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So when I was a kid, an animal that we used to have, at least in my generation, was the hombre del sacro.
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Right? So then we grew up, and some of them we decided to go, to apply to the, to become a teacher in the public system, and then we had another nightmare, right?
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So here are some of the themes that you are familiar with then.
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And for me, in 1935, Kingdom of Angers was especially hard.
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I talked to my colleague, who is a great teacher, and she recommended to lend me a book.
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And when I read it, I felt like I had discovered a new world.
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One of the things that impresses me the most is the fact that the largest living thing
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so far is a fungi, believe it or not, and what is very large, it can be like 4 km long,
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and it's in the United States, is the mycelium, what is underground, you can see, and the
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interesting thing about fungi and some type of fungi and the mycelium is that some of
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them, they make microquista, so they join with the roots of plants, and they get a beneficial
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relationship, so it's both of them. Also, some scientists, they think that these mycelia,
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they can act kind of like a network, connecting and communicating somehow different plants.
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So, by looking at this, well, this impressive mycelium, it's like, okay, this remembers, right, to another thing, right?
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And now that, wow, it's a neuron, right? So this is a Purkinje neuron from the cell vein.
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That hormone was named by our Nobel Prize, that we should be very proud of him, right?
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Santiago Ramón y Cajal. He's considered the father of neuroscience.
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And after him, a lot of research has been done, and, well, this is their culture neurons in a petri dish, right?
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So we can see that those neurons, well, they grow up and they create ganoderma as a network, right?
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So they connect with each other.
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Theoretically, well, that's how they connect in the brain, in the real brain.
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So, well, again, this image of this network image
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remembers, well, to another, well, this is another network.
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They may look like ultra-neurons,
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but this is a model right now that is the theory
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about how galaxies are organizing the universe.
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So the idea that they are clusters on super clusters
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of galaxies, that they are all connected
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in a sheet-like way, right?
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And if you just look into one of those superclusters, one of them is the one called Laniakea, that was published in 2014, and this is our supercluster.
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So this is Laniakea, this is just part of one thread like, and here is our building.
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Right, so I just want to make this point, this curiosity. I'm not the first one, but when I first thought about this, when I saw the image of the superclusters of galaxies, and then it came to me the image of a lunar, when I looked on the internet, other people before me, right, they have probably seen this, right, in a web or in a blog, right, making these, also other people have compared the mycelium with the universe,
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And also, the other day, yesterday, I found that they have compared the three of them.
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So someone has compared the mycelium with the universe and the neurons.
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So it's like, just, I want to finish with, this was a nightmare, and now it has not...
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They are not a nightmare anymore, and they have just transformed into, like, their very beautiful networks.
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- Autor/es:
- Raquel Riquelme Galiana
- Subido por:
- Raquel R.
- Licencia:
- Reconocimiento - No comercial - Compartir igual
- Visualizaciones:
- 95
- Fecha:
- 13 de julio de 2017 - 17:55
- Visibilidad:
- Público
- Centro:
- IES MANUEL FRAGA IRIBARNE
- Duración:
- 04′ 29″
- Relación de aspecto:
- 4:3 Hasta 2009 fue el estándar utilizado en la televisión PAL; muchas pantallas de ordenador y televisores usan este estándar, erróneamente llamado cuadrado, cuando en la realidad es rectangular o wide.
- Resolución:
- 640x480 píxeles
- Tamaño:
- 36.14 MBytes