HIGHEST FLYING BIRDS
Rüppell’s griffon vulture
Altitude: 11,300m
Distribution: Sahel region,
Africa
Lammergeier
Altitude: 7,300m
Distribution: Mountains in
Europe, Asia and Africa
Bar-headed goose
Altitude: 6,437m
Distribution: Central
and South Asia
Andean condor
Altitude: 6,500m
Distribution: Andes,
South America
Mallard
Altitude: 6,400m
Distribution: Europe,
Asia and North America
Bar-tailed godwit
Altitude: 6,000m
Distribution: Northern Europe,
northern Asia and Alaska
White stork
Altitude: 4,800m
Distribution: Europe, North
Africa and western Asia
TOP 10
Why are gases
invisible?
Actually, gases aren’t invisible: many are quite brightly coloured.
For example, nitrogen dioxide is brown-y orange, chlorine has
a yellowish green hue and iodine vapour is a vivid purple.
Other gases in the atmosphere (particularly oxygen, carbon dioxide
and water vapour) also absorb light, but at ultraviolet and infrared
wavelengths that we can’t see. There’s a sweet spot between
the absorption spectra of oxygen and water where not much light
gets absorbed. Lo and behold, that’s exactly the range of light
that we’ve evolved to see! So it’s not that gases are invisible,
as such; it’s just that we can’t see atmospheric gases as they don’t
have a colour in the visible range. ML
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Common crane
Altitude: 10,000m
Distribution: Northern Europe
and Asia
Whooper swan
Altitude: 8,200m
Distribution: Europe and Asia
Alpine chough
Altitude: 8,000m
Distribution: Mountains
from Spain to China
It stays right there! Fart gas mostly comes
from the bacteria and yeasts that live in
the large intestine. If you suppress a fart,
it actually just seeps out more quietly,
or you might be able to hang on until
the next time you are on the toilet.
But sooner or later, that fart is coming out! LV
If you hold
in a FART,
where does it go?
18 April 2017
| & ANSWERS
QUESTIONS
ISTOCK,GETTY IMAGES, SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY
12 April 2017