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Scientist Cooks Up a Meatless Product for Meat Lovers | LiveScience - 0 views

  • "What you first need is a gateway drug for people to realize that all the things they love can be satisfied by plants," Brown said.
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Forks Over Knives - The Official Movie Website - 0 views

  •  
    Dr. Campbell, a nutritional scientist at Cornell University, was concerned in the late 1960's with producing "high quality" animal protein to bring to the poor and malnourished areas of the third world.  While in the Philippines, he made a life-changing discovery: the country's wealthier children, who were consuming relatively high amounts of animal-based foods, were much more likely to get liver cancer.  Dr. Esselstyn, a top surgeon and head of the Breast Cancer Task Force at the world-renowned Cleveland Clinic, found that many of the diseases he routinely treated were virtually unknown in parts of the world where animal-based foods were rarely consumed.  These discoveries inspired Campbell and Esselstyn, who didn't know each other yet, to conduct several groundbreaking studies.  One of them took place in China and is still among the most comprehensive health-related investigations ever undertaken.  Their research led them to a startling conclusion: degenerative diseases like heart disease, type 2 diabetes, and even several forms of cancer, could almost always be prevented-and in many cases reversed-by adopting a whole foods, plant-based diet.  Despite the profound implications of their findings, their work has remained relatively unknown to the public.
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Crittervision: What a dog's nose knows - 22 August 2011 - New Scientist - 0 views

  • "The smells have different layers, which probably give dogs a much bigger range of types of information."
  • But the dog's eyes are just a back-up.
  • The dog could imagine the future by picking up the scent of the dogs, humans or other objects coming towards them on the breeze.
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • they inhale air from two distinct regions of space, allowing the dog to decipher the direction of a scent.
  • The sniff also funnels stale air out through the sides of the nostrils, an action which pulls new air into the nose.
  • Once inside the nose the air swirls around up to 300 million olfactory receptors, compared with our measly 6 million
  • the dog olfactory cortex, which processes scent information, takes up 12.5 per cent of their total brain mass, while ours accounts for less than 1 per cent.
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Rosacea may be caused by mite faeces in your pores - health - 30 August 2012 - New Scie... - 0 views

  • colonise your face at puberty.
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      quiere decir que se quedan ahí por el hecho de haberte conocizado?
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