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S C A T T E R B R A I N E D
IRIDIUM (IR)
Th
is element was the clue that cracked one of history’s
biggest
murder cases: What killed the dinosaurs? Turns out the layer of
sediment laid down 65 million years ago—right on top of all
the dino skeletons we excavate today—is full of iridium, rare
on the surface of the Earth but intriguingly common in aster-
oids. Th
is eff ectively put to rest a host of
other extinction theo-
ries, ranging from a nearby supernova dissolving the atmosphere
to a decrease in brain size, which, yielding very special dino-
saurs, made them more susceptible to predators.
TANTALUM (TA)
Its name was inspired by the
mythical Greek Tantalus, who
was condemned to stand for all eternity with perfect fruit
growing just out of reach. Tantalum is similarly nonreactive
and is used widely in making surgical equipment because of
its immunity to corrosion by bodily fl uids.
RADIUM (RA)
Th
is element’s soft blue luminescence earned it a name derived
from
the Latin word
radius
for “ray,” as in ray of light. For a
while radium was used to paint glow-in-the-dark instrument
panels and clock faces until the painters noticed that it seemed
to kill them. In fact, despite prior warnings from radium dis-
coverer Marie Curie about not putting
radioactive things in
your mouth, the painters continued to shape their tiny brushes
with their lips. Told you so!
POLONIUM (PO)
So, how many Polacks did it take to discover polonium? Just
one: native daughter Marie Curie. Th
e famous scientist
101
named it in 1898 for her then-beleaguered homeland, which
was tangled in a web of fi ghting
among Austria, Russia, and
Germany. Speaking of tangled webs . . .
08
Web-Based Trivia:
Choice Pit Stops on the Information Superhighway
When Ray Tomlinson invented the software that allowed
computers to send messages to one another in 1971—back
when the Internet linked computers at just 15 sites—he could
hardly have realized how signifi cant this new technology
would be. But unlike other legendary fi rst communications
(“Mr. Watson, come here; I want you”
were Alexander Gra-
ham Bell’s fi rst words over a telephone), Tomlinson says his
historic fi rst e-mail was “completely forgettable.” (He has, in
fact, forgotten it.) His best guess: “Qwertyuiop.”
✖ ✖ ✖
Since the fi rst Web browser was disseminated in 1990, the
number of registered Web sites on the Internet has grown
exponentially—from just 16,000 in 1992 to more than 50
million in 2005. Th
at, of course, explains why it’s become
harder to fi nd an available
domain name that makes any
sense at all. Despite the many trillions of possible names for
a Web site (that’s including all combinations of numbers and
letters up to 22 characters in length), there are only so many
English words. As of 2000, only about 1,700
one-word Eng-
lish domain names were still available. It’s just this kind of
unfriendly math that’s given rise to “cybersquatting,” which
is how Houston businessman Marc Ostrofsky bought the do-
main “business.com” for $150,000 in 1996 and sold it for
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