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3 Random Tidbits

A Ancient Humans Story.

From History:
Subject: Islamic Neoplatonism.
born 872
872 to 950

Put simply.

Now, the details…

46 Generations Ago

30 Phil, Chapter 16: Al-Farabi and Intellect
Al-Farabi was born along the Silk Road circa 872 CE in the city of Farab, in present-day Kazakhstan. Al-Farabi’ thought was rooted in Platonic and Aristotelian frameworks, yet it seamlessly wove in elements of Islamic thinking. He imagined an ideal society, steered by virtuous leaders akin to Plato’s philosopher-kings, guiding them towards a virtuous existence. In his vision, true wisdom was the foundation of an intellectual civilization.

Pictured: Artist impression.

 


That Ancient Humans Story, 

was first published on TST 2 years ago.

By the way, the flashcard inspired by it is this.

 

A Ancient Humans Story.

From History:
Subject: Dinosaur Evolution.
Lived ~161 to 146 million years ago.
28–33.5 m long: longer, whiplike, slimmer.
Diplodocus was the longer, slimmer, more stretched-out sauropod, famous for its especially long neck and whiplike tail. It is one of the longest land animals and generally more slender in build.

To clarify.

Diplodocus shows the slimmer side of the classic giant-necked sauropods. Compared with its heavier cousins, it stretched the same basic body plan into a longer, leaner form, reminding us that even among the giant plant-eaters, evolution was already experimenting with different proportions and ways of being enormous.

Now, the details…

Diplodocus was another giant Late Jurassic sauropod from North America, but it had a different feel from Apatosaurus. It was one of the longest land animals ever, with a more slender build, an especially long whiplike tail, and a lighter, stretched-out look. If Apatosaurus was the muscular heavyweight of the diplodocid family, Diplodocus was the long, elegant specialist.

It also became one of the most commonly displayed dinosaurs in museums, which is a big part of why its silhouette is so deeply stamped into popular memory. Along with Apatosaurus and the revived Brontosaurus, it helps define what many people picture when they hear the word “sauropod”: a giant, long-necked, plant-eating dinosaur from the lush floodplains of the Late Jurassic.

One tiny nuance: the exact date ranges can vary a bit depending on which species and formation a source is emphasizing, so I used broad mainstream ranges rather than the narrowest possible dates.

 


That Ancient Humans Story, 

was first published on TST 2 weeks ago.

By the way, the flashcard inspired by it is this.

Front: What does Diplodocus mean?
Back: double beam

 

A Ancient Humans Story.

From History:
Subject: Evolution.
~2.4 Billion years ago (+/- 100 million)
Bacteria are added to eukaryote ancestor cells
About 2 billion years ago, bacteria are added to cells and that group leads to eukaryotes. You are a walking chimera ecosystem made of an Archaea host and trillions of Bacterial power-plants.

That takeaway is this.

By 2.4 billion years ago, bacteria are added to cells and within the archaea group and eukaryotes emerge. You are a walking ecosystem. A Chimera, a hybrid creature made of an Archaea host and trillions of Bacterial power-plants. Without that theft 2 billion years ago for the massive energy boost needed for muscle and brains, life would likely still be just a thin layer of slime on the ocean floor.

Now, the details…

In early oxygen-rich environments, some archaeal cells occasionally engulfed bacteria. Most of these encounters failed. But in rare cases, an oxygen-using bacterium survived inside its host and produced energy in exchange for protection. Natural selection stabilized this partnership, and the bacterium evolved into the mitochondrion — a turning point that enabled complex eukaryotic life.

Imagine the crowded microbial ecosystems of early Earth. Countless bacteria and archaea lived, competed, and died in constantly shifting chemical conditions. Oxygen was rising, creating both danger and opportunity.

Some archaeal cells likely evolved flexible membranes and primitive internal scaffolding that allowed them to engulf other cells. Most engulfment events ended in digestion or death. But occasionally, an aerobic bacterium persisted inside its host. If it reduced oxygen toxicity while generating usable energy, both cells benefited. Over time, this temporary coexistence became permanent symbiosis. The internalized bacterium became the mitochondrion, and a new form of life — the eukaryotic cell — was born.

The mitochondria in your cells still divide like bacteria. They carry circular DNA. They use bacterial-style ribosomes. And they sit inside a double membrane — the scar of an ancient engulfment. Although some cells, like mature red blood cells, do not have mitochondria, nearly all your cells do. And some cells, like heart muscle cells that require enormous amounts of energy, contain thousands of them. Cardiac muscle cells (cardiomyocytes) can contain 5,000 to 8,000 mitochondria per cell. Your brain contains about 86 billion neurons — and many of them carry nearly 2,000 mitochondria each.

Every time one of your cells divides, it reenacts a 2.4 billion-year-old merger.

 


That Ancient Humans Story, 

was first published on TST 1 month ago.

By the way, the flashcard inspired by it is this.

 

The end. Refresh for another set.

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