorus. Phosphorus is an essential nutrient for plant proteins and growth, which the Amazon rain forest depends on in order to flourish.
Nutrients – the same ones found in commercial fertilizers – are in short supply in Amazonian soils. Instead they are locked up in the plants themselves. Fallen, decomposing leaves and organic matter provide the majority of nutrients, which are rapidly absorbed by plants and trees after entering the soil. But some nutrients, including phosphorus, are washed away by rainfall into streams and rivers, draining from the Amazon basin like a slowly leaking bathtub.
The phosphorus that reaches Amazon soils from Saharan dust, an estimated 22,000 tons per year, is about the same amount as that lost from rain and flooding, Yu said. The finding is part of a bigger research effort to understand the role of dust and aerosols in the environment and on local and global climate.
Oooooh, I'll have to visit Xessaloníke then.Yil: paprika on gyros: very good...
We have an East Asia thread with which we've been at war for some time (TI was reminded of).TIL that the sister of the King of Thailand runs for PM against the ruling military junta
poor country
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...-prime-minister-against-ruling-military-junta
This reminds me of a documentary on how some coastal part of the Sahara blooms overnight at a time of the year when the moist winds blow in from the sea and a myriad lifeforms come out to feed and reproduce and then hide again every dawn. It was breathtaking.TIL that dust from the Sahara desert fertilizes the Amazon. It blows my mind that soil from one of the most desolate places is essential to life in one of the fertile. And it blows my mind that enough of it is transferred across the oceans to be significant.
https://www.nasa.gov/content/goddar...s-how-much-saharan-dust-feeds-amazon-s-plants
This trans-continental journey of dust is important because of what is in the dust, Yu said. Specifically the dust picked up from the Bodélé Depression in Chad, an ancient lake bed where rock minerals composed of dead microorganisms are loaded with phosphorus. Phosphorus is an essential nutrient for plant proteins and growth, which the Amazon rain forest depends on in order to flourish.
Nutrients – the same ones found in commercial fertilizers – are in short supply in Amazonian soils. Instead they are locked up in the plants themselves. Fallen, decomposing leaves and organic matter provide the majority of nutrients, which are rapidly absorbed by plants and trees after entering the soil. But some nutrients, including phosphorus, are washed away by rainfall into streams and rivers, draining from the Amazon basin like a slowly leaking bathtub.
The phosphorus that reaches Amazon soils from Saharan dust, an estimated 22,000 tons per year, is about the same amount as that lost from rain and flooding, Yu said. The finding is part of a bigger research effort to understand the role of dust and aerosols in the environment and on local and global climate.
thank you for the clarificationfloaters (little clumps of protein in the vitreous)
Carl Sagan used the term "floaters" in Cosmos when he was speculating about what sort of lifeforms could possibly exist in Jupiter's atmosphere.If I hadn't had some of those myself I would only think of those danged purple aliens from Enemy Unknown when I read the word ‘floaters’ in a gaming forum.