Here are 2 snips from David Cloud's news letter for today.
NEW IMAGING METHOD REVEALS STUNNING DETAILS OF
BRAIN CONNECTIONS (Friday Church News Notes,
December 10, 2010, www.wayoflife.org
[log in to unmask], 866-295-4143) - The following
is from The ID Update, Nov. 22, 2010: “As
reported in Medical Daily, researchers at the
Stanford University School of Medicine, applying
a state-of-the-art imaging system to brain-tissue
samples from mice, have been able to quickly and
accurately locate and count the myriad
connections between nerve cells in unprecedented
detail, as well as to capture and catalog those
connections' surprising variety. Observed in a
new method called array tomography, the brain’s
overall complexity is almost beyond belief, said
Stephen Smith, PhD, professor of molecular and
cellular physiology at Stanford University. ‘One
synapse, by itself, is more like a
microprocessor--with both memory-storage and
information-processing elements--than a mere
on/off switch. In fact, one synapse may contain
on the order of 1,000 molecular-scale switches. A
single human brain has more switches than all the
computers and routers and Internet connections on
Earth,’ he said. ‘In a human, there are more than
125 trillion synapses just in the cerebral cortex
alone,’ said Smith. That's roughly equal to the
number of stars in 1,500 Milky Way galaxies, he
noted. Mark Hartwig, long time ID advocate,
commented that ‘Probably the only thing more
complex than this will be Darwinists’ explanation
of how a mindless process and time produced such stunning structures.’”
THE LIMA BEAN’S DISTRESS SIGNAL (Friday Church
News Notes, December 10, 2010, www.wayoflife.org
[log in to unmask], 866-295-4143) - The following
is excerpted from Bombardier Beetles and Fever
Trees by William Agosta: “Always seeking a meal,
spider mites are attracted to the leaves of a
healthy lima bean plant by the mixture of
volatile chemicals it emits. The mites settle on
the leaves and commence feeding. Somehow, the
mites’ activity causes the bean plant to alter
the mix of volatile chemicals that it releases.
Those leaves besieged by the mites, as well as
those untouched, begin to send out a ‘distress
signal.’ This new signal has a slightly different
odor from that of an unstressed plant, and it
carries several messages, each for a different
recipient. It has a message for nearby lima bean
plants that are not under attack. When the signal
reaches them, these plants apparently also begin
to send out the distress signal, even though they
themselves are free of mites. The distress signal
also reaches distant spider mites, but instead of
attracting these mites, as the odor of an
unstressed bean plant did, this new odor now
repels them. Finally, the third recipient of the
new signal is the carnivorous mites, which are
recruited to devour the spider mites.” Complex
chemical signaling mechanisms have also been
found in cotton plants, poplar trees, sugar maples, and sitka willows.
John
Currently in Ocala, Florida Overcast, Mist 50°F Wind:N-010° at 10mph
Foreploy: any misrepresentation of yourself for
the express purpose of obtaining sex.
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