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Dichotomous Keys: Identification Achievement Unlocked - YouTube - 1 views

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    Join the Amoeba Sisters in discovering how to use a dichotomous key to identify organisms. This video also touches on the importance of scientific names.
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10 Signs You Have an Underactive Thyroid - Yahoo News - 0 views

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    Some thyroid 101 background: Your thyroid gland is the butterfly-shaped gland at the base of your neck that secretes two all-important hormones that control major bodily functions (including how you use energy, regulate body temperature, and digest food) and organs (including the heart, brain, liver, kidneys and skin). But with hypothyroidism, your body can have normal to low thyroxine hormone levels and elevated thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) levels. These high TSH levels are a result of an overworked pituitary gland that is trying to elevate the hormone levels in an inadequately responsive thyroid.
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Myths and misconceptions about evolution - Alex Gendler - YouTube - 1 views

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    How does evolution really work? Actually, not how some of our common evolutionary metaphors would have us believe. For instance, it's species, not individual organisms, that adapt to produce evolution, and genes don't "want" to be passed on -- a gene can't want anything at all! Alex Gendler sets the record straight on the finer points of evolution.
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Explore Your Inner Animals | HHMI's BioInteractive - 2 views

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    This interactive explores different anatomical features of the human body and what they reveal about the evolutionary history we share with other organisms, including earlier, long-extinct species.
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Avida-ED Home Page - 1 views

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    Avida-ED is an award-winning educational application developed at Michigan State University for undergraduate biology courses to help students learn about evolution and scientific method by allowing them to design and perform experiments to test hypotheses about evolutionary mechanisms using evolving digital organisms.
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Easy Variation and Natural Selection Lessons with Wisconsin Fast Plants® Seed... - 0 views

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    Middle and high school students need an opportunity to construct evidence-based explanations for how variation and natural selection can lead to adaptation of populations over time (NGSS MS-LS4-4 and HS-LS4-4). However, managing a population of classroom-friendly living organisms that consistently grow, develop, and thrive while students observe variation among individuals can be a real challenge.
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GCSE Biology - Genetic Engineering Insulin - YouTube - 0 views

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    2 min video A quick tutorial, showing how we use restriction enzymes to cut out a desired gene from one organism, and insert it into the plasmid of a bacterium. This allows massive production of the desired protein (in this case the hormone: insulin) in a relatively short amount of time.
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The Case of Desiree's Baby - National Center for Case Study Teaching in Science - 0 views

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    This case is based on Kate Chopin's short story "Desiree's Baby," a tragic tale of race and gender in antebellum Louisiana first published in 1893. Students read the story and then answer a series of questions about the genetics and evolution of skin color. The case was developed for a general biology course organized around the general theme of evolution. It could also be used in anthropology and biology courses for non-majors.
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First uterus transplant in US failed - Business Insider - 0 views

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    First, surgeons remove the uterus and part of the vagina from the donor - in this case, one who was deceased, since it is a risky surgery that involves separating uterine blood vessels that are tightly wrapped around the tubes from the bladder. Next, the uterus is transferred to the living recipient. Surgeons connect an artery and a vein on either side of the uterus to connect it to the recipient's blood supply. A piece of the donor's vaginal tissue is attached to the recipient's vagina, and supporting tissue is attached to the pelvis to secure the organ in place. It's not necessary to connect any nerves.
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CSPI: There are concerns about GMOs, but not around food safety - 0 views

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    The Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI) has made a name for itself by tackling the food industry's big guns on everything from artery-furring entrees to misleading label claims. But where does it stand on genetically modified organisms (GMOs)? Elaine Watson quizzed Gregory Jaffe, CSPI director of biotechnology, on everything from GM labeling initiatives to super weeds…
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CONCERNS WITH GMOs - WHAT IS THE SCIENCE? - The Connecticut Chapter of The Sierra Club - 0 views

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    Genetically modified organisms (GMOs) or genetically engineered (GE) foods have the potential to cause a variety of health problems.  For example, they may produce new allergens and toxins, and spread harmful traits to non-GMO crops. In addition, at least one major environmental impact of genetic engineering has already reached critical proportions: overuse of herbicide-tolerant GE crops has spurred an increase in herbicide use and an epidemic of herbicide-resistant "superweeds," which will lead to even more herbicide use. The long-term impacts of GMOs are unknown, and once released into the environment they cannot be recalled.  
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Gene Flow Facts, information, pictures | Encyclopedia.com articles about Gene Flow - 0 views

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    Gene flow is the transfer of genetic material between separate populations. Many organisms are divided into separate populations that have restricted contact with each other, possibly leading to reproductive isolation. Many things can fragment a species into a collection of isolated populations. For example, a treacherous mountain pass may cut off one herd of mountain goats from another. In human beings, cultural differences as well as geographic separation maintain unique populations: It is more likely that a person will marry and have children with someone who lives nearby and speaks the same language.
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The Cell From Hell: Scientific controversy surrounds elusive fish-killing microorganism - 0 views

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    JoAnn Burkholder and her associates at North Carolina State University were the pioneer investigators in the Pfiesteria research, which our group of Old Dominion colleagues has since pursued. Burkholder was the first scientist to link the 1991 fish deaths to Pfiesteria, based on her team's on-site investigations and controlled laboratory studies. In addition, she observed a complicated life cycle in the organism, including numerous morphological forms such as motile flagellated cells, amoebae and cysts that are able to survive in the sediment of estuaries until activated by the presence of fish to produce toxic motile cells. 
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All Gene-Editing Research Should Proceed Cautiously, Scientists Conclude - Scientific A... - 0 views

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    Tweaking the human genome with current and future gene-editing tools could lead to sophisticated treatments and prevention strategies for disease. The promise of those applications is reason enough to move forward with such work in the lab and clinic, albeit cautiously, the dozen scientists and bioethicists who organized the International Summit on Human Gene Editing said today after three days of deliberation and presentations in Washington, D.C.
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My Husband and I Are Both Carriers for a Jewish Genetic Disease. Here's How We Had Kids... - 0 views

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    I'm a carrier of a Jewish genetic disease. With that, here's my journey, which will explain why I'm so passionate about advocating for JScreen-a national organization that focuses on education and screening for Jewish genetic diseases.
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Contaminating Our Bodies With Everyday Products - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    IN recent weeks, two major medical organizations have issued independent warnings about toxic chemicals in products all around us. Unregulated substances, they say, are sometimes linked to breast and prostate cancer, genital deformities, obesity, diabetes and infertility. "Widespread exposure to toxic environmental chemicals threatens healthy human reproduction," the International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics warned in a landmark statement last month.
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The Nitrogen Cycle | Science | Interactive | PBS LearningMedia - 0 views

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    This interactive activity adapted from the University of Alberta illustrates how, through a process called fixation, nitrogen flows from the atmosphere, into the soil, through various organisms, and back to the atmosphere in a continuous cycle.
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Protein Function | Learn Science at Scitable - 1 views

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    The collection of proteins within a cell determines its health and function. Proteins are responsible for nearly every task of cellular life, including cell shape and inner organization, product manufacture and waste cleanup, and routine maintenance. Proteins also receive signals from outside the cell and mobilize intracellular response. They are the workhorse macromolecules of the cell and are as diverse as the functions they serve.
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The Role of Enzymes - YouTube - 1 views

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    3:35 video Enzymes are the critical ingredient in every organism that make life possible. They are catalysts and drive every chemical reaction that takes place in the human body, enabling our bodies to be built from proteins, carbohydrates, and fats. In this program from VEA we investigate the role of enzymes in detail, offering both theoretical and practical examples.
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Classification of Life - YouTube - 0 views

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    Analogy of organizing music for taxonomy, then works through classification for humans.
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