This phenomenon was not necessarily confined to the Pleistocene, but may have occurred much earlier in the Southeastern Asian islands, although evidence is fragmentary.
This phenomenon has set off an intensifying discussion at hospitals and medical schools about a problem perhaps best described as "distracted doctoring".
These have always occurred naturally, but they have increased in frequency, number and size in recent years, notably since man-made nitrogen fertilisers came into widespread use in the 1950s.
Launch scratch test indicate under most big load function of 100n, cladding layer combine substrate well, there are no stripping and avalanche phenomenon.
Although other lizards are known to reproduce this way, it is the first time this process was recorded in Komodo dragons, which are the largest of the lizard family.
Unfortunately, however, this unpredictable phenomenon also causes turbulence, and means that a solar plane has to climb high in the air to get the energy-efficient smooth ride that it needs.
This apparent anomaly is partially explained by the fact that most founder mutations are recessive: only a person with copies of the affected gene from both parents becomes ill.