We don't know everything, this just in today.
it will be just as interesting and unexpected tomorrow.
and then another again, the day after that.
science is changing faster than the most quick witted people can handle or take on. It really is moving that fast.
So the backward looking 'cage yourself' (and try to force others so as to feel safe!) into a safe box, people who live through ignorant levels of negative proofing... will not have a single safe little monkey branch to hang on to (while they fling derisive effluent at the mindful explorers who left the tree).
it will be just as interesting and unexpected tomorrow.
and then another again, the day after that.
science is changing faster than the most quick witted people can handle or take on. It really is moving that fast.
So the backward looking 'cage yourself' (and try to force others so as to feel safe!) into a safe box, people who live through ignorant levels of negative proofing... will not have a single safe little monkey branch to hang on to (while they fling derisive effluent at the mindful explorers who left the tree).
The research team found that atoms of hydrogen, which are very light, provide the bonds that hold the two strands of the double helix together and can, under certain conditions, behave like spread-out waves that can exist in multiple locations at once, thanks to proton tunneling. This leads to these atoms occasionally being found on the wrong strand of DNA, leading to mutations.