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AfghanistanSun.com Thursday 9th September 2010 Issue 8/0252
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  • 'Lunar bridge' discovered on far side of Moon
  • Fossil find indicates earliest life existed 270m years ago
  • Scientist offers better ways to engineer Earth's climate to prevent global warming
  • India's participation highest during International Year of Astronomy 2009
  • Universe at big bang's time was highly chaotic
  • Venus Williams enters US Open semi-finals for the seventh time
  • Clijsters beats Stosur to meet Venus in US Open semis
  • Serious eye problems emerge from laser pointers
  • Many world leaders disturbed by Quran burning plan
  • Taliban are winning war says Mullah Omar
  • Looted artifacts go back to Iraq
  • Alzheimer’s could be helped by vitamin B
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    'Most ancient' animal species on Earth discovered in Scotland
    Afghanistan Sun
    Friday 30th July, 2010  
    (ANI)


    A rare shrimp, believed to be the most ancient animal species on Earth, is alive and well in Scotland, discovered scientists.

    Two colonies of the tadpole shrimp, Triops cancriformis, were found at Caerlaverock on the Solway Coast of Dumfriesshire, reports the Independent.

    According to experts, there could be more "hidden" populations of the crustacean - a designated endangered species - elsewhere.

    Scientists think that the tadpole shrimp may have the oldest pedigree of any living animal.

    Fossil findings have revealed that the shrimp is virtually the same today as it was 200 million years ago, when the first dinosaurs evolved.

    The shrimps are adapted to living in temporary water pools.

    When the water dries up, the adults die but leave behind eggs that can remain dormant for years until wet conditions return.

    Understanding the animal's unusual lifestyle helped researchers from the University of Glasgow make the discovery.

    Mud thought to contain tadpole shrimp eggs was sampled from pools around Caerlaverock, dried, re-wetted and placed in small aquaria.

    The scientists were startled to find a large shrimp swimming in one of the tanks within a couple of weeks. (ANI)

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