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Kitty Litter to Blame for Nuclear Waste Leak
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Sunday, March 29, 2015
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
Saturday, March 28, 2015
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
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Cosmic Traditions: One-Year Space Crew Marks Flight with Russian Spaceflight Customs Read More » Liftoff! US, Russia Launch Historic One-Year Space Mission Read More » U.S., Russian crew blasts off for year-long stay on space station Read More » Environmental group seeks greater protection for USDA scientists An environmental activist group has filed a legal petition with the U.S. Department of Agriculture seeking new rules that would enhance job protection for government scientists whose research questions the safety of farm chemicals. The action filed on Thursday by the Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility, an advocacy group for local, state and federal researchers, came less than a week after a World Health Organization group found the active ingredient in Roundup, the world's best selling weed killer, is "probably carcinogenic to humans." Roundup is made by Monsanto Co. The petition to the USDA presses the agency to adopt policies to prevent "political suppression or alteration of studies and to lay out clear procedures for investigating allegations of scientific misconduct." According to the petition, some scientists working for the federal government are finding their research restricted or censored when it conflicts with agribusiness industry interests. Read More »Primordial sea creature with spiky claws unearthed in Canada Read More » Environmental group seeks greater protection for USDA scientists An environmental activist group has filed a legal petition with the U.S. Department of Agriculture seeking new rules that would enhance job protection for government scientists whose research questions the safety of farm chemicals. The action filed on Thursday by the Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility, an advocacy group for local, state and federal researchers, came less than a week after a World Health Organization group found the active ingredient in Roundup, the world's best selling weed killer, is "probably carcinogenic to humans." Roundup is made by Monsanto Co. The petition to the USDA presses the agency to adopt policies to prevent "political suppression or alteration of studies and to lay out clear procedures for investigating allegations of scientific misconduct." According to the petition, some scientists working for the federal government are finding their research restricted or censored when it conflicts with agribusiness industry interests. Read More »One-Year Crew Begins Epic Trip on International Space Station Read More » U.S.-Russian crew reaches space station for year-long stay Read More » | ||||
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Friday, March 27, 2015
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
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U.S. Air Force overstepped bounds in SpaceX certification: report Read More » Meet the Leading Space Rock Target for NASA's Asteroid-Capture Mission Read More » Proving Einstein Wrong with 'Spooky' Quantum Experiment Quantum mechanics is one of the best-tested theories in science, and it's one of the few where physicists get to do experiments proving that Einstein was wrong. That's what a team at Griffith University and the University of Tokyo in Japan did this week, showing that a weird phenomenon — in which the measurement of a particle actually affects its location — is real. Back in the 1920s and 1930s, Albert Einstein said he couldn't support this idea, which he called "spooky action at a distance," in which a particle can be in two places at once and it's not until one measures the state of that particle that it takes a definite position, seemingly with no signal transmitted to it and at a speed faster than light. When the particle takes its definite position, physicists refer to this as its wave function collapsing. Read More »Antarctica's Supersized Icebergs Shut Down Currents Read More » One-Year Space Station Mission Launches Today: Watch It Live Read More » One Year in Space: A History of Ultra-Long Missions Off Planet Earth Read More » Deadly Oklahoma Twister Ends Slow Start to Tornado Season Read More » Valeo's self-driving car systems learn from Safran drones Read More » Grants help level the playing field for young moms in science By Randi Belisomo (Reuters Health) - Thanks to a generous benefactor, young mothers doing laboratory research at the Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston can receive major grants to keep them from falling behind while they raise their children. Since 1993, the Claflin Distinguished Scholar Awards at MGH have helped junior female faculty with young children keep pace with their male peers, who don't face the same challenges to research productivity that women do during their child-rearing years. Every year, five women are awarded $100,000 Claflin grants - named for benefactor Jane D. Claflin - to fund a research assistant for two years. Read More »Kelly Astronaut Twins Meet on Eve of 1-Year Mission Launch (Photo) Read More » Ancient 4-Eyed Predator Wielded Wicked Toothy Claws Read More » | ||||
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