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Freak Waaaay Out This Halloween with the Scariest Space Movies Read More » Dawn Probe Heads to Superclose Orbit of Dwarf Planet Ceres Read More » Scientists: Warming ocean factor in collapse of cod fishery Read More » Scientists announce progress toward better battery to power cars Read More » Scientific Prizes Bring Needed Attention to Mental Health Research Read More » The More Severe-Burn Patients Eat, the Faster They Heal (Op-Ed) Read More » Facing Organ Donor Shortage, Patients Forced to Get Creative Read More » Fossil unearthed in Spain sheds light on ape evolution Read More » Large asteroid set to shoot by Earth on Halloween By Irene Klotz CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (Reuters) - A large asteroid that scientists only discovered this month will make a relatively close approach to Earth on Saturday, astronomers say, providing one of the best opportunities in years to gather data about a passing space rock. The asteroid, estimated to be about 1,300 feet (400 meters) in diameter, will shoot past the planet at 22 miles (35 km) per second at around 1 p.m. (1700 GMT) on Halloween afternoon. Known as 2015 TB145, it will come within about 300,000 miles (480,000 km) of Earth, farther away than the moon but relatively close by cosmic measures. Read More »Halloween Asteroid Flyby: Here's What We Know About 2015 TB145 Read More » NASA Probe Flies Through Saturn Moon Enceladus' Plume
Party Like It's 2500 B.C.: Stonehenge Builders Hosted Barbecues The ancient builders of Stonehenge may have hosted massive barbecue cookouts where thousands of revelers feasted on meat, new research suggests. Archaeologists at the Neolithic settlement of Durrington Walls in modern-day southern England, where the builders of Stonehenge likely lived, found evidence that the village hosted open-air meat-roasting parties 4,500 years ago, with animals likely walking to the site for slaughter from regions far and wide. At the time, thousands of ancient pilgrims may have flocked to the site of Stonehenge to honor their dead, while heading back after hours to party and grill at Durrington Walls, the study authors speculated. Read More »Tiny Bird Fossil Solves Big Mystery About Life After Dinosaurs Read More » Little Cousin: Human, Ape Ancestor Had 'Goggle Eyes' Read More » Swim for the Earth: 3D-Printed Bikini Scrubs Water Pollution Read More » 'Be the Astronaut' and 'Journey to Space' in New Museum Exhibits Read More » Halloween Fireballs Will Blaze in the Sky Through November Read More » Allied Navies Destroy Mock Ballistic Missile in Practice Test Read More » | ||||
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Friday, October 30, 2015
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
Thursday, October 29, 2015
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
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Rookie Spacewalkers Perform Critical Space Station Work Read More » Modern Mystery: Ancient Comet Is Spewing Oxygen Read More » Spacecraft to sample water plumes from Saturn moon By Irene Klotz CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla (REUTERS) - A U.S. spacecraft was poised to make a deep dive into plumes of water, ice and organic matter blasting from Saturn's small, ocean-bearing moon Enceladus, in an effort to learn if it could support life, NASA said on Wednesday. Only a drop of water will be collected during the 19,000 mph (30,600 kph) flyby, which is scheduled to take place about 1 p.m. EDT. Scientists say that will be enough to answer some key questions about Enceladus, which has a global ocean sealed beneath its icy surface. Read More »Zap happy: electric eels innovative in subduing hapless prey Read More » 22 Ancient Shipwrecks Discovered Near Greek Island Read More » Electric Embrace: Eels Curl Up to Supercharge Shocks Read More » Omm…MG! Rare Yoga Injury Breaks Man's Leg A man in Ireland broke his leg and spent 10 days in the hospital after injuring himself in a surprising way — while practicing yoga. The 38-year-old yoga enthusiast fractured the thighbone on his right leg while doing a difficult seated yoga pose known as Marichyasana posture B in his morning yoga class, according to a new report of the man's case, which was published online Oct. 9 in the journal BMJ Case Reports. When the man got into the position, he heard a loud cracking sound and felt enormous pain in his right femur (thighbone). Read More »Marriage Linked to Better Outcomes After Heart Surgery People who are married may be more likely to survive heart surgery than people who are divorced, separated or widowed, according to a new study. In the study, researchers looked at health and survival rates in 1,576 adults ages 50 or older who underwent cardiac surgery. The new findings suggest that "marital status is a predictor of survival and functional recovery after cardiac surgery," the authors,from the University of Pennsylvania, wrote in their study published today (Oct. 28) in the journal JAMA Surgery. Read More »Oh Baby! The Science of Identical Triplets and Quadruplets For two Baltimore parents, their three new bundles of joy may make them feel like one in a million, and statistics show they're not far off: Parents Thomas and Kristen Hewitt welcomed a rare set of identical triplets earlier this month, The Baltimore Sun reports. The Hewitts' three boys were born more than six weeks early, on Oct. 6, the Sun reported. Statistics help tell the story: Without the help of fertility treatments, and according to a mathematical rule that doctors use called Hellin's law, about one in 90 births is twins, one in 8,100 births (90 squared) is triplets and one in 729,000 births (90 cubed) is quadruplets, Herman said. Read More »Snakebite Victims in Africa Lack Needed Antivenom, Researcher Says There is an urgent need for better and more accessible snakebite treatments in Africa, which cause thousands of deaths each year, researchers argue. Recently, the antivenom manufacturer Sanofi-Pasteur made headlines when it said it would stop producing the snakebite treatment. "The reality is that for the vast majority of Africa's snakebite victims, the loss of Sanofi's antivenom will mean little, if anything at all," Williams wrote. Read More »'1st Hardware Store in Space': Commercial 3D Printer Launching in 2016 Read More » Scientists announce progress toward better battery to power cars By Will Dunham WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Scientists have created a battery whose technology in principle could power electric cars and other energy-hungry devices far better than current lithium-ion batteries, but it remains years away from commercial use. Researchers at the University of Cambridge on Thursday announced the creation of a laboratory demonstration model of a lithium-oxygen battery that overcomes many of the barriers that have held back the development of this technology. Clare Grey, a Cambridge professor of materials chemistry who led the research, called it "a step towards a practical battery, albeit with many hurdles ahead." The researchers said it could be more than a decade before a practical lithium-oxygen battery is ready, in part because the battery's ability to charge and discharge is too low. Read More » | ||||
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