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The World's Most Powerful Atom Smasher Restarts With a Big Bang Read More » Breast Milk Sold Online May Not Be 100% Human Milk Buying breast milk online in order to nourish a baby with important nutrients that are not available from formula may not always be the safest choice, a new study suggests. Researchers found that one in 10 samples of breast milk that they bought over the Internet and tested contained genetic material from cow's milk. They said it was likely that the cow's milk was intentionally added to human milk, to stretch its volume. Giving babies breast milk that contains even small quantities of cow's milk could be harmful because some infants may have problems tolerating cow's milk, or they might have an allergy to cow's milk protein. Read More »Huge Colorado Floods Helped Sculpt Mountains Read More » Junk Food Is Making NYC Ants More Like Humans Read More » Here Be Dragons: 3 Spiky Lizard Species Found in Andes Read More » Zap! New Map Charts Every Lightning Bolt Read More » Ghostly Faces and Invisible Verse Found in Medieval Text Read More » Pluto Weather Forecast: Probe Likely to Find It Gusty and Gassy Read More » Want to Live Longer? Optimal Amount of Exercise Revealed Doing a few hours of exercise every week will probably help you live longer, but doing a whole lot more exercise doesn't provide much extra benefit, according to a new study on physical activity and longevity. Still, doing as much as 10 times the recommended amount of exercise was not linked with an increased risk of dying during the study period. In the study, researchers analyzed information from more than 660,000 people ages 21 to 98 in the United States and Sweden who answered questions about how much time they spent doing physical activity, including walking, running, swimming and bicycling. People who got some exercise, but not enough to meet the physical activity recommendations were still 20 percent less likely to die over a 14-year period than those who did not do any physical activity. Read More » | ||||
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Monday, April 6, 2015
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
Sunday, April 5, 2015
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
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'Big Bang' particle collider restarts after refit: CERN Read More » CERN restarts 'Big Bang' collider after two-year refit Read More » CERN restarts "Big Bang" collider after two-year refit Read More » How Easter Helped Bring Down a Medical Myth About Ulcers Some people will celebrate Easter this Sunday. Some scientists, meanwhile, will celebrate the birthday of the humble bacterium Helicobacter pylori. H. pylori infects more than half of the world's population. Many people who carry the bacterium won't ever experience any symptoms of the infection, but it's the culprit behind most ulcers and many cases of stomach cancer — and it hid, unidentified, inside human stomachs for thousands of years. Read More » | ||||
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Saturday, April 4, 2015
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
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World Will Get More Religious by 2050 The world is becoming more religious, as the number of agnostics and others who don't affiliate with a certain religion shrinks as a percentage of the global population. By 2050, just 13 percent of people in the world will say they are unaffiliated, compared with 16 percent who said the same in 2010, according to a new Pew Research Group survey. The United States is an exception, where more Americans are expected to flee organized religion. Islam will grow faster than any other major religion, and at a higher rate than the world population balloons, the survey found. Read More »Shortest Total Lunar Eclipse of the Century Visible Early Saturday Read More » Easter Science: 5 Odd Facts About Eggs Read More » 2011 Japan Tsunami Unleashed Ozone-Destroying Chemicals Read More » Amped-Up Atom Smasher Will Restart This Weekend Read More » Bizarre Syndrome Makes Visitors to Jerusalem Go Crazy Read More » For Some Kids, Easter Egg Hunts Pose Allergy Risk Several children in Florida experienced allergic reactions after they secretly ate chocolate during an Easter egg hunt, without their parents realizing it, according to a new report of the cases. The four children — two boys and two girls, ages 4 to 7 years old — had all previously been diagnosed with a nickel allergy, a condition in which people experience skin rashes when they come in contact with the metal. In each child's case, their symptoms had improved for two to five months, but then they all wound up at the doctor with flare-ups about two to five days after that year's Easter Sunday. "They all came in on the same two-day period," said Dr. Sharon Jacob, a dermatologist who treated the children at the University of Miami. Read More » | ||||
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