I want to start a weekly factoid thread with facts on various things taken from Discover Magazine. I'm a pretty big fan of science so I thought you all might enjoy reading some interesting facts about everything that you may have never heard about, some even common household things like this week's topic...
20 Things You Didn't Know....About Sugar
Taken from the October 09 Issue of Discover Magazine
1. The average American eats 61 pounds of refined sugar each year, including 25 pounds of candy. Halloween accounts for at least two pounds of that.
2. Trick: Sugar may give you wrinkles via a process called
glycation,in which excess blood sugar binds to collagen in the skin, making it less elastic.
3. Or treat: Cutting back on sugar may help your skin retain it's flexibility. So actually, no treats.
4. People in India have been crystallizing cane sugar for at least 2,000 years. When Alexander the Great's companions arrived there, they marveled at the production of honey without bees.
5. In 1747 German chemist Andreas Marggraf discovered that the sugar in a sugar beet is identical to that in sugarcane,. in 1802 the first beet-sugar refinery began operations,bringing cheap sweets to northern climes.
6. More than half the 8.4 million metric tons of sugar produces annually in the United States comes from beets.
7. Can you imagine eating 16 sugar cubes? You probably have. That's a little less than what is contained in a 20-ounce bottle of cola.
8. Soft drinks with artificial sweetener may actually help make you fat. In a Purdue University study, rats drinking liquids with artificial sweeteners consumed more calories overall than rats whose drinks were sweetened with sugar.
9. The artificial sweeteners saccharin and aspartame were found accidentally when lab workers doing research that had nothing to do with sweetening put a bit of the test compounds in their mouths and liked what they tasted.
10. What kind of researcher sticks an experiment in his mouth?
11. At least he had an excuse. The scientists who discovered sucralose (now sold as Splenda) were oringinally trying to create an insecticide. An assistant thought he had been instructed to "taste" a compound he'd only been asked "test".
12. A compound called
lugduname is the sweetest compound known-- more than 200,000 times as sweet and table sugar.
13. Sugars are molecules of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen. The simplest include glucose, fructose and galactose. Table sugar is crystallized sucrose, a fusion of one fructose and one glucose molecule.
14. Can't escape them: Sugars are the building blocks of carbohydrates, the most abundant type of organic molecules in living things.
15. Glycoladehyde, an eight-atom sugar, has even been found in at interstellar gas cloud near the center of the Milky Way.
16. Glycoladehyde can react with a three-carbon sugar to form ribose, the basis for both RNA and DNA, so the glycoladehyde found in deep space may be a chemical precursor to life on Earth.
17. That cloud also contains ethylene glycol, a sweet relative of glycoladehyde and the main ingredient in antifreeze. Either complex sugars can be synthesized between the stars or there is a truck stop at the end of the universe.
18. Sugar can help get you there to find out. Burn sucrose with a dose of corn syrup and saltpeter and you get "sugar propellant," a popular amateur rocket fuel.
19. How do you spell relief? "Obecalp," a sugar pill manufactured to FDA standards, is marketed as a treatment for children's mild complaints. (Try reading the name backward.)
20. It's not all mind games. The sugar glucosamine works as an immunosuppressant in mice, an xylitol (a sugar alcohol) can prevent ear infections in kids. Sweet!
Any comments to the above science facts? Or any yays/nays to me putting one of these up every week? I really think this would help people learn about the world better.