Denemek ALTIN - Özgür
Amazing Algae
How It Works
|Issue 111
These organisms are more than just green slime - they have shaped human history and will go on to protect our future

You can find algae almost anywhere you can find water, from magnificent giant kelp forests rising from the ocean floor to the thin green film resting on a shallow pond. Over millions of years they have evolved to survive in the most extreme environments: deep within the ice of the Arctic, around acidic ocean vents and in lava flows. Even in puddles, within the bark of trees, and inside droplets of dew on grass in the morning, microscopic algae diatoms will be thriving – they are masters of survival.
Algae have shaped life on our planet, and without them many of the species alive today wouldn’t exist. Entire ocean ecosystems rely on them as a source of food, and over half of the oxygen we breathe comes from these remarkable organisms. Algae even play a role in the formation of clouds.
Throughout human history they have sustained us through famines and provided our species with medicine and nutrition. Today, having harnessed the power of algae, we use them in everything from food and pharmaceuticals to cosmetics and fuel. They are arguably the most important organisms in the world, but could they offer us even more in the future? Around the world people are looking towards algae to provide solutions to some of our planet’s greatest challenges.
WHAT ARE ALGAE?
Algae are a genetically diverse group of over 48,000 different species. They come from a wide range of different evolutionary lineages that can’t be truly classified as animals or plants. As a result they are lumped into a group known as protists – a category for predominantly single-celled living organisms that don’t fit into any other. They are also ancient – fossil records indicate that red algae date back at least 1.6 billion years.
Bu hikaye How It Works dergisinin Issue 111 baskısından alınmıştır.
Binlerce özenle seçilmiş premium hikayeye ve 9.000'den fazla dergi ve gazeteye erişmek için Magzter GOLD'a abone olun.
Zaten abone misiniz? Oturum aç
How It Works'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE
How It Works UK
INSIDE TRUMP'S 'PALACE IN THE SKY'
This luxurious intercontinental jumbo jet will be the US president's new Air Force One
3 mins
Issue 206
How It Works UK
Why are we still sending probes to Mars?
Mars is perhaps the most interesting, and certainly the most Earth-like world in the Solar System, and there's a huge amount still to find out about it.
1 min
Issue 206

How It Works UK
BURMESE PYTHONS HAVE CELLS THAT HELP THEM DIGEST ENTIRE SKELETONS
Researchers found that specialised cells in Burmese pythons' intestinal lining process calcium from the bones of their meals. This helps explain how these predators digest whole prey.
1 min
Issue 206

How It Works UK
DISCOVERING THE TITANIC
Finding the remains of this iconic liner on the seabed was no easy feat, but after more than seven decades the wreckage revealed itself
6 mins
Issue 206
How It Works UK
Melting glaciers could trigger volcanic eruptions around the globe
Melting glaciers could make volcanic eruptions more explosive and frequent, worsening climate change in the process, scientists have warned. Hundreds of volcanoes in Antarctica, Russia, New Zealand and North America rest beneath glaciers. But as the planet warms and these ice sheets melt and retreat, these volcanoes are likely to become more active, according to the authors of a new study analysing the activity of six volcanoes in southern Chile during the last ice age. “Glaciers tend to suppress the volume of eruptions from the volcanoes beneath them. But as glaciers retreat due to climate change, our findings suggest these volcanoes go on to erupt more frequently and more explosively,” said Pablo Moreno Yaeger, a graduate student at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
2 mins
Issue 206

How It Works UK
The world's dams hold so much water they've shifted Earth's poles
The construction of thousands of dams since 1835 has caused Earth's poles to wobble, new research suggests. Scientists found that large dams hold so much water, they redistribute mass around the globe, shifting the position of Earth's crust relative to the mantle, the planet's middle layer. Earth's mantle is gooey, and the crust forms a solid shell that can slide around on top of it. Weight on the crust that causes it to shift relative to the mantle also shifts the location of Earth's poles. \"Any movement of mass within the Earth or on its surface changes the orientation of the rotation axis relative to the crust, a process termed true polar wander,\" researchers wrote in the journal Geophysical Research Letters.
2 mins
Issue 206
How It Works UK
WHY WE STUDY SPACE DUST
Long ignored by scientists, cosmic dust is becoming an increasingly important field of study
2 mins
Issue 206

How It Works UK
HOW DINOSAURS BECAME BIRDS
Dinosaurs were prehistoric egg-laying reptiles that went extinct millions of years ago, but their survivors still live among us
5 mins
Issue 206

How It Works UK
WHY ARE SMOKE DETECTORS RADIOACTIVE?
These devices use a radioactive element to help sniff out smoke and alert you to a potential fire
2 mins
Issue 206

How It Works UK
SALLY RIDE MEMORABILIA COLLECTION SELLS FOR OVER £100,000
A set of memorabilia chronicling Sally Ride’s pioneering path to space just fetched a pretty penny at auction.
1 min
Issue 206
Translate
Change font size