Dodiongan Falls

November 28, 2007

Dodiongan

PHYSICAL FEATURES

A 65.5 ft. high double drop waterfalls with a lagoon ideal for swimming

LOCATION

Brgy. Bonbonon, Iligan City, Lanao del Norte, Mindanao, Philippines

It’s 14.5 kms from the city proper.

TERRAIN

Rough road, with trees & other vegetation present

Popularity: 3% [?]

Posted in Paradise Philippines — opaw

Mimbalut Falls

November 26, 2007

Mimbalut

Mimbalut falls is 11 kms. from the city, located at barangay Buru-un, Iligan City, Lanao del norte, mindanao, Philippines. Approximately it is 90 ft. and 18 ft. wide. It is beautiful site to behold and provides a very enjoyable swimming spot.

This place is memorable to me. Our Boy Scout Camping activity when I was pupil was held very close to this beautiful site. It was such a beautiful swimming experience. You can put yourself just at the foot of waterfall cause the fall is light. It’s a nice chilling effect and feel the rushing of water in your head through your body.

Popularity: 4% [?]

Posted in Location, Paradise Philippines, Travel — opaw

Conidae - Conotoxin

November 22, 2007

Pathophysiology: Cone shells are carnivorous; they eat other mollusks, worms, or fish. Their habitats extend from shallow, intertidal areas to extreme deepwater areas. Cone shells are predominantly nocturnal, burrowing in the sand and coral during the daytime.

To capture a much faster prey in a highly dynamic marine environment, this relatively slow-moving snail has evolved into one of the fastest known hunters in the animal kingdom, with the average attack lasting only milliseconds. In an attack, the cone shells inject a cocktail of small, rapidly acting paralytic and lethal oligopeptide toxins, each 15-30 residues long, into the prey. Almost 200 different conotoxin peptides have been identified to date. The venom mixture is specific to each cone shell species, containing 30-200 conotoxin peptides. Numerous disulfide bonds determine a specific spatial shape for each toxin. Thirty cases of human envenomation, with occasional fatalities, have been documented worldwide. Human envenomations have involved 18 species of cone shells, including Conus geographus, Conus aulicus, Conus gloria-maris, Conus omaria, Conus striatus, Conus tulipa, and Conus textile.

Read full article…

Popularity: 14% [?]

Posted in Conchology, Seashells — Tags: — opaw
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The Author: Rexymay

Rex S. Sacayan

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