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The past, present, and future of looking good: how far would you go to look your best? Discover the ultimate style-setter: chemistry!


You roll out of bed and look in the mirror--think Scary Movie 3. On a scale of 1 to 10, this bad-hair day is a-20. What do you do? Well, if you were Cleopatra (Egypt's queen from 51 to 30 B.C.), you'd reach for bear-grease hair gel! Fortunately, science has advanced the cause of looking good into an art. How have grooming rituals changed over time? Read on to find, out.

Ancient Grooming

Recently, archaeologists dug up a tin of 2,000-year-old cosmetic cream in the ruins of a Roman temple near London, England. When they opened the container, they found the finger marks of its owner still in the cream! "This is such a rare discovery. To find finger marks is extraordinary. We are literally touching hands with history," says archaeologist Nansi Rosenberg. It just goes to show, people have cared about looking good for ages. In fact, Egyptians and Romans had their cosmetics buried with them so they could shine in the afterworld.

Scientists are still busy analyzing the ancient cream's chemical components, but they suspect that it is a moisturizer mois·tur·iz·er  
n.
A cosmetic lotion or cream applied to the skin to counter dryness.

moisturizer ncrema hidratante

moisturizer moist n
 made from donkey's milk. And--guess what?--today's moisturizing lotions use some of the same chemistry.

The body has its own natural moisturizer called sebum--a waxy waxy (wak´se)
1. composed of or covered by wax.

2. resembling wax, especially denoting some combination of pliability, paleness, and smoothness and luster.
 lubricant secreted by glands at the base of hair follicles Hair follicles
Tiny organs in the skin, each one of which grows a single hair.

Mentioned in: Alopecia
 to moisturize your hair and skin. But regular washing and cold weather remove sebum sebum: see sebaceous gland. . That's where artificial moisturizers moisturizers

hydroscopic agents, applied to the skin and hair, as creams, rinses or shampoos, to increase hydration of the stratum corneum. Examples are propylene glycol, glycerine and lactate.
 come in: "They work in two ways," says Dianna Kenneally, a scientist at Procter & Gamble (P & G). "They create barriers, like plastic wrap. Or they hold water in the cell, like a sponge."

Want to keep your skin's outer layer, the epidermis, smooth and soft? Slather slath·er  
tr.v. slath·ered, slath·er·ing, slath·ers Informal
1. To use or give great amounts of; lavish: slathered gifts and attention on their only child.

2.
a.
 on that moisturizer! All moisturizing creams contain fats, a type of lipid (organic compound that stores energy) that coats your skin. The fats repel water and prevent your skin's natural moisture from evaporating into thin air.

Molecules are the real beauty secret behind moisturizers. They're the smallest part of a substance containing at least two atoms. But not every molecule acts the same. Water is a polar molecule--it clings to other molecules. But it can't cling to lipids, which are nonpolar nonpolar

not having poles; not exhibiting dipole characteristics.
 molecules. That's why water and oil, a nonpolar molecule, don't mix. If you were to coat your skin with lotion that contained polar molecules, it would pull the moisture right out of your epidermis. Talk about crocodile skin! But since moisturizers contain nonpolar lipids, they lock in your body's natural moisture.

So the next time you slather on lotion, rest assured: You're not only engaging in an ancient ritual dating back two millennia. You're also protecting your skin from the harsh elements--like skin-drying wind and pore-clogging dirt.

Today's Hair-Raiser

Soccer superstar David Beckham isn't the first to turn heads with a hairstyle. In the 1700s, the French sensation Madame de Pampadour created a fad with her "pompadour"--a tower of hair teased, combed high, and smoothed with a waxy mixture of beef marrow, skin, bone, and hazelnut oil. Yuck!

What's the chemical lowdown low·down  
n. Slang
The whole truth: gave us the lowdown on what happened at the party.

lowdown low (inf) n he gave me the lowdown on it →
 on hair? Inside each hair core is keratin keratin (kĕr`ətĭn), any one of a class of fibrous protein molecules that serve as structural units for various living tissues. The keratins are the major protein components of hair, wool, nails, horn, hoofs, and the quills of feathers. , bundles of long chains of protein (organic molecules). Keratin gives hair its strength.

Molecules on a keratin chain bond, or link to each other, and the kind of bond they form determines whether hair is curly or straight. In straight hair, bonds form between adjacent molecules; when a molecule bonds with another molecule further down the line, it creates a curl or wave.

Sometimes your hair needs extra help looking its best. Gels and waxes are synthetic polymers (human-made chemicals) made of long protein chains. "Some polymers are rigid, like plastic bottles," says Kenneally. "But some are long and stretchy stretch·y  
adj. stretch·i·er, stretch·i·est
1. Capable of being stretched: a stretchy fabric.

2. Tending to stretch excessively.

Adj. 1.
, like rubber or a plastic bag."

Most water-soluble (polar molecules that stick to water) polymers--like those in hair gel--dry to a rigid state. As gel dries, it forms a film on, and physically bonds with, the hair. But waxes are softer polymers. They don't dry completely, so you can mold and remold Re`mold´   

v. t. 1. To mold or shape anew or again; to reshape.

Verb 1. remold - cast again; "The bell cracked and had to be recast"
remould, recast

mould, mold, cast - form by pouring (e.g.
 them. That way you can change your do faster than the leading trendsetters.

Tomorrow's Cosmetic Chemistry

Imagine a small electronic patch that lets moisturizer penetrate deep into your cells. Or a powder that scatters light and masks your skin's imperfections. Inspired by biotechnology and medical research, cosmetic chemists have gone high-tech.

In its latest wrinkle cream--Olay Regenerist--P&G turned to wound-healing medical research from the National Institutes of Health. P&G cosmetic chemists studied collagen, a large protein found in the dermis dermis: see skin. , or thick under-layer of the skin. Collagen's long fibers are extremely flexible and make skin elastic. As you age and lose collagen, skin sags and forms wrinkles. But when you cut yourself, some collagen strands break--and signal the body to repair itself by producing more collagen.

P&G cosmetic chemists isolated the small section of collagen responsible for the signal. Then they bonded the collagen with a lipophilic lipophilic,
adj/n the ability to dissolve or attach to lipids.

lipophilic (lipōfil´ik),
adj 1. showing a marked attraction to, or solubility in, lipids.
2.
, or oil-clinging, molecule that helps it penetrate the epidermis. The hope? Lipophilic molecules will deposit healing collagen below the skin and repair aging wrinkles. Sound promising? Just don't count on it to turn back time.

FUN FACTS FROM HISTORY:

LETTUCE HEAD (330-30 B.C.)

Ancient Egyptians put shredded lettuce on their bald spots to encourage hair growth. And they dyed gray hairs with a mixture of henna, cow's blood, warm oil, and crushed tadpoles Tadpoles are a psychedelic rock band formed in 1990 in New York City by Todd Parker (guitars/vocals) and Michael Kite Audino (drums.) In 1992, Nick Kramer (guitars/vocals), David Max (bass) and Andrew Jackson (guitars) of the fledgling Manhattan group, Hit, joined the Tadpoles .

GREASE QUEEN (69-30 B.C.)

Romans went to bed wearing a facial mask made with sweat extracted from sheep's wool. They mixed ashed, boiled walnut shells, and earthworms to color gray hairs.

GO BLONDE (8TH-13TH CENTURIES)

Women tried to lighten hair with henna, gorse gorse: see furze.
gorse

Any of several related plants of the genera Ulex and Genista. Common gorse (U. europaeus) is a spiny, yellow-flowered leguminous shrub native to Europe and naturalized in the Middle Atlantic states and on Vancouver Island.
 flowers, saffron, eggs, and calf kidneys.

MEAT HEAD (1558-1603)

People applied raw meat to their face to shrink wrinkles.

HUMPTY DUMPTY (1558-1603)

Queen Elizabeth I covered her smallpox scars with an inch-thick layer of egg whiles that cracked when she smiled.

UP, UP-DO (18TH CENTURY)

Women used wires, stuffing, and padding to pile hairdos up to 3 feel high--so high that doorways were raised and women slept with wooden neck supports.

Did You Know?

* The hairs on the crown of your head grow faster than hair at your temples. But on average, hair grows a centimeter a month. As for how long you can grow your hair, it's genetically predetermined pre·de·ter·mine  
v. pre·de·ter·mined, pre·de·ter·min·ing, pre·de·ter·mines

v.tr.
1. To determine, decide, or establish in advance:
. Depending on the person, a strand of hair can grow for 2 years or up to 10 years before it falls out. The maximum length your hair will grow is about 100 cm.

* Cosmetics weren't made specifically for teens until the 1940s, and those teens were encouraged to use natural colors. Then in the 1960s, teens developed their own makeup styles and trends. By the 1980s, teen cosmetics became a $20 billion industry.

* Healthy, lustrous lus·trous  
adj.
1. Having a sheen or glow.

2. Gleaming with or as if with brilliant light; radiant. See Synonyms at bright.



lus
 hair tends to be acidic. The acid keeps the cuticle cuticle /cu·ti·cle/ (ku´ti-k'l)
1. a layer of more or less solid substance covering the free surface of an epithelial cell.

2. eponychium (1).

3. a horny secreted layer.
 (protective cells) smooth and tight. It also reflects light to keep hair shiny. An alkaline (basic) cuticle will fluff up and look dull. This is what the label "pH-balanced" means in hair products--they are slightly acidic.

Cross-Curricular Connection:

Geography/Social Studies: The Songhai people of Mall wear beads, coins, and lumps of amber in their hair. How is beauty different in other cultures? Construct a chart that compares the methods of dress, hairstyles, makeup, and other beauty facts from five different areas of the world.

Critical Thinking: In the U.S., the media often dictate what is considered beautiful. Have students study popular culture and then debate the stereotypes of today's beauty standards.

Resources

For a great history of beauty trends, check out For Appearance' Sake: The Historical Encyclopedia of Good Looks, Beauty, and Grooming, Oryx oryx (ôr`ĭks), name for several small, horselike antelopes, genus Oryx, found in deserts and arid scrublands of Africa and Arabia. They feed on grasses and scrub and can go without water for long periods.  Press, 2001.

For more on ancient cosmetics, read "Style of the Nile: Recreating the chemistry and cosmetics of Queen Nefertiti," Discover Magazine, September 1999.

For experiments on the pH of hair and hair-care products, see www.sciencenetlinks.com/Lessons.cfm?DocID=18

For a list of cosmetics recipes, visit www.hair-news.com/mixit.html
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Title Annotation:Physical/life science: chemistry
Author:Fewster, Sarah
Publication:Science World
Geographic Code:00WOR
Date:Dec 8, 2003
Words:1320
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