The Giraffe photograph

The Giraffe

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Initial release September 14, 1998
Directors Dani Levy
Producers Stefan Arndt
Screenplay Maria Schrader
Dani Levy
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID2244202
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About The Giraffe


The torching of a Jewish chocolatier's factory leads to two people's discovery of a common link in their pasts.

Roald Dahl: Original books to be printed by Penguin following criticism

Roald Dahl: Original books to be printed by Penguin following criticism
Feb 24,2023 8:21 am

... The titles due to be published without any edits are: Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Matilda, The BFG, Fantastic Mr Fox, George s Marvellous Medicine, James and the Giant Peach, The Witches, The Twits, The Giraffe, the Pelly and Me, The Enormous Crocodile, Esio Trot, Billy and the Minpins, The Magic Finger, Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator, Danny the Champion of the World...

Marwell Zoo break-in pair sentenced after giraffe harassed

Marwell Zoo break-in pair sentenced after giraffe harassed
Jan 19,2023 8:21 am

... A snapchat video showed The Giraffe being hit on the neck by a bottle thrown by Green...

Mutations across species reveal clues to ageing

Mutations across species reveal clues to ageing
Apr 13,2022 6:20 pm

... " You d expect The Giraffe s mutation rate to be even lower, but it s like body size doesn t matter, " said Dr Cagan...

Disability: Bedbound Gwynedd woman can only stare at ceiling

Disability: Bedbound Gwynedd woman can only stare at ceiling
Mar 19,2022 3:51 am

... In her latest bid to reach the surgery target, Jenny is asking people to help her transport a giant cuddly giraffe around the world, taking pictures of themselves with Jenny The Giraffe, while tracking it online...

Week in pictures: 13-19 June 2020

Week in pictures: 13-19 June 2020
Jun 20,2020 2:55 am

... Hannah Owens opens open the doors to The Giraffe house, Chester Zoo, to the visitors after the further easing of the coronavirus lockdown measures in England...

Extinction: Last chance to save 'rhinos of the oceans'

Extinction: Last chance to save 'rhinos of the oceans'
Feb 16,2020 5:36 am

... Mako sharks are endangered due to overfishing The Cites agenda has so far been dominated by discussions on the protection of large charismatic animals like the elephant and The Giraffe...

Giraffes given greater protection from unregulated trade as numbers fall

Giraffes given greater protection from unregulated trade as numbers fall
Feb 16,2020 5:33 am

... They argued that there was scant evidence to suggest international trade was contributing to the decline of The Giraffe...

Mutations across species reveal clues to ageing

Feb 16,2020 5:33 am

How long animals live is linked to how quickly their genetic code mutates, a study suggests.

Researchers discovered that Mammals - from tigers to Humans - have roughly the same number of mutations by The Time they die of Old Age .

But short-lived animals tend to burn through their allowance more rapidly, the analysis of 16 species indicates.

The researchers say it helps explain why we age and sheds light on one of cancer's most perplexing mysteries.

Experts said the findings, by researchers at the Wellcome Sanger Institute, were " staggering" and " thought-provoking".

Mutations are changes that creep into the instruction manual for building and running our Bodies - our DNA.

Those mutations have long been known to be at the root of cancer, but whether they were important for ageing has been debated for decades. Researchers at Wellcome say they have produced " The First experimental evidence" suggesting they are.

They analysed how quickly mutations occur in species with different life expectancies. They looked at DNA from a cat, black and white colobus, dog, ferret, giraffe, horse, human, lion, mouse, naked mole rat, rabbit, rat, ring-tailed lemur and a tiger.

The study, showed mice rattle through nearly 800 mutations a year during their short lives, which last just under Four Years .

And the longer animals live, the fewer mutations they Pick Up each year.

Dogs have around 249 annual mutations, a lion 160 and a giraffe 99. Humans averaged 47.

One of the researchers, Dr Alex Cagan, said The Pattern was " striking" and it was " really surprising and exciting" that all The Animals in the study converged on " about 3,200" mutations across their lifetime.

If people's DNA mutated at the same rate as that of mice, we would die with More Than 50,000 genetic alterations.

" Despite having different lifespans, at The End of life The Mammals had the same number of mutations, " Dr Cagan told The Bbc .

" This is The Number , but what does it mean? It's a mystery to us, " He Said .

It could be the cells in The Body reach a critical number of mutations And Then conk out. There are also ideas that " a few [cells] behaving badly" start to take over critical tissue, such as in The Heart , as we age, so organs do not function properly.

Ageing, however, is unlikely to be down to a single process inside our Bodies ' cells.

and are also thought to play a role. However, if mutations are involved, then it poses the question whether there are ways of slowing the genetic damage or even repairing it.

The researchers want to see whether this pattern holds true for all life or just for Mammals . They are aiming to add fish to the analysis, including a Greenland Shark , which can and is the longest-living vertebrate in The World .

Cancer paradox

In cancer science there is a conundrum known as " Peto's paradox" - why don't big, long-living animals have sky-high rates of cancer?

The more cells there are in your body and the longer you live, the greater the chance that one of them becomes cancerous. This should be terrible news for elephant and whales.

" Whales have trillions more cells [than us]. They shouldn't exist as they'd have cancer before adulthood, " says Dr Cagan.

Big Animals tend To Live longer, so their slower mutation rate could help explain the paradox, but the researchers say this is far from the whole story.

Naked mole rats and giraffes both live to broadly the same age, with similar mutation rates, despite giraffes being thousands of times larger.

" You'd expect The Giraffe 's mutation rate to be even lower, but it's like body size doesn't matter, " said Dr Cagan.

Instead, the researchers argue that other methods of suppressing cancer must have evolved - which could inspire new cancer therapies. For example, of a chunk of DNA that suppresses tumours.

Dr Alexander Gorelick and Dr Kamila Naxerova, from Harvard Medical School , said The Gulf between a human's 47 mutations a year and a mouse's 800 was huge.

" This difference is staggering, given the large overall similarities between human and mouse genomes.

" These results are thought-provoking. "

Dr Simon Spiro , a wildlife veterinary pathologist at the Zoological Society of London, said: " Animals often live much longer in zoos than they do in The Wild , so our vets' Time Is often spent dealing with conditions related to Old Age .

" The genetic changes identified in this study suggest that diseases of Old Age will be similar across a wide range of Mammals , whether Old Age begins at seven months or 70 years. "



Source of news: bbc.com

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