Iron, Nature's Universal Element: Why People Need Iron & Animals Make Magnets

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Rutgers University Press, 2000 - 204 Seiten

Virtually all life on Earth, from bacteria to humans, needs iron to survive. From facilitating oxygen flow in mammals to assisting migrating birds in finding their way south for the winter, iron serves a variety of definitive roles for nearly all living creatures.

Our knowledge of iron's role in life is the result of recent discoveries about iron and magnetism in bacteria, in myriad animals and plant species, and in humans. Personal stories of scientists illustrate the lively interplay between molecular biologists, ornithologists, physicists, oceanographers, chemists, geologists, physicians, and ecologists.

The authors start with the discovery of iron-rich hot springs on the ocean floor. Was this life's nursery? Other chapters describe why there is iron in our blood and how the body safely cages excess iron. The physiology of exercise and the genetic blood diseases, sickle cell anemia, hemochromatosis, and the thalessemias are explained.

One of nature's most dramatic mysteries--the migration of birds, turtle, salmon and other animals--depends on iron magnets. The bodies of some animals contain minute deposits of magnetite that are sensory navigators. Far reaching in scope, Iron, Nature's Universal Element also looks at global issues including iron's power over the earth's oceans, vegetation, and populations; and the low-protein diets that lead to long-term cognitive damage in iron-deficient children in poor countries.

 

Inhalt

GLOSSARY
161
BIBLIOGRAPHY
177
INDEX
197
Urheberrecht

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Beliebte Passagen

Seite 193 - Scoy, CS Law, MI Liddicoat, R. Ling, T. Stanton, J. Stockel, C. Collins, A. Anderson, R. Bidigare, M. Ondrusek, M. Latasa, FJ Millero, K. Lee, W. Yao, JZ Zhang, G. Friederich, C. Sakamoto. F. Chavez, K. Buck, Z. Kolber, R. Greene, P.
Seite 168 - These are atoms of the same element with the same number of protons but a different number of neutrons.
Seite 135 - CO? during glacial maxima; it is also important because oceanic iron fertilization aimed at the enhancement of phytoplankton production may turn out to be the most feasible method of stimulating the active removal of greenhouse gas CO 2 from the atmosphere, if the need arises.
Seite 136 - The Buffalo News. Reprinted with permission of UNIVERSAL PRESS SYNDICATE. All Rights Reserved.
Seite 135 - In the report by the National Research Council (an arm of the National Academy of Sciences...
Seite 188 - ... WEBB. 1964. Adaptation of the magnetoreceptive mechanism of mud-snails to geomagnetic strength. Biol. Bull. 127: 221-231. 5. BROWN, JR., FA & YH PARK. 1966. Effects and aftereffects on planarians of reversals of the horizontal magnetic vector. Nature 209: 533-535. 6. BROWN, JR., FA & YH PARK. 1965. Duration of an aftereffect in planarians following a reversed horizontal magnetic vector.
Seite 55 - Nation's only very high magnetic field facility, the Francis Bitter National Magnet Laboratory at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and expects to respond to the MMF recommendations concerning this MMF.
Seite 3 - ... to carry oxygen from the lungs to the rest of the body.
Seite 135 - Scientists trying to battle the 'greenhouse effect' have seriously proposed dumping hundreds of thousands of tons of iron into the ocean to create giant blooms of marine algae that could soak up much of the excess carbon dioxide believed to be responsible for global warming.
Seite 188 - ... Orientation in birds (ed. P. Berthold), pp. 166-79. Birkhauser, Basel. Able, KP (1994). Magnetic orientation and magnetoreception in birds. Progress Neurobiol. 42, 449-73. Able, KP (1995). Orientation and navigation: a perspective on fifty years of research. Condor 97, 592-604. Able, KP and Able, MA (1995). Interactions in the flexible orientation system of a migratory bird.

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