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Your Cellphone Could Be a Sonar Device Submarines have used sonar for decades. Bats and dolphins have used it for millions of years. And thanks to a little math, humans could soon be echolocating with their mobile phones. Read More »How a High Fat Diet Increases Alzheimer's Risk
Details in Death of Yuri Gagarin, 1st Man in Space, Revealed 45 Years Later Read More » Don't Hurt That Robot! How Morality Muddles Perception of a Mind
Ocean 'Snapshot' Taken With Sound Waves
Doctor Shortage Looms in Health Care Reform (Op-Ed) The Doctors Company Expert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights Read More »LEGO to Roll Out Mars Rover Curiosity as Toy Model Read More » The Singularity Is Near: Mind Uploading by 2045? Read More » AstraZeneca picks site for new global home in Cambridge By Ben Hirschler LONDON (Reuters) - AstraZeneca has chosen a science park on the southern outskirts of Cambridge, England, next to the world-renowned Addenbrooke's Hospital, for its new $500 million global headquarters and research center. Property industry sources told Reuters last month that the Cambridge Biomedical Campus (CBC) was the most likely site for the new facility, which will house some 2,000 employees - a decision confirmed by the drugmaker on Tuesday. Transplanting the heart of the company to the university city is the centerpiece of a $2. ... Read More »The Top Jobs Young Women Just Don't Want While young female professionals have many career goals, ascending to the top of their company is not one of them, new research shows. Read More »A Simple Thing That Stops the Spread of Flu at Work Giving employees paid time off when they're sick is the best way to keep influenza, or the flu, from spreading throughout the office, new research shows. Read More »Flare Star Gets 15 Times Brighter in Minutes Read More » New 'Mixed' Language Discovered in Northern Australia
Facebook Helped Boost Organ Donor Registration Raising awareness of organ donation on social media websites can help boost donation rates, according to a new study. Read More »Grammar May Be Hidden in Toddler Babble
Europe Says Farewell to Prolific Herschel Space Telescope Read More » Earth Calling E.T.: New Project Begins Beaming Your Messages Into Deep Space
The Future of Bionic Humans: What's Next in Bio-Hacking? James Rollins has one foot planted firmly in science, the other in the unknown. Read More »Seeing the Light: Retinal Prosthesis Restores Rat Vision
Flashpoint Found for Istanbul's Next Earthquake
Autism Linked with Air-Pollution Exposure During Pregnancy Pregnant women who are exposed to high levels of air pollution may be more likely to give birth to children with autism, according to a new study. Read More »Lost Letters by Catherine the Great, Tchaikovsky Returned to Russia Read More » 'Lost' Medieval City Discovered Beneath Cambodian Jungle
Kenneth Wilson, Nobel winner for physics, dies SACO, Maine (AP) — A physics professor who earned a Nobel prize for pioneering work that changed the way physicists think about phase transitions has died in Maine at age 77. Read More »Saturn Forms Cosmic Triangle with Stars This Week Read More » | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Tuesday, June 18, 2013
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