U Tech Solution

Thursday, December 2, 2010

Amazing Facts About the Human Body

Interesting Facts About the Human Body

These interesting human body facts will educate you about how your body responds to outside influences, what goes on within your body, why certain spasms or reactions take place and more.
  1. Average life of a taste bud is said to last up to 10 days.
  2. A cough comes out from one's mouth at the speed of 60 miles/hour.
  3. The human thigh bone is stronger than concrete. Here are some more skeletal system facts. You'll surely find it as a good read.
  4. Women blink twice as much as men do.
  5. Cow milk takes one hour to break down in the human stomach.
  6. Children grow at a higher rate during the springtime.
  7. Blondes have more hair compared to those with dark hair.
  8. When the human body dries up, it creates an illusion that makes one think that hair and nails still grow after death.
  9. When the brain suffers from a traumatic injury like from an infection, accident or stroke, some people develop 'alien hand syndrome'. This syndrome causes one to feel no sensation in either hand, losing the ability to control its movements. It feels like the hand has a mind of its own and isn't a part of the body, and can randomly play out functions like tearing up one's clothes or grabbing at items. Here we bring you some intriguing facts about nervous system.
  10. A human can survive without food intake, but not without sleep.
  11. The human lung contains around 3000 million tiny blood vessels known as capillaries. If these blood vessels were laid end to end they could stretch over an area of 1500 miles.
  12. Skin is the largest organ in the human body. The skin of an adult man can cover an area of approximately 20 sq. ft
  13. Talking about the cells, the largest cell in the human body is the female egg, while the smallest cell is the male sperm.
  14. A man's testicles produce around 10 million sperm cells every day. These are enough to repopulate the entire world within a period of 6 months
  15. Every one knows that the human brain is very sharp, but not many people know that a single cell of the human brain has the capacity to store as much information as the information in 5 Encyclopedia Britannica's.
  16. One of the most amazing facts about the human body is that it can give off heat enough to boil a gallon of water within half an hour.
  17. Although the human nose is not as sensitive as dogs, it can remember around 50,000 different scents with ease.
  18. Each of our fingernails and toenails take around 6 months to grow from its base to the tip.

Useless Facts About the Human BodyIf the amazing facts about the human body weren't enough, here are some more interesting facts about it. They may not be of much use for us, but that doesn't mean they are not interesting.
  • Each square inch of human skin has approximately 32 million bacteria on it. Wait! You don't need to panic as most of them are harmless.
  • Skin shedding is not restricted to animals, human beings also shed copious amounts of skin in form of skin flakes. In fact, every individual sheds around 40 lbs of skin throughout their lifetime.
  • There are around 500,000 sweat glands on a pair of human feet, which can produce around a pint of sweat everyday.
  • Although, all the organs of human body stop growing after we cross a particular age, the ears and nose continue growing.
  • Interestingly enough, an average individual produces around 25,000 quarts of saliva in his lifetime. That can fill two average sized swimming pools.

10 Fastest Growing Industries

1. Hospitality.

Hospitality is the relationship between guest and host, or the act or practice of being hospitable. Specifically, this includes the reception and entertainment of guests, visitors, or strangers, resorts, membership clubs, conventions, attractions, special events, and other services for travelers and tourists.

2. Retail

Every country, city and state is laced with retail outlets that sell every kind of merchandise under the sun. This industry is growing because people will never get enough of shopping and spending their money!


3. Real Estate

People have gotten marginally richer over the years which is why property prices have soared in a manner that can only be described as startling. Therefore, people are constantly looking to invest in real estate which is why there is a demand for property managers and dealers at any given time of the year.
According to The Economist, "developed economies'" assets at the end of 2002 were the following:
4. Education

People have started understanding the importance of education and those who have the money do not think twice before opening training centers and schools. It is safe to say that this industry will stop growing only when humans are wiped off the face of the earth.


5. Media

Media as an industry has seen maximum growth over the past few years. This is because citizens today have become very conscious about having their voice be heard. Therefore, they become a part of newspapers and type out blog posts every chance they get. Also, there is a glamorous tag attached to this industry which is why it is as popular as it is.


6. Financial Sectors

People always need money- be it to start a business, buy a house or for education. However, this need has increased in recent years which is why one can find an excess of banks, insurance companies and stock brokerages in every part of the world.


7. Manufacturing

If companies that assemble cars and use chemicals need to do well, they have to depend on this particular company. They basically look into the development of newer compounds and elements so as to reach the top as far as competition is concerned.


8. Accounting

For a business to flourish, somebody needs to look over the specifics of the inflow and outflow of cash. This is exactly what accountants do- they record the expenditure and analyze past performance in order to determine whether the business has made a profit or a loss. It may be a boring job but because proprietors do not have time to look into each and every part of their business, they will always need you if you are good with numbers.


9. Transportation

These industries manage the movement of people and products from one place to another. They do extremely well because naturally, people cannot stay in one place! The growth is somewhat related to the tourism sector as well.


10. Information Technology

When the computer was created, it brought about a revolution and as they say, there is always room for improvement which is exactly what the IT sector strives for. They manage information and develop newer gadgets. As long as people need to store data and carry information around with them, this industry will reach greater heights every year!

Monday, October 25, 2010

FATHER OF SURGERY

Sushruta was the famous surgeon of Kashi, popularly known as Benares and used to teach and practice medicine around 600 BC.The historic contribution of Sushruta, the ancient surgeon of India, is well recognised for his innovative method of rhinoplasty,1 extracapsular lens extraction in cataract,2 anal and dental surgeries. However, little is known regarding his vivid description of diabetes (madhumeha),angina (hritshoola) and obesity (medoroga).He was a disciple of Dhanwantari, who is recognised as the Lord diety of Ayurveda (science of life) the Indian system of medicine.To Sushrutha, belongs the honor of being called “the FATHER OF SURGERY” and the ‘PATRON OF A SURGEON IN TRAINING’, as he was the first before all to emphasize on practical training in experimental and clinical surgery.







 

The Sushruta Samhita is one of two early texts that form the cornerstone of the Indian medical tradition of Ayurveda (Ayurveda means science of life). The other treatise is called the Charaka Samhita. Samhita is Sanskrit for compendium, and Sushruta and Charaka are proper names. So thetitles translate as "Sushruta's Compendium" and "Charaka's Compendium." Likethe Charaka Samhita, the Sushruta Samhita made revisions and alterations to an earlier text on which it is based, in this case, the writingsof Divodasa Dhanvantari, the author's teacher. The author, Sushruta, is identified as the son of the Vedic sage Visvamitra. The text is long, running over 1,700 pages in English translation. The exact date of its composition is unknown, but is generally thought to be around 100 A.D.

Sushruta details about 650 drugs of animal, plant, and mineral origin.In addition, it describes more than 300 kinds of operations that call for 42different surgical processes and 125 different types of instruments. Other chapters in Sushruta make clear the high value put on the well-being ofchildren, and on that of expectant mothers. Sushruta's coverage of toxicology (the study of poisons) is more extensive than that in Charaka, and goes into great detail regarding symptoms, first-aid measures, and long-term treatment, as well as classification of poisons and methods of poisoning.

The tools(125) mentioned in the book are :

 
  • Forceps 20 types
  • Specula
  • Scalpels
  • Scissors
  • Saws
  • Cauteries
  • Syringes
  • Needles
  • Trocars
  • Catheters

 


Sunday, October 24, 2010

The world’s largest book

The world’s largest book has been commissioned for the world’s tallest building, the Burj Dubai. The book, which will chronicle the construction of the Burj, will be 16ft tall and made of some of the world’s finest silk-threaded paper. It will first tour 15 cities around the world before becoming a centrepiece in the Burj and will tell the stories of over 100 people who worked on the tower.

The tome, which will cost more than dhs5.25 million has been commissioned from Kraken Opus, a UK-based company that specalises in manufacturing high-quality outsized books. The company previously completed a giant book on the history of Manchester United football club that was recently sold at auction for over £1 million (dhs5.25 million). Chief Executive Karl Fowler said that book would be accompanied by a print run of 750,000 giant books with covers measuring half a sqm. The paper will be threaded with silk, which helps the print and photo quality and the binding will be hand-stitched so that 98 per cent of the page surface can be seen by turning the page. “With cheaper binds, the book is bound so tightly that you have to press the page down to read the print. We use the best materials because it makes reading more pleasurable,” Fowler said.




The giant book’s pages will be turned using a giant paddle. Fowler said that the money spent on the project was justified, even during the economic downturn. “Some of Hollywood’s most lavish, expensive films were made during the Great Depression. People need escape. We’re not making the book just for the here and now, we’re making it so that it can be read 50 years from now.” The book will be released shortly after the Burj opens later this year.



Saturday, October 23, 2010

The strongest girl in the world

Varya Akulova, also called "Girl Hercules" is capable of lifting up to 350 kg, while she weighs only 40 kg and she is the strongest girl in the world. This fact has already been confirmed twice by Guinness Book of World Records

Varya's muscles are barely visible but she has tremendous will-power, translucent body and thread-like tendons. Varya says, "I wish I could be big, really big: 190 cm tall and weigh more than 100 kg, like my dad.
Despite the daily workouts, Varya is a top student in her class. Currently, she is in 7th grade


Are u Belive 17-year old teen has 7 children

This is really outrageous. Argentine teenager Pamela Villarruel poses with her seven children outside her parents' home in the town of Leones in Cordoba Province, northern Argentina, May 11, 2008. Pamela, 17, bore all seven children in just three pregnancies, having her first boy in 2005 when she was 14 and the other six girls in two deliveries of triplets in the following two years. Pamela and her children currently sleep in the living room of her mother Magdalena who supports them all by house cleaning. The father of Pamela's first son abandoned them, the father of the first set of triplets was forced out of the house by the family for beating her, and Pamela refuses to identify the father of the more recent triplets. Magdalena requested to have her daughter's fallopian tubes tied to avoid any further pregnancies, but was denied as Argentine law prohibits the procedure to be done on minors


Tuesday, October 19, 2010

HIGHEST, LONGEST, BIGGEST, LARGEST, DEEPEST, SMALLEST OF THE WORLD

  • Largest Airport - King Khalid International Airport (South Arabia)
  • Highest Airport - Lhasa Air­port, Tibet
  • Tallest Animal - Giraffe
  • Largest Animal - Blue Bottom whale
  • Largest Bay - Hudson Bay, Canada,
  • Fastest Bird - Swift
  • Largest Bird - Ostrich
  • Smallest Bird - Humming bird
  • Longest Bridge - the Akashi Kaikyo bridge in Japan takes the title, with a main span of 1,991 meters (or 6,532 feet)
  • Tallest Building - Taipei 101, Taipei, Taiwan,2004,101 stories,509m,1,670ft
  • Longest Canal - Baltic sea White Canal
  • Largest Cathedral - Cathedral Church of New York
  • Largest Cemetry - Leningrad, Russia
  • Largest Church - Belisca of St. Peter in the Vatican City, Rome.
  • Largest Continent - Asia
  • Smallest Continent - Australia
  • Largest Country - Russia
  • Smallest Country - Vatican City
  • Biggest Cinema House - Roxy, New York
  • Highest City - Wen Chuan, China
  • Highest Population - Mexico
  • Longest Day - June 21
  • Shortest Day - December 22
  • Largest Delta - Sunderbans
  • Largest Desert - Sahara, Africa
  • Biggest Dome - Gol Gumbaz (Bijapur), India
  • Largest Dams - Grand Coulee Dam, USA
  • Tallest Fountain - Fountain Hills, Arizona
  • Largest Gulf - Gulf of Mexico
  • Largest Hotel - Hotel Rossaiya, Moscow
  • Largest Island - Greenland
  • Largest Lake - Caspian Sea, CIS Iran
  • Deepest Lake - Baikal (Siberia)
  • Highest Lake - Titicaca (Bolivia)
  • Biggest Library - National Kiev Library, Moscow and Library of the Congress, Washington
  • Largest Mosque - Jama Masjid, Delhi (India)
  • Highest Mountain Peak Mount Everest (Nepal)
  • Highest Mountain Range Himalayas
  • Longest Mountain - Andes (South America)
  • Biggest Museum - British Museum (London)
  • Largest Minaret Sultan Has-san Mosque (Egypt)
  • Tallest Minaret - Qutub Minar, Delhi (India)
  • Biggest Oceans - Pacific Ocean
  • Deepest Oceans - Pacific Ocean
  • Biggest Palace - Vatican (Rome)
  • Largest Palace - Imperial Palace (China)
  • Biggest Park - Yellow Stone Na­tional Park
  • Largest Park - Wood Buffalo National Park (Canada)
  • Largest Peninsula - Arabia
  • Highest Plateau - Pamir (Tibet)
  • Longest Platform - Kharagpur, W. Bengal (India)
  • Largest Platform - Grand Central Terminal, (Ely. Sta­tion)New York (USA)
  • Biggest Planet - Jupiter
  • Smallest Planet - Murcury
  • Brightest Planet Venus
  • Coldest Planet Pluto
  • Nearest (To the Sun) - Mercury
  • Farthest (from the Sun) - Pluto
  • Longest River - Nile, Africa
  • Longest River Dam - Hirakud Dam, India
  • Largest Sea - South China Sea
  • Largest Stadium - Starhove Stadium, Prague (Czech Republic)
  • Brightest Star - Sirius A
  • Tallest Statue - Motherland (Russia)
  • Largest Sea-bird - Albatross
  • Biggest Telescope - Mt. Palomar (USA)
  • Longest Train Flying Scotsman
  • Largest Temple - Angkorwat in Kampuchea
  • Oldest Theatre - Teatro Ohm­pico (Itlay)
  • Tallest Tower - C. N. Tower, Toronto (Canada)
  • Longest Wall - Great Wall of China
  • Highest Waterfall - Angel (Venezuela)
  • Widest Waterfall - Khone Falls (Laos)
  • Lowest Water Level - Dead Sea
  • Longest Epic - Mahabharata
  • Hottest Place - Al-Azizia (Libya)
  • Rainiest Place - Mosinram, near Cherapunji (India)
  • Highest Road - Leh-Nobra, Ladakh division India.
  • Highest Village - Andean (Chile)
  • Highest Volcano - Ojos del Salado, (Argentina) Chile
  • Largest Volcano - Manuna Lea (Hawai)
  • Lightest Gas - Hydrogen
  • Fastest Animal - Cheetah
  • Biggest Flower - Rafflesia (Java)
  • Longest Corridor - Rameshwaram Temple (India)
  • Largest Democracy - India
  • Fastest Dog - Persian greyhound
  • Lightest Metal - Lithium

Deepest Spot in the Ocean

The deepest spot in the ocean is called the Mariana Trench and is approximately 35, 797 ft (10,911 m) deep in the Pacific Ocean. That's deeper than the height of the world's highest mountain, Mount Everest, which is 29,035 ft (8,850 m) high.


Highest Navigable Lake

Lake Titicaca in Peru is the highest navigable lake in the world. It is about 12,500 ft (3,810 m) above sea level. This lake is also South America's second largest freshwater lake.


Lowest Lake

The lowest lake is the Dead Sea (it's considered a lake but called a sea), which is in the Jordan Valley of Israel. The surface of the water is 1,340 ft (408 m) below sea level. The Dead Sea is also the saltiest lake in the world. Almost nothing can survive in it besides simple organisms like green algae.


Largest Freshwater Lake

Lake Superior is the largest of the Great Lakes and it's also the freshwater lake that covers the greatest surface area in the world. Lake Superior covers over 82,000 km� of land and there's enough water in the lake to fill all the other Great Lakes plus three Lake Eries.


Deepest Lake

Lake Baikal is the world's deepest lake and is located in Siberia, Russia, north of the Mongolian border. It is 5,369 ft (1,637 m) deep - more than one mile straight down.


Largest Ocean

The Pacific Ocean takes the award for being the largest ocean in the world. It covers almost a third of the Earth's surface and goes from the Bering Sea in the Arctic north to the icy waters of Antarctica's Ross Sea in the south.


Smallest Ocean

The smallest ocean is the Arctic Ocean, which is about 10 times smaller than the Pacific Ocean.


Longest River

The Nile River in Egypt is the longest river. It's 4,145 miles (6,671 km) long and flows into the Mediterranean Sea.


Shortest River

The world's shortest river, according to the Guinness Book of World Records, is the Roe River. It is only 200 feet (61 meters) long and flows between Giant Springs and the Missouri River near Great Falls, Montana. There has been debate, though, about which river is really the shortest. The D River in Oregon has been measured as being only 120 ft (37 m) long. It connects Devil's Lake directly to the Pacific Ocean near Lincoln City. Because the D River flows into the ocean though, it's length changes according to the tide so has been measured at several different lengths.


Largest River

The Amazon Basin in South America is the largest river with the greatest water flow. This is because it flows through the Amazon rain forest - the largest and wettest rainforest on Earth.


Highest Waterfall

Angel Falls (Salto Angel) in Canaima National Park , Venezuela is the highest waterfall in the world at 3212 ft (979 m).