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  2. Meat grown from animal cells? Here's what it is and how ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/meat-grown-animal-cells-heres...

    The U.S. government is allowing the sale of chicken made from animal cells. California companies Upside Foods and Good Meat were granted permission on Wednesday to sell their products by the ...

  3. Iridium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iridium

    Iridium compounds are used as catalysts in the Cativa process for carbonylation of methanol to produce acetic acid. [92] [93] Iridium complexes are often active for asymmetric hydrogenation both by traditional hydrogenation. [94] and transfer hydrogenation. [95] This property is the basis of the industrial route to the chiral herbicide (S ...

  4. Iridium anomaly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iridium_anomaly

    The type locality of this iridium anomaly is near Raton, New Mexico. [1] [2]Iridium is a very rare element in the Earth's crust, but is found in anomalously high concentrations (around 100 times greater than normal) in a thin worldwide layer of clay marking the boundary between the Cretaceous and Paleogene periods, 66 million years ago.

  5. Cell (biology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cell_(biology)

    He coined the term cell (from Latin cellula, meaning "small room" [41]) in his book Micrographia (1665). [42] [40] 1839: Theodor Schwann [43] and Matthias Jakob Schleiden elucidated the principle that plants and animals are made of cells, concluding that cells are a common unit of structure and development, and thus founding the cell theory.

  6. Timeline of Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event research

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_Cretaceous...

    Anbar and others measured the iridium content of modern bodies of water. They found that the K–T boundary preserved 1,000 times as much iridium as is present in all of the world's oceans combined. [120] Birger, Schmitz and Asaro re-examined volcanism as a potential source of elevated iridium levels in the rock record. [79]

  7. Biological roles of the elements - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biological_roles_of_the...

    iridium: 77: 1a: Due to its extreme rarity, iridium has no biological role. [11] The chloride is moderately toxic to humans. [11] iron: 26: 5: Essential to almost all living things, usually as a ligand in a protein; it is most familiar as an essential element in the protein hemoglobin. [11] Toxic in some forms. [11] krypton: 36: 1

  8. Intercellular communication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intercellular_communication

    Cell to cell signalling using "pheromones" was also found in more complex animals. As complexity increases so does the effect of signals. "Pheromones" in more complex animals such as vertebrates are now more correctly referred to as "chemosignals" [47] [48] [49] including between species. [50] Paristatoid wasp on caterpillar

  9. Excavata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Excavata

    Thus the Fornicata are more closely related to e.g. animals than to Parabasalia. The rest of the Eukaryotes emerged within the Excavata as sister of the Discoba; as they are within the same clade but are not cladistically considered part of the Excavata yet, the Excavata are in this analysis highly paraphyletic.