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World's most northerly lake comes back to life after 2,400 years

World's most northerly lake comes back to life after 2,400 years | Science is Cool! | Scoop.it

Kaffeklubben Sø, the world's most northerly lake, was entombed beneath a near-permanent layer of ice some 2400 years ago. Now it is beginning to thaw – and some of the organisms that disappeared from its waters are beginning to return. The finding is the latest evidence that warmer temperatures in polar regions can result in rapid ecological changes.

 

Located at 83° 37' north, on the coastal plain of northern Greenland, the 48-hectare Kaffeklubben Sø looks out over the Arctic Sea. "It's kind of the end of the earth," says Bianca Perren of the University of Franche-Comté in Besançon, France. One to two metres of ice cover the lake year-round, but a "moat" of water forms around the edge of the lake in summer when average temperatures rise to 1.6 °C.

 

The lake formed about 3500 years ago when local precipitation increased, says Perren. A few species of silica-shelled algae called diatoms lived in the young lake, but their populations declined as regional temperatures cooled, and they vanished entirely 2400 years ago. All that survived under the ice were hardy cyanobacteria, which require little light and can survive even under several metres of ice.

 

A couple of brief summer thaws allowed diatoms to return briefly, but the lake remained nearly barren until around 1960, when the first diatom species returned. The latest water samples, collected by Perren and her colleagues, contain some 20 species.


Via Dr. Stefan Gruenwald
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Mood Music: Music May Physically Block Out Pain

Mood Music: Music May Physically Block Out Pain | Science is Cool! | Scoop.it
Not to be outdone by "runner's high", music has been found to increase endorphins and increase a body's threshold for pain.

Via Sakis Koukouvis
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Music and Mathematics: Algorithmic Composition « mixolydianblog

Music and Mathematics: Algorithmic Composition « mixolydianblog | Science is Cool! | Scoop.it
The process of music composition can be, at times, a severely trying exercise. There seem to be endless techniques and approaches that a composer can use to further their artistic pursuits. One particular method may seem ...

Via M. Edward Borasky, Sakis Koukouvis
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Familiar music arouses coma patients

Familiar music arouses coma patients | Science is Cool! | Scoop.it
Last month, dozens of news outlets reported the story of Charlotte Neve, the seven-year-old girl from Lancashire who awoke from a coma after hearing one of her favourite songs. "It's a complete miracle," the girl's mother, Leila, told The Sun. "I thought I was going to lose my little girl. I climbed into her hospital bed to give her a cuddle … and Adele came on the radio. I started singing it to her because she loves her and we used to sing that song together. Charlotte started smiling and I couldn't believe it."

 

There are other, similar cases. Earlier this year, Bee Gees singer Robin Gibb fell into a coma after contracting pneumonia, and reportedly emerged from it 12 days later after family members began playing familiar music and singing to him. Such cases provide anecdotal evidence that familiar music has beneficial effects on comatose patients. Now, French researchers have conducted the first scientific study of this phenomenon, and their preliminary findings suggest that familiar music probably can increase arousal in coma patients, and may also enhance their cognitive processes....


Via Dr. Stefan Gruenwald, Sakis Koukouvis
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