Thursday, October 3, 2013

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Red Wine's Resveratrol Could Be Beneficial After All

Resveratrol, a chemical found in red wine that is often touted for its anti-aging benefits, is chemically active in cells, which has been doubted, according to new research.


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Solar Fallout from Sun Eruption Crashes Into Earth (Video)

A powerful solar explosion slammed into Earth's magnetic field late Tuesday night (Oct. 1), ramping up the northern lights across parts of Canada and the United States.


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US Space Weather Tracking Website Still Active Despite Government Shutdown

The U.S. government shutdown has broken the links to many federal websites, but a vital source of information about sun storms and their potential effects on Earth remains available.


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For Twin Delivery, C-Sections No Safer than Vaginal Births

Planning to give birth to twins by vaginal delivery is as safe for a mother and her babies as planning to have a cesarean section, a new study suggests.

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Not in the Mood: Storms Quell Insects' Appetite for Sex

Sex may feel electrifying, but insects may avoid the naughty act when they detect storms are coming, a new study suggests.

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Spies & Secrets: 4 True Stories From Tom Clancy's Novels

Sometimes truth may be stranger than fiction, but for best-selling author Tom Clancy, the two are often more closely paralleled. Clancy died Tuesday (Oct. 1) at the age of 66, but his thrilling, espionage and military-inspired novels helped him become one of the most well-known American authors.

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Scientists discover ancient supervolcanoes on Mars

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Scientists have discovered ancient supervolcanoes on Mars similar to the caldera that sits under Yellowstone National Park.

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Artist Creates 3D Printed Chocolate

What do you get when you combine a background in visual art, 3D printing technology, and a desire for highly customized chocolate? Just ask Brian Begun, the visual effects artist turned chocolate maker who invented a patent-pending process for replicating three-dimensional objects in chocolate.

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Pufferfish Love Explains Mysterious Underwater Circles

In 1995, divers noticed a beautiful, strange circular pattern on the seafloor off Japan, and soon after, more circles were discovered nearby. Some likened these formations to "underwater crop circles." The geometric formations mysteriously came and went, and for more than a decade, nobody knew what made them. 


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Space Junk Cleanup Satellite Launching on Swiss Space Plane in 2018

A Switzerland-based spaceflight company is finalizing plans with Canada over a potential launch site for a new private space plane, which is slated to launch a satellite to clean up space junk by 2018.


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Seafloor Scours Hint at Ancient Arctic Ice Sheet

When deep ice sheets chilled most of North America and Europe 20,000 years ago, Alaska and eastern Siberia remained remarkably ice-free, providing passage for America's first humans.


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Where's My Flower? Diesel Throws Honeybees Off the Trail

Diesel pollution snuffs out floral odors, interfering with honeybees' ability to find and pollinate flowers, new research suggests.


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Top Brain Science Movies Revealed

Movies that showcase brain science often take a little artistic license in terms of their scientific accuracy — think "Being John Malkovich" or "The Matrix" — but even brain scientists say that these fanciful plots can make for good movies.

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Oceans face 'deadly trio' of threats, study says

By Environment Correspondent Alister Doyle OSLO (Reuters) - The world's oceans are under greater threat than previously believed from a "deadly trio" of global warming, declining oxygen levels and acidification, an international study said on Thursday. The oceans have continued to warm, pushing many commercial fish stocks towards the poles and raising the risk of extinction for some marine species, despite a slower pace of temperature rises in the atmosphere this century, it said. ...


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Gray Wolves May Lose Endangered Status, But Not Without a Fight

WASHINGTON — In passionate and at times tearful testimony at the U.S. Department of the Interior Monday night (Sept. 30), Americans who say they have admired, studied, defended and even kissed gray wolves offered a plea to federal officials: Don't take the animals off the endangered species list.


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Potentially Dazzling Comet ISON Spotted from Mars by Spacecraft (Photo)

A probe in orbit around Mars spotted Comet ISON — a possible "comet of the century" — as it flew past the Red Planet on its way to give the sun a close shave in November.


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Lake That Turns Animals to Stone? Not Quite

Lake Natron in Tanzania is one of the most serene lakes in Africa, but it's also the source of some of the most phantasmagorical photographs ever captured — images that look as though living animals had instantly turned to stone.

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World Space Week Launches Friday on Sputnik Anniversary

A seven-day celebration of spaceflight and exploration kicks off Friday (Oct. 4), with hundreds of events scheduled in scores of countries around the world.


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15 Weirdest Effects of the Shutdown

The government shutdown was ironic from the moment it began — It all happened over the health care law, which started registration the moment the government shut down at midnight on Oct. 1.

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Honey Badger Don't Care About Camera Traps

With charismatic lions and leopards often stealing the spotlight, small predators in Central Africa sometimes get overlooked.


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Polar Opposites: Why Climate Change Affects Arctic & Antarctic Differently

The sea ice around Antarctica reached a record high in August of 7.2 million square miles (18.6 million square kilometers) — the greatest extent observed since recordkeeping began in 1979. 


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Think You Know Your Close Pals? Think Again, Science Says

SAN FRANCISCO — How well do you know what your loved ones are thinking?

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Incredible Technology: How to Clean Up Dangerous Space Junk

The vast amount of manmade debris in orbit around Earth is untenable, but emerging and currently available technologies could be used to get these objects under control.


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Giant Impact That Formed the Moon Blew Off Earth's Atmosphere

The moon came into existence after several planet-size space bodies smashed into the nascent Earth one after the other, with the final one actually forming our satellite, while several impacts repeatedly blew off our planet's atmosphere, according to a new study.


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'Poop Pills' May Halt Gut Infections

Bacteria extracted from human poop are the main ingredients of a new pill that may help treat patients who have difficult-to-cure intestinal infections, according to a new study from Canada.

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Scientists to explore Caribbean faults, volcanoes

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — The man whose research team discovered the Titanic shipwreck is now leading a mission to investigate major faults and underwater volcanoes in the northern and eastern Caribbean to collect information that could help manage natural disasters.

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Milky Way Galaxy Meets Photographer In Dazzling Space Photo

The Milky Way galaxy reigns over Maine as a photographer looks on this spectacular view captured by a veteran observer of the night sky.


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Scientist to Congress: Shutdown a 'Deep Hardship'

During her time as head of the U.S. Geological Survey, Marcia McNutt had to prep for many government shutdowns but never had to temporarily lay off any employees, as is happening under the current shutdown. Now, she's the editor of Science, one of the world's top science journals, and has the freedom to let Congress know what she thinks about the current budget impasse.


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Spooky Vibrations: Finding Brings Quantum Computers a Bit Closer

Imagine that two people could get linked in such a way that they could influence each other no matter where in the universe they existed. Now scientists find they can entangle mechanical vibrations in this same way, findings that could help enable quantum computers far more powerful than normal computers.


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Zapping the Brain Makes People Obey Social Norms

From dress codes to anti-incest laws, all human societies have social norms that specify how people should behave in various situations. Scientists have now shown that a zap of electricity to the brain can influence whether people choose to comply with these norms or not.

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