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Friday 28th April 2006 Issue: 46

Thank goodness for that Wired Up Friday feeling! What have we got for you this week? The 1st of May is approaching so don’t forget to get up at dawn to bathe your face in the dew (!). Supposedly makes you more beautiful. Is there any science in it? Let’s see.

  1. The Wire – what have cows got do with fairy rings?
  2. You What? – Britain’s biggest cow? Pull the udder one!
  3. Try This! – Dew want to find out about dew-points?!
  4. Gear for Grabs – Hang on to your underpants, Dr Bunhead’s in town!
  5. Winners – tickets for the Life Centre
1. The Wire – Science news straight to your Inbox…

'May Day' stems from the fire festival of Beltane that celebrates the beginning of summer and the fertility of the coming year. Beltane is a Celtic word which means 'fires of Bel' (Bel was a Celtic deity). In springtime, at the beginning of the farming calendar, everybody would be hoping for a fruitful year for their families and fields. Most of the customs centre around flowers, greenery and at one time the 'hobby-horse'. So dancing round the maypole, dressing up as a fool with a bladder-on-a-stick and Morris dancing can all be blamed on Bel can it?

It is said that a maiden can improve her looks by bathing her face in dew collected on a May morning. However, it’s not that simple. If the dew is collected from inside a fairy ring, then her appearance is turned into that of an old crone, complete with spots and blemishes. O-kaaaaaaay! We hear what you’re saying but come on! Is it really likely? Dew may be extremely pure water but if it had those kinds of properties don’t you think Estee Lauder might be onto it by now?

So what are fairy rings? Usually, a fairy ring is visible as a noticeable circle appearing in grass. Some rings look like a circle of grass that is darker at the edges than it is in the centre. Others look like a ring of poor-growth or bare earth. Fairy rings were thought to be the result of fairies dancing in a circle. No, don’t laugh! Another explanation held cow’s rear ends to blame! Cattle feeding on bales of hay invariably form a circle around their food, and what happens around the back? Yes, instant fertiliser, which means a circle of greener grass. Nice try, cow fans, but in actual fact fairy rings are all down to fungi.

The fairy ring was identified as a fungal growth pattern in 1792 by William Withering. It was due to a species called Marasmius oreades, whose modern common name is the fairy ring mushroom. This is one of 60 or so different species which produce fairy rings.

All fairy rings are produced in the same manner. Initially a spore (the fungal equivalent of a seed) lands on some suitable ground. It starts to grow underground, pushing out mycelium (fungal threads – the actual body of the fungus itself) in all directions. Eventually the central part dies off, leaving a disc of mycelium growing at the outer edge. Fungi release digestive chemicals (enzymes) into the ground to break down their food, which they then suck up. Unfortunately, they are sloppy eaters and not all of this digested food is taken up. The leftover nutrients are used by the surrounding plants. As a result of this, the grass grows more luxuriantly at the leading edge where the extra food supply is present. Meanwhile the death of the mycelium at the trailing (inner) edge returns nutrients to the soil, also stimulating a growth of grass.

Eventually fruit bodies (usually in the form of mushrooms) are produced to release spores and start the cycle again. Sometimes, several years may go by before mushrooms are actually seen at a fairy ring. Fairy rings may not be complete circles, as parts of the circle of mycelium become damaged and die off, leaving a crescent shape. So now you know! Fairies indeed…

2. You What? - Science facts that might make you go “Hmm?”

Her name is Rio and she towers on the stand… isn’t that a song by Duran Duran?

Weighing one tonne and standing 6ft from hoof to head, this is one cow you wouldn't be able to moooove easily. Her name is Rio and she lives at Compact Farm in Worth Matravers, Dorset. Her owner thinks she might just be the biggest cow in Britain.

Rio is a Charolais cow. They're bigger than the average British cow, but Rio stands head and shoulders above the rest of her herd. It looks like Rio's guaranteed a nice, long life too. She won't be sent to the slaughterhouse because her owners want her to have lots of babies who will be equally as impressive!

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3. Try This! – Science experiments for you to try at home..

Would dew believe it? Finding the temperature at which the air begins to form dew is a way of gauging the air’s humidity.

You will need:

  • tin can
  • thermometer
  • crushed ice
  • bowl
  • water

What to do:

  1. Half fill the bowl with crushed ice.
  2. Ensure the outside of the can is completely dry.
  3. Fill the can with cold water.
  4. Place the thermometer in the can.
  5. Add one tablespoon of crushed ice and stir.
  6. Continue adding the ice until a layer of dew is visible on the outside of the can.
  7. Immediately read the temperature on the thermometer to find the dew point temperature.
  8. If it is high then the humidity is high also – watch out for the downpour!

What’s going on?

All air contains water vapour. As air cools (when it comes in contact with the cold can), the water vapour begins to condense. This is why glasses holding cold drinks "sweat" in the summertime. The dew point is the temperature at which moisture in the air begins to form dew. The higher the dew point temperature, the higher the moisture content of the air.

Read this for more information on humidity and the weather and for the full lowdown on weather click this.

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4. Gear for Grabs – You’ve got to be in it to win it...

Duck! Science showman Dr Bunhead is on the loose again, and you know what that means, don't you? Exploding underpants, the world's fastest chips, the Strange Case of the Luminous Gherkin and altogether a barnstorming couple of hours you'll never forget ... All in the name of science too.

The Recipes for Disaster tour takes in Jersey, Peterborough, High Wycombe, Nottingham, Northampton, Sheffield, Manchester, Blackpool, Stoke on Trent, Cambridge, Bradford, Halifax and Chelmsford - full info on places, times and dates can be checked at www.bunheadonstage.co.uk

We have two family (ie 2 adults/2 kids) passes to give away and to get into the draw email us with your name, age and address to: wired-up.news@nesta.org.uk with ‘RECIPE 4 DISASTER!’ as the subject. You must must must state the date/venue you'd like to attend (High Wycombe is sold out unfortunately).

The winner will be picked at random at 5pm, on Thursday 4th May.

Good luck!

5. Winners – Has your name been picked out of the bag?

Remember issue no. 44? We were giving away two family passes for the Life Centre. The winners are:

Sufia Desai from Preston and

Class 3 (ages 8 to 9) of St Matthews RC First School in Northumberland.

Well done everyone!

And remember, keep entering ‘cos next time –it could be YOU!

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THAT’S ALL FOR NOW

Got Wired-Up? Got clued up!

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If you would like to see any past Wired newsletters check out the archive page.

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