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Photo: Magda Ehlers
Regardless of their preferred mode, bats, elephants, frogs, honeybees, humans and more have something in common: They all sleep. In fact, scientists have yet to find a truly sleepless creature.
THE AVERAGE READER can read a book at 200 words per minute (WPM). That's about 4.5 hours to read a 200-page book (55,000 words). By increasing your...
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Kidney stones have many causes and are not only due to water quality. However, studies have shown a significant risk increase when consuming hard...
Read More »Some do it hanging upside down. Some do it for a few hours at a time. Some do it buried under a blanket of mud. Regardless of their preferred mode, bats, elephants, frogs, honeybees, humans and more have something in common: They all sleep. In fact, scientists have yet to find a truly sleepless creature. But is sleep really necessary for survival? [Why Do We Sleep?]
Best availability: Satellite internet service for off-grid areas. In rural areas without mobile phone service, satellite internet is the best...
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The Whitworth rifle was arguably the first long-range sniper rifle in the world. Designed by Sir Joseph Whitworth, a prominent British engineer, it...
Read More »Now, Gilestro and a few other researchers are starting to wonder if sleep is less necessary than people have thought. "Some animals seem to survive on far less sleep than previously expected based on restorative theories for the function of sleep," Niels Rattenborg, who studies sleep in birds at the Max Planck Institute for Ornithology in Germany, told Live Science. In a 2016 study, Rattenborg and his colleagues outfitted great frigatebirds (Fregata minor) in the Galápagos Islands with a small device to measure electrical activity in the brain. The monitors showed that the birds sometimes slept in one hemisphere of their brains at a time while they were soaring over the ocean. They sometimes even slept in both hemispheres simultaneously while in flight. Sleeping while flying could be common among other bird species — such as common swifts (Apus apus), which can fly for 10 months without landing — though scientists have no direct evidence for this. But perhaps more surprisingly, the study found that the frigatebirds, while flying, slept on average just 42 minutes per day, even though they typically got more than 12 hours of shut-eye on land.
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after college with a job), while the broad population average counts adults as over 18. That would make the “average prepper” a little bit older...
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Fire does not contain cells. -- Living things contain DNA and/or RNA, proteins which contain the basic information cells use to reproduce...
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