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Trail from Ship Exhaust Leaves 'A' in the Sky Read More » Google Glass Redux: High-Tech Wearable Gets Ready for Business Read More » Forget the Flashlight: New Ninja Shark Species Lights up the Sea Read More » 3D printing process brings art to blind people By Sharon Reich Writer and pod cast host Romeo Edmead is using his fingers to unlock a world he has never experienced before. Edmead lost his sight when he was just two-years-old, so he has always had a complicated relationship with art and museums. While he has heard of classical paintings, he says school trips to museums were uncomfortable. "I knew that what my friends would experience, because I went to public schools with sighted kids, and knew that what they would experience, I wouldn't necessarily experience because they could use their sense of sight and I didn't have that. ... Read More »India test-fires long range surface-to-air missile developed with Israel By Sankalp Phartiyal NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India successfully test-fired on Wednesday a new long range surface-to-air missile capable of countering aerial threats at extended ranges, as Prime Minister Narendra Modi pushes to enhance the country's military capabilities. India, which shares borders with nuclear-armed China and Pakistan, is likely to spend $250 billion over the next decade to upgrade its military. It is the world's biggest buyer of defense equipment but Modi is trying to build a defense industrial base in the country to cut overseas purchases. Read More »Camera trap system could help fight against poaching By Joel Flynn The Zoological Society London (ZSL), whose mission is to promote and achieve the world-wide conservation of animals and their habitats, says it may have taken a step closer to fulfilling that with the development of a new camera, which it calls Instant Detect. Developed in partnership with other companies like Seven Technologies Group, which specializes in security technology and helped train rangers on conservation sites on how best to use Instant Detect devices, ZSL hopes it could help the fight against poaching, as well as the monitoring of endangered and other species. Instant Detect is a camera trap system that uses satellite technology to send images from anywhere in the world, according to ZSL Conservation Technology Unit Project Manager, Louise Hartley. Read More »Giant Comets Periodically Smash Earth, Scientists Say Read More » Baghdad Blasts: Earthquake Detectors Map Sounds of War Read More » Tasmanian Devils' Mysterious Cancer May Come in Two Varieties The Tasmanian devil has long been known to suffer from an unusual type of cancer that can spread from animal to animal, but now researchers say the endangered species is plagued by at least two kinds of infectious cancer. The finding suggests that Tasmanian devils are especially prone to the emergence of contagious tumors, and that transmissible cancers may arise more frequently in nature than previously thought, scientists added. The furry, dog-size mammals are found only on the island of Tasmania, which sits about 150 miles (240 kilometers) south of Australia. Read More »Volcanoes Sparked an Explosion in Human Intelligence, Researcher Argues Read More » Space Fuel: Plutonium-238 Created After 30-Year Wait Read More » | ||||
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Wednesday, December 30, 2015
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
Tuesday, December 29, 2015
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
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The 10 Strangest Animal Discoveries of 2015
Pocket-Size Device Turns Smartphone into a High-Powered Microscope Read More » Turtles' Wayward Travels May Mean BP Oil Spill's Impact Was Global Read More » From Blood Rain to Green Poo: 10 Weirdest Science Stories of 2015 Read More » HyQ2Max: the robot you can't keep down Step forward HyQ2Max - the latest and most powerful four-legged robot to come out of the Italian Institute of Technology (IIT). Animal-like in posture and movement, HyQ2Max is an improved version of their hydraulic quadruped robot HyQ. Read More »Smart wheelchair moves by dummy sucks A Barcelona-based disability foundation has created an intelligent chair so that severely disabled children can better explore their surroundings. Previous models of wheelchair were usually joystick-operated and were unusable for children without the necessary motor skills or with limited awareness of their environment. This model of wheelchair responds to voice command, head movement, or sucks of a dummy. Read More »Ram Statue Unearthed on Christmas Eve May Represent Jesus Read More » New Kind of Hydrothermal Vent Forms Ghostly Chimneys Read More » Russia to rewrite space program as economic crisis bites By Dmitry Solovyov MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia is to revise its space program, the national space agency said on Tuesday after a newspaper published a report that billions of dollars of cuts may be afoot including to ambitious Moon exploration plans. Several Russian government ministries were engaged in revising the space program up to 2025, Roscosmos said in a written statement to Reuters. The authoritative Izvestia newspaper published details of what it said was a draft proposal sent by Roscosmos to the government which showed big spending cuts were being proposed to the Moon exploration program. Read More » | ||||
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Monday, December 28, 2015
Venomous Sea Snake Washes Up on California Beach, Surprising Scientists
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12 Flavors of Rainbows Identified
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Huh? Could Cleaner Air Be Worsening Global Warming?
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Ancient Mom: Oldest Brood of Preserved Embryos Found
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Venomous Sea Snake Washes Up on California Beach, Surprising Scientists
A venomous sea snake washed up on a Southern California beach recently, striking fear in the hearts of beachgoers but eliciting excitement from the scientists who study these marine reptiles. The stranded snake, which was dead when it was discovered on Dec. 12, was a yellow-bellied sea snake (Pelamis platura), the most widespread marine snake in the world. "North of the tip of Baja [California], we have only five documented observations of this snake ever. Read More »
'Writable' Circuits Could Let Scientists Draw Electronics into Existence
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