Articles for ielts the dangers of being over-confident
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- Inner ears reveal when animals evolved warm blood
Shapeshift (v)- to be able to change into other people, animals or things.
Branch out (phr.v)- to start to do an activity that you have not done before, especially in your work or business Exterior (n)- the way that somebody appears or behaves, especially when this is very different from their real feelings or character articles_for_IELTS articles_for_IELTS articles_for_IELTS articles_for_IELTS Inner ears reveal when animals evolved warm blood The first warm-blooded animals appeared abruptly 233 million years ago, according to clues hidden deep inside their ears. Before now, scientists estimated that warm-bloodedness, or endothermy, gradually evolved over a period of about 120 a million years based on vague clues from animals’ skeletons and their environments. But Ricardo Araújo at the university of Lisbon in Portugal and his colleagues suspected that the semicircular canals in the inner ear might provide a more precise record. These fluid-filled canals help animals maintain balance and keep their sense of orientation. But because temperature affects the way fluids behave, warm-blooded animals would, in theory, have had to evolve a different inner ear shape from their cold-blooded ancestors in order to keep their orientation system working properly. Araújo and his colleagues used an X-ray scanning technique called microtomography to examine the inner ears of hundreds of modern animals, including mammals, reptiles, birds, amphibians, and fish, and 64 extinct species of mammalian predecessors. They found that in mammals, which are warm-blooded, the inner ear canals were more circular and smaller, and thinner relative to their body size, compared with those in cold-blooded reptiles, amphibians, and fish. That trend was so reliable that the researchers soon realized that they could identify whether animals were warm-blooded or cold-blooded “with a lot of confidence” just by looking at their inner ears, says Araújo. Armed with that knowledge, the researchers looked at the inner ear canals in their ancient specimens spanning several hundreds of millions of years. They determined that mammal ancestors first became warm-blooded over a roughly1- million-year period during the late Triassic, 233million years ago (Nature, doi.org/h5vq). This corresponds with the first known appearance of mammaliamorphs, ancestors of mammals that may have had the first hairs and whiskers. Source: New Scientist, 30 July 2022 |
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