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Curious? Read


Curious? Read
A blog of interesting stories, websites and web resources from around the world.
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Articles

New 'super-paper' is stronger than cast iron
2008-06-07 16:42:00
Punching your way out of a paper bag could become a lot harder, thanks to the development of a new kind of paper that is stronger than cast iron. The new paper could be used to reinforce conventional paper, produce extra-strong sticky tape or help create tough synthetic replacements for biological tissues, says Lars Berglund from the Swedish Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm, Sweden. Despite its great strength, Berglund's "nanopaper" is produced from a biological material found in conventional paper: cellulose. This long sugar molecule is a principal component of plant cell walls and is the most common organic compound on Earth. Wood is typically about half cellulose, mixed with other structural compounds. ...
More About: Super , Cast , Paper , Stronger , Iron
Africa's Hot Deserts Could Power Entire Continent
2008-06-07 16:35:00
Solar power from Africa's deserts could supply all 600 million citizens currently without electricity and even export power to Europe, a green energy conference in Nairobi heard Thursday. The ferocious desert sun could provide the energy equivalent of 1.5 barrels of oil per square kilometer, said Gerhard Knies, project manager for Trans-Mediterranean Renewable Energy Cooperation (TREC), at a meeting of nine African states. "The largest source of energy is the solar radiation (and) the best place to receive solar radiation is the desert," he told reporters at the start of meeting of 20 parliamentarians in Kenya. "Deserts get 700 times more energy per year than all human kind is using," he explained. "It is as if a layer of 25 centimeters (10 inches) of oil is falling down in the deserts year after year." The legislators from Burundi, Djibouti, Ethiopia, Kenya, Madagascar, Rwanda Tanzania, Uganda and the Seychelles are at the conference to discuss energy access for the poor. "T...
More About: Power , Entire , Continent
Man Charged With DWI on Cruzin Cooler
2008-06-06 15:38:00
The Man has struck again. Although TastyBooze was originally all over the Cruzin Cooler a couple months ago, we suggested driving it to parties, not home from them.Well, that?s what Leslie J. ?Bomber? Marr did over the Memorial Day Weekend. After having a couple beverages, he was seen cruisin? on top of his Cruzin Cooler in Whitehall, New York. Marr was weaving ?pulled over? because he was driving on the sidewalk. Although he refused to take a breathalyzer at the scene, Marr faces DWI charges: Leslie J. ?Bomber? Marr, 57, could face felony DWI and aggravated unlicensed operation of a motor vehicle charges because of prior arrests and convictions in drinking-and-driving cases, said Whitehall Police Chief Richard LaChapelle. ? Marr was charged with misdemeanor counts of DWI and aggravated unlicensed operation of a motor vehicle, and also was cited for operating an uninsured motor vehicle. My oh my, what is this world coming to when you get charged for driving a cooler, intoxicated......
More About: Funny , Curious
2012: The Year The Internet Ends
2008-06-02 20:41:00
Every significant Internet provider around the globe is currently in talks with access and content providers to transform the internet into a television-like medium: no more freedom, you pay for a small commercial package of sites you can visit and you'll have to pay for seperate subscriptions for every site that's not in the package.Almost all smaller websites/services will disappear over time and multinationals who are used to using big budgets to brute force their content into every media outlet will finally be able to approach the internet in the same way. This well-known illustration of why we need net neutrality turns out to be very close to the truth: What can we do? Internet providers have realized that the only way to not lose massive amounts of customers over this is to make sure there are no alternatives, that's why all major Internet providers are currently making ag...
More About: The Internet , Ends , Year
10 Gross Food Myths Debunked
2008-05-28 15:18:00
Food is a deceptive mistress. Seductive, delicious, but also occasionally steeped in bacteria.There are rules (such as the five-second one) we fall back on to determine whether to partake in a particular morsel, yet many don't hold up under scrutiny.For those who've spent hours studying the recently discovered, yet unidentifiable leftovers hiding in the back of the fridge, here's some advice to keep you from spending days in the bathroom.10. It's OK to eat boxed pizza out of the garbage.As Jerry Seinfeld so eloquently stated, food "adjacent to refuse is refuse." But those willing to cross the line that "divides man and bum" should keep in mind that leftover pizza which wasn't refrigerated within two hours of being served is no longer safe for breakfast or a drunken snack. Of course, if you heed this advice when you're totally wasted, then you are clearly a master of self-preservation on top of being a master of your domain.9. Moldy food can be salvaged.Not only does mold have ...
More About: Health , Food , Curious , Myths , Gross
Mad Neuroscience - The "Trust Me" Drug That Makes You Take Social Risks
2008-05-22 14:53:00
What if you could convince people to trust you and take risks for you with just a few drops of liquid surreptitiously placed in their water? There would be no drunkenness, no rufie-esque glazed eyes: just pure, human trust created via chemicals. The person wouldn't even know they'd been dosed. A study coming out tomorrow in the journal Neuron explains how this scenario is possible today, with just a small dose of the brain chemical oxytocin. Oxytocin is a chemical associated with many of the "pleasurable" feelings you have, from basic trust, to love and orgasm. Researchers in Switzerland theorized that people playing social trust games might change their behaviors if given doses of oxytocin, since the chemical might artificially enhance their willingness to trust someone. Indeed, they were right: subjects dosed with Oxytocin were willing to trust people even after they'd been explicitly told that those people had behaved in untrustworthy ways in the past. People who had no...
More About: Social , Trust , Drug , Neuroscience
The Stories Behind 10 Famous Product Placements
2008-05-22 14:26:00
I saw Run, Fatboy, Run this weekend. Loved it. The movie centers around a marathon called the Nike River Run. This, of course, was accompanied by Nike River Run signs splattered all over London. At one point, the main character receives a brand-spanking-new pair of running shoes?Nike, of course?and is told that they are ?the best money can buy.? My first thought was, ?I wonder how much Nike paid for that.? I read that the filmmakers originally wanted the race to be the London Marathon, but that was already being used by another movie. Thus, the Nike River Run was invented. Nonetheless, I wonder about product placement whenever I see a logo or company name pop up in a movie. Was that a paid deal? Or just something that the moviemakers threw in there? Here are the answers to some of those questions?including the Seinfeld Junior Mints and the Reese?s Pieces from E.T.1. Junior Mints, Seinfeld ?Who?s gonna turn down a Junior Mint? It?s chocolate, it?s peppermint, it?s delicious!? Were...
More About: Funny , Stories , Curious , Product , Famous
The Physiological Science Behind a Ball to the Groin
2008-05-20 22:47:00
To all the women out there that think we over exaggerate the pain when we get hit in the balls: Please watch...It hurts just watching it...
More About: Science , Ball
10 dumbest laws in America
2008-05-19 16:12:00
America is filled with dumb laws -- but which are the worst? We've compiled a list of laws courtesy of DumbLaws .com -- 10 of our favorite; the most insane, dumbest laws we could find. Here they are, the 10 dumbest laws in America:10. Texas: A recently passed anticrime law requires criminals to give their victims 24 hours notice, either orally or in writing, and to explain the nature of the crime to be committed.9. Nevada: It is illegal to drive a camel on the highway.8. Colorado: It is illegal to ride a horse while under the influence.7. Virginia: Children are not to go trick-or-treating on Halloween.6. Florida: A special law prohibits unmarried women from parachuting on Sunday or she shall risk arrest, fine, and/or jailing.5. California: Animals are banned from mating publicly within 1,500 feet of a tavern, school, or place of worship4. Wisconsin: Margarine may not be substituted for butter in restaurants unless it is requested by the customer.3. Illinois: You may be arrested fo...
More About: America , Funny , Curious
Girl's twin found inside her stomach
2008-05-16 15:21:00
ATHENS, Greece (AP) -- A nine-year-old girl who went to hospital suffering from stomach pains was found to be carrying her embryonic twin, doctors in central Greece said Thursday. Doctors at Larissa General Hospital examined the girl and surgically removed a growth they later discovered was an embryo about six centimeters (more than two inches) long. "They could see on the right side that her belly was swollen, but they couldn't suspect that this tumor would hide an embryo," hospital director Iakovos Brouskelis said. The girl has made a full recovery, he said. Andreas Markou, head of the hospital's pediatric department, said the embryo was a formed fetus with a head, hair and eyes, but no brain or umbilical cord. Markou said cases where one of a set of twins absorbs the other in the womb occur in one of 500,000 live births. The girl's family did not want to be identified, hospital officials said.[via cnn]
More About: Stomach , Inside , Twin
6 gas-saving myths
2008-05-15 16:18:00
Sure you want to save gas, but there's a lot of bad advice on how to do it. Some of it makes no difference, and some of it can wind up costing you.With gasoline prices hitting record levels, it seems everyone has a tip on how to save fuel. Much of the advice is well-intentioned, but in the end, much of it won't lower your gas bill.Here's a look at a few misconceptions:#1. Fill your tank in the morningYou may have heard that it's best to fill your gas tank in the early morning while the fuel is cold. The theory goes that fluids are more dense at lower temperatures, so a gallon of cold gas actually has more gas molecules than a gallon of warmer gas.But the temperature of the gasoline as it comes out of the nozzle varies little during the course of the day, according to Consumer Reports, so there's little, if any, benefit, to getting up early to pump gas.#2. Change your air filterMaintaining your car is important, but a clean air filter isn't going to save you any gas. Modern eng...
More About: Myths , Saving
?People foods? that can kill your pet
2008-05-14 20:27:00
From chocolate to raisins, here?s what not to feed Fido ? even if he begsIt feels good to treat your pet to human food every once in a while. Those puppy-dog eyes are hard to resist as they watch you eat and try to convince you that they are starving! It makes you want to give them a taste of everything you eat. But beware: Giving in to those eyes and giving dogs human foods can actually harm them. In 2007, the ASPCA's Animal Poison Control Center received more than 130,000 calls. Most cases of animal poisoning were caused by common human foods and household items. Many foods we enjoy can be dangerous to animals. It's best to stick to pet food and a diet recommended by your vet. Here are a few of the most toxic foods that can harm your pet:Bad news foodsAvocadosThey contain a toxic component called persin, which can damage heart, lung and other tissue in many animals. This fruit is very toxic to dogs, cats and most animals. BeerAlcoholic beverages can cause the same damage to an a...
More About: People , Foods , Kill
How Do Painkillers Find & Kill Pain?
2008-05-11 15:43:00
First, we need to make a distinction between the two main classes of painkillers, which are used for different situations and function via different mechanisms. The first class is the narcotic drugs. These are the heavy-duty drugs, like morphine and codeine, used to treat severe pain. They relieve pain in two ways: first by interfering with and blocking the transmission of pain signals to the brain, and then by working in the brain to alter the sensation of pain. These drugs neither find nor kill pain, but reduce and alter the user?s perception of the pain. They?re kind of like having an optimistic friend that says, ?Hey man, everything will be cool. Nothing?s wrong. Here, look at this shiny, distracting thing!? The other class is the aspirin drugs, like paracetamol and ibuprofen. These are the over the counter drugs we reach for whenever we?ve got a headache or a sore back. Throughout history, people all over the world were using botanical remedies for pain. The ancient Egyptians u...
More About: Health , Curious , Pain , Find , Kill
Ridiculous! How Can One Travel Like This?!
2008-05-10 15:10:00
Though the description mentions China, I'm guessing this is actually from Japan because the stations masters are speaking Japanese. But ridiculous none the less!
More About: Funny , Travel , Curious , Ridiculous
The woman who can remember everything
2008-05-10 15:03:00
A woman who has baffled doctors with her ability to remember every detail of every day has broken her anonymity to speak of her condition.Jill Price, 42, can remember every part of her life since she was 14 but considers her ability a curse as she cannot switch off. She described her life as like a split-screen television, with one side showing what she is doing in the present, and the other showing the memories which she cannot hold back. Every detail about every day since 1980 - what time she got up, who she met, what she did, even what she ate - is locked in her brain and can be released to come flooding back by common triggers like songs, smells or place names. Mrs Price, a widow who is a school administrator, sometimes struggles to sleep because the vivid memories crowd her mind and stop her relaxing. Her condition is so rare that scientists had to coin a term for her condition - hyperthymestic syndrome from the Greek thymesis, for remembering, an...
More About: Woman
Green Puppy Born In New Orleans
2008-05-09 15:17:00
One special puppy definitely stood out from his brothers and sisters when it was born last week with bright green fur.Animal experts said the puppy would not stay green forever.The Louisians SPCA said light-colored puppies are occasionally born with some discoloration after some fluids are mixed during the birthing process.Animal experts said the puppy's green exterior should fade in about two to four weeks. The puppy was expected to eventually sport white or tan fur.
More About: New Orleans , Green , Puppy , Orleans
What if I were on a roller coaster and the safety harness broke?
2008-05-09 15:11:00
A roller coaster loop-the-loop is a sort of centrifuge. As you approach the loop, your velocity is straight ahead of you. But the track keeps the coaster car, and therefore your body, from traveling along this straight path. The car starts to turn upward and your velocity is trying to carry you straight ahead. The force of your inertia pushes you into the car floor. This creates a sort of false gravity pulling you toward the bottom of the car when you're upside down. You need a safety harness for security, but in most loop-the-loops, you would stay in the car whether you had a harness or not. As you move around the loop, the net force acting on your body is constantly changing. At the very bottom of the loop, the acceleration force is pushing you down in the same direction as gravity. Since both forces push you in the same direction, you feel especially heavy at this point. As you move straight up the loop, gravity is pulling you into the back of your seat while the acceleration ...
More About: Safety , Roller Coaster , Roller , Harness
10 Things You Didn't Know About You
2008-05-08 20:24:00
The human body is a great, sweaty, fluid-filled machine, moving and mixing chemicals with precision and coordination, making everything from memories to mucus. Here we explore some of the complex, beautiful or just plain gross mysteries of how you function.10. Your Stomach Secretes Corrosive Acid There's one dangerous liquid no airport security can confiscate from you: It's in your gut. Your stomach cells secrete hydrochloric acid, a corrosive compound used to treat metals in the industrial world. It can pickle steel, but mucous lining the stomach wall keeps this poisonous liquid safely in the digestive system, breaking down lunch.9. Body Position Affects Your Memory Can't remember your anniversary, hubby? Try getting down on one knee. Memories are highly embodied in our senses. A scent or sound may evoke a distant episode from one's childhood. The connections can be obvious (a bicycle bell makes you remember your old paper route) or inscrutable. A recent study helps deciphe...
More About: Things
Easiest way to save on gas for your car? Lay off the lead foot.
2008-05-08 15:24:00
ALBANY, New York (AP) -- As other cars zipped by at 70 mph or more, Mike Papin and his wife, Joann, kept rolling along just below the 65 mph limit as they made their way from their winter home in Florida to a summer place in Vermont.Gas prices are displayed at a station in San Francisco on Monday.They've typically done six or seven miles above the speed limit during the annual migration, but with gasoline prices roaring toward $4 a gallon nationally, Joann suggested they ease off the pedal during the 1,500-mile drive this year."I read somewhere that around 62 or 63 was the best speed to drive to make the most of your gas," she said.Drivers have known for years that throttling back is a sure way to improve gas mileage, and the Papins are among those who are consciously slowing down to save. Several airlines have adopted the same tactic, adding a few minutes to flights to save millions on fuel.But most drivers still wink at posted speed limits because they say their time is worth mor...
More About: Save , Foot , Lead
13 Things Your Auto Mechanic Won't Tell You
2008-05-07 19:08:00
1. "If a mechanic offers to change your timing belt and water pump, question how long the job will take. Some will charge you double labor even though the second task is essentially done once the belt is removed."2. "Always ask for your old parts back. This way you'll know they've been changed, and you or a friend can tell if they're worn."3. "Be careful with "road hazard" warranties on tires. The shops may give you a free tire here and there, but eventually they will soak you with unnecessary alignments or suspension replacements."4. "All brakes are not equal; ask for estimates on brake jobs. Many mechanics will use very cheap parts and mark them up. Good mechanics who understand cars will never skimp in this area."5. "Remember to have your car test-driven. A good test-drive is just as important as a regular service -- it might mean the difference between simply needing brake pads and having a complete rotor replacement."6. "Good mechanics, like good customers, are hard to find ...
More About: Auto , Things , Mechanic
A Dead Man's Eyes Hold the Key to His Age
2008-05-06 15:13:00
Proteins in the eye offer a new means of identifying corpses.After the 2004 tsunami smashed into South Asia, thousands of the dead awaited identification for weeks and even months. The more time passed, the harder it became to identify the victims, let alone determine their age. In the wake of a similar catastrophe, however, a new technique may help us learn victims' ages by analyzing the crystalline proteins in their eyes. The proteins form in the lens of the eye during the first two years of life, remaining unchanged thereafter. For anyone born in the last six decades, moreover, the lens proteins carry a radioactive marker?a special signature reflecting the pattern of nuclear bomb tests starting in 1955 and declining at an exponential rate since 1963. "We're always on the lookout for methods of improving our ways to identify corpses," says Niels Lynnerup, a forensic anthropologist at the University of Copenhagen, who developed the technique based on levels of carbon-14. A rare r...
More About: Eyes , Dead Man , Dead , Hold
The reason fat people find it hard to lose weight is found
2008-05-05 22:03:00
Scientists have discovered why fat people find it so hard to lose weight, which will lead to many new approaches to weight loss.The difference in the number of fat cells between lean and obese people is established in childhood and, although fat people replenish fat cells at the same rate as thin ones, they have around twice as many.This remarkable glimpse of what gives us beer guts, love handle and muffin tops could also lead to new approaches to fight the flab, by cutting the overall number of fat cells in the body, as well as providing an insight into why fat people find it so hard to lose weight, because the number of fat cells in a person remains the same, even after a successful diet.The details of how humans regulate their fat mass is reported today in the journal Nature by a team led by scientists at the Karlolinksa Institute, Stockholm, Sweden, as a second team, led by Imperial College London, reports in the journal Nature Genetics the discovery of a gene sequence present i...
More About: People , Weight , Lose Weight , Find , Hard
What Is The Real Cost Of Bottled Water?
2008-05-05 21:59:00
As John McCain and Hillary Clinton tell Americans tales of a gas tax holiday to relieve us of a whole 20 cents per gallon this summer (we?re paying more than four dollars anyway) it?s probably worth discussing one of the other reasons that gas is so darn expensive? Of course, the reason is demand. Although developing countries such as China and India take the blame, there are other forces at work. Bottled water for example, which despite being past its peak, consumes roughly 17 million barrels of oil every year, not including transportation. The worst part of it is that that?s not even half the problem. In addition to the 17 million barrels of oil (equivalent to just under the GDP of the Cayman Islands at today?s prices) used in production, bottled water consumes gallons and gallons of water. Three gallons of the wet stuff is required to produce one gallon of what you will happily pay a dollar for, largely because of the length and complexity of the various ?purification? processes...
More About: Cost , Water , Real , Bottled Water
Is Wireless Power Closer Than We Think?
2008-05-04 15:43:00
A few years back, Marin Solja?i? was driven from bed by the insistent beeping of his mobile phone. But it wasn?t beeping for him to answer it, it was beeping for him to plug it in. Since that night, the assistant professor of physics at MIT, has been thinking about ways to start his phone charging as soon as he enters his home - without the need for plugs or wires. Jennifer Chu at Technology Review writes that Solja?i? considered using radio waves, but found that most of their energy would be lost in transmission. Targeted methods like lasers require a clear line-of-sight and could be dangerous for anything in their way. According to Chu, he eventually settled on a phenomenon called magnetic resonance coupling, in which two objects tuned to the same frequency exchange energy strongly but interact only weakly with other objects. ?A classic example is a set of wine glasses, each filled to a different level so that it vibrates at a different sound frequency. If a singer hits a pitch th...
More About: Power , Wireless , Closer
The Amazing Story behind the 256 Year-Old Man
2008-05-04 15:39:00
Li Ching-Yun. Image from The People?s Republic of China According to the 1933 obituaries in both Time Magazine and the New York Times, Li Ching-Yun was reported to have buried 23 wives and fostered 180 descendants by the time he died at the age of 256. Was he really that old? Could he have forgotten his own birthday or exaggerated his claim? Environmental Graffiti investigates. The Secrets to an Interminable Life ?Keep a quiet heart, sit like a tortoise, walk sprightly like a pigeon and sleep like a dog.? These were the words of advice Li gave to Wu Pei-fu, the warlord, who took Li into his house to learn the secret of extremely long life. Li maintained that inward calm and peace of mind were the secrets to incredible longevity. His diet after all, was mainly based on rice and wine. From 0 to 256 Unsurprisingly, not much is known about Li Ching-Yun?s early life. We know he was born in the province of Szechwan in China, where he also died. We also know that by his tenth birthday, Ch...
More About: Health , Story , Curious , Amazing , Year
Your computer keyboard is 5 TIMES dirtier than a toilet seat
2008-05-03 17:57:00
How your computer keyboard is FIVE TIMES dirtier than your toilet seat - and could even give you 'qwerty tummy'Computer keyboards can harbour more harmful bacteria than a lavatory seat, it has been claimed. Many users are at risk of becoming ill with stomach bugs, according to the consumer group Which? It warned that 'qwerty tummy', named after the first six letters on a keyboard, could sweep through workplaces after tests on equipment in its own London offices showed alarming results. One keyboard was so dirty that a microbiologist ordered it to be removed, quarantined and cleaned. It had 150 times the acceptable limit for bacteria and was five times as filthy as a typical lavatory seat. Anyone who eats a sandwich or piece of fruit having been tapping on such a keyboard can pick up bacteria that could lead to a stomach upset. The scientist swabbed 33 keyboards for food poisoning bugs e.coli, coliforms, staphylococcus aureus and enterobacteria and compared the results...
More About: Seat , Toilet , Times , Keyboard
Man Wants to Turn Big Truck Traffic into Electricity
2008-05-02 17:13:00
While the Japanese are trying to produce electricity from train station gates (!?), entrepreneur Terry Kenney is going after a bigger target: Truck s. It took him eight years to get a working prototype, but now there's one working at the Port of Oakland which Kenney calls the "Dragon Power Station". Special plates are set on the road, and as big trucks drive over them (about 2,500 of them per day at the port), they compress a tank of hydraulic fluid under the road, which in turn creates a series of pumping actions that turns a generator to produce electricity.By June, the Dragon should generate about 5,000 to 7,000 kilowatt-hours of electricity each day, or enough to power up to 1,750 homes. Not bad for a prototype.Of course there's no such thing as a free lunch. That energy actually comes from the fossil fuels burned by the trucks. The benefits of that system is that they are harnessing energy that would otherwise be lost, and doing so in a way that isn't noticeable in practice...
More About: Traffic , Electricity , Turn
Earth is losing dirt at an alarming rate
2008-05-02 17:08:00
Nutrient-rich topsoil is being eroded much faster than it can be replenished, experts say.While many worry about the potential consequences of atmospheric warming, a few experts are trying to call attention to another global crisis quietly taking place under our feet. Call it the thin brown line. Dirt . On average, the planet is covered with little more than three feet of topsoil -- the shallow skin of nutrient-rich matter that sustains most of our food and also appears to play a critical role in supporting life on Earth ."We're losing more and more of it every day," said David Montgomery, a geologist at the University of Washington. "The estimate is that we are now losing about 1 percent of our topsoil every year to erosion, most of this caused by agriculture." "It's just crazy," fumed John Aeschliman, a fifth-generation farmer who grows wheat and other grains on the Palouse near the tiny town of Almota, just west of Pullman. "We're tearing up the soil and watching tons of it wash...
More About: Rate
Six Diseases You Don?t Want
2008-04-30 20:30:00
I?ve had friends and family with diseases like cancer, lupus, bipolar, and diabetes, but I?ve never known anyone with a disease I could laugh at. They say laughter is the best medicine; that?s good news for the sufferers of these diseases. 1) Maple Syrup Urine Disease (MSUD)To answer your question, yes, your pee does smell like maple syrup. Other symptoms include lethargy, coma, avoiding food, and mental retardation. If left untreated, this disease can kill you and would make for an embarrassing obituary. This disease is a metabolism disorder that makes the body incapable of breaking down particular proteins. Studies conducted since 1979 (Georgia) show that MSUD affects approximately 1 in every 120,000 live births and occurs in all ethnic groups worldwide. It?s genetic, so if your pee that smells like it could be poured over waffles, get to the hospital?stat! 2) Exploding Head SyndromeI?m sure many of you get the same mental image I do when reading the name of this disease. It?s act...
More About: Health , Diseases , Curious
Plastic from plants
2008-04-30 15:55:00
A new biodegradable plastic has been developed from an unlikely source - wheat. The wheat starch plastic has similar properties to conventional plastic, but it will break down in the compost heap in 40 to 50 days. As well as being made from a low cost, renewable resource, another advantage of the plastic is that it won't contaminate any food it holds.Watch the video on how this company CSIRO is doing it here.
More About: Plants , Plastic
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