Tuesday, October 15, 2013

FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News

feedamail.com Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News

Young Apes Develop Empathy Like Human Kids

Apes orphaned by the African bushmeat trade lack the social savvy of apes raised by their mothers, a new study finds. The study links the emotional development of bonobos (), one of humans' closest living relatives, with the ability to interact nicely with others, echoing how human emotions develop.


Read More »

Rare Blood-Engorged Mosquito Fossil Found

About 46 million years ago, a mosquito sunk its proboscis into some animal, perhaps a bird or a mammal, and filled up on a meal of blood. Then its luck turned for the worse, as it fell into a lake and sunk to the bottom.


Read More »

Touch-Sensitive Prosthetic Limbs Take Step Forward in Monkey Study

People with artificial limbs could one day have their sensation of touch restoredthrough electrical stimulation of the brain, new experiments in monkeys reveal.


Read More »

Comet-Chasing Spacecraft to Awake from Deep-Space Hibernation Soon

Europe's comet-chasing space probe Rosetta has been hibernating for more than two years, but in January, the spacecraft will be jolted awake to prepare for the climax of its mission.


Read More »

Air Pollution 'Fertilizer' Threatens National Parks

An influx of nitrogen-based pollution is acting as an unwanted fertilizer and is disrupting the ecology of dozens of national parks, according to new research.


Read More »

Delaying Measles Vaccine May Increase Risk of Seizures

Children who receive their measles vaccination on time have a lower risk of adverse events following vaccination than those who receive the vaccine later than is recommended, a new study finds.

Read More »

Neptune Shines in Night Sky This Week

Neptune is much too faint to be seen with the unaided eye, but right now you can see the blue planet shine just by using binoculars.


Read More »

Astronauts See Strange Cloud in Space from Missile Launch (Photos)

Astronauts on the International Space Station have beamed home photos of an eerie space cloud outside their orbital home, a strange sight apparently created by a recent missile launch.


Read More »

Hunt for Amelia Earhart's Plane Back On

A new search for the wreckage of Amelia Earhart's plane will launch in 2014, according to an organization that has already launched several expeditions to the Pacific island of Nikumaroro.


Read More »

Eye Drops Could Treat Age-Related Macular Degeneration

A drop a day might soon keep blindness away. Researchers say they have found a possible treatment for age-related macular degeneration (AMD) — the leading cause of blindness among the elderly — that could be delivered via eye drops.

Read More »

Minor Lunar Eclipse to Grace Night Sky This Week

The moon will dive through Earth's shadow Friday evening (Oct. 18) in a lunar eclipse that will be visible to sharp-eyed skywatchers in much of the world.


Read More »

Government Shutdown Delays Major Private Space Plane Test

A key test flight of a new private space plane that aims to be a next-generation transportation vehicle for astronauts has become another casualty of the ongoing U.S. government shutdown.


Read More »

Debt Ceiling: How Much Is $16.699 Trillion?

This Thursday, Oct. 17, the U.S. Treasury Department will run out of money and will no longer have the ability to borrow the funds needed to pay the U.S. government's bills.

Read More »

Googling Your Health: Why Some Suffer More Anxiety

For people who don't like uncertainty, searching for medical information online could set them on a downward spiral. As they pore through websites looking for answers — and along the way, finding out all the possible ways things could go wrong in the body — they become increasingly more anxious, according to a new study.

Read More »

Workout Supplement Contains Meth-Like Compound

A widely available workout supplement contains a compound that is chemically similar to the drug methamphetamine, according to a new study.

Read More »

Panda Miscarries at Edinburgh Zoo

The giant panda, Tian Tian, seems to have miscarried after weeks of showing signs of being in late-term pregnancy, Edinburgh Zoo officials said today (Oct. 15).


Read More »

What Is a Dry-Ice Bomb?

Law enforcement officials are investigating four dry-ice bombs — two of which exploded — that were discovered Sunday and Monday (Oct. 13 and 14) at Los Angeles International Airport. Though the blasts caused no injuries or damage, air traffic was delayed from some terminals during the ongoing investigation.

Read More »

Stranger than Fiction: Volcanic Eruption Creates Deadly Acid Lake

Grandma's death by acid is a highlight of the 1997 camp classic "Dante's Peak." The disaster epic chronicles the race to save a small town from a deadly volcanic eruption.


Read More »

How Earthworms Offset Their Carbon Emissions

Earthworms may release a significant amount of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, some past studies have concluded, but new research suggests these dirt-eaters may offset their carbon footprint by trapping the mineral in the soil.


Read More »

Fish Armor Repels Vicious Piranha Bite

A freshwater Amazonian fish has evolved scales with microscopic armorlike structures specially designed to resist a piranha's piercing bite, new research shows.


Read More »

Converted Ballistic Missiles Could Launch Aid to Disaster Zones

It may be the purest distillation of the swords-to-plowshares idea yet imagined.


Read More »

What Caused the Deadly Philippines Earthquake?

A deadly magnitude-7.1 earthquake struck the central Philippines on a national holiday yesterday.


Read More »

Recession Linked to Rise in Vasectomies, Study Suggests

An economic downturn may drive more men to obtain vasectomies to prevent having unintended children, a new study suggests.

Read More »

Human 'Mad Cow Disease': 1 in 2,000 Brits Carry Abnormal Protein

One in 2,000 people in the United Kingdom carry a variant of a protein associated with Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, the human version of mad cow disease, a new study finds.

Read More »
 
Delievered to you by Feedamail.
Unsubscribe

Monday, October 14, 2013

FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News

feedamail.com Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News

Surgical Knife May Sniff Out Cancer

When a surgeon is removing a tumor, it's often hard to tell where the patient's cancer ends and the normal tissue begins – which is important in ensuring that all of the cancer is removed. Now, an experimental surgical knife aims to detect cancerous tissue as it cuts.


Read More »

The Secret to a Well-Behaved Child: Regular Bedtime

Young children who don't have a regular bedtime behave worse than kids who go to sleep at the same time each night, a new study suggests.

Read More »

BPA Exposure Linked to Higher Rate of Miscarriage

Exposure to the chemical bisphenol A (BPA) during early pregnancy may increase the risk of miscarriage, preliminary research suggests.

Read More »

'Cyclops' Sub Aims to Advance Deep Sea Exploration

A manned submersible named Cyclops is being built to dive nearly 2 miles (3 kilometers) below the ocean's surface, deeper than most existing subs, and could open up more of the seafloor to exploration.


Read More »

This Way Up: Source of Brain Dizziness Identified

Feeling dizzy? A part of the brain that tells "up" from "down" may be the cause, new research finds.

Read More »

Cosmic Rose from Galaxy Crash Seen by Hubble Telescope (Video)

Astronomers are studying a wispy rose-shaped galaxy some 350 million light years away, looking for clues to the violent galactic collision that likely created this celestial bloom.


Read More »

NASA Research Stalled By Government Shutdown

The government shutdown brought research at NASA facilities around the United States to a standstill when it went into effect on Oct. 1.


Read More »

Vampire Cannibals: Real Ghouls Haunt Papua New Guinea

Papua New Guinea — a large island nation north of Australia — boasts a fast-growing economy and a rich natural resource base of gold, copper, oil and agricultural products. But deep within the British Commonwealth country's rugged mountains and tropical rain forests, some dark practices still occur.

Read More »

FACTBOX - The 2013 Nobel Prize season

LONDON (Reuters) - Here is a look at who has won the Nobel prizes for 2013: Physiology or Medicine: James Rothman (United States) Randy Schekman (United States) Thomas C. Suedhof (Germany, United States) For - plotting how cells transfer vital materials such as hormones and brain chemicals to other cells, giving insight into diseases such as Alzheimer's, autism and diabetes. Physics: Francois Englert (Belgium) Peter Higgs (United Kingdom) For - predicting the existence of the Higgs boson particle that explains how elementary matter attained the mass to form stars and planets. ...


Read More »

Weak Iron Explains Earth's Inner Core Speed Trap

Something is not quite right inside the Earth's core. When seismic waves from earthquakes ripple through its solid center, they hit a speed bump.


Read More »

NASA Jupiter Probe Recovers from Earth Flyby Glitch

All systems are go again for a NASA probe on its way to Jupiter.


Read More »

Invasive Mink Threatens South America's Largest Woodpecker

Invasive American minks may threaten the largest woodpecker species in South America, according to new research.


Read More »

Massive Star Explosion Seeded the Early Solar System, Meteorite Study Suggests

The explosive death of a star seeded matter into the solar system soon after its birth, analysis of a meteorite now reveals.


Read More »

Giant Amazon Fish Species Discovered

A new type of giant Amazonian fish — one for which only a single species was known for more than a century — has been discovered in Brazil, scientists say.


Read More »
 
Delievered to you by Feedamail.
Unsubscribe

Sunday, October 13, 2013

FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News

feedamail.com Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News

Fall Night Sky Guide: Eclipses, Comets, Meteor Showers and More

The fall night sky in the Northern Hemisphere brings a veritable harvest of amazing celestial sights and this year is no different, but you do need to know when to look up to see them.


Read More »

Lost Kings: DNA Fails to Illuminate Royal Mystery

A skeleton buried under a parking lot. A grotesque mummy head. A gourd encrusted with mysterious blood.


Read More »

Ozone Hole Over Antarctica Caused Southern Africa Warming

The infamous hole in the ozone layer above Antarctica may have caused warming in southern Africa over the past two decades, researchers say.


Read More »

Possible Treatment for Marijuana Abuse Found

Boosting levels of a naturally occurring compound in the brain could prevent people who abuse marijuana but are trying to quit from relapsing, a new study suggests.

Read More »
 
Delievered to you by Feedamail.
Unsubscribe