| ||||
Oldest Animal Jonathan the Tortoise Is Going Strong at 183 Read More » Fowl Play: Diverse Parasites Infest Backyard Chickens Read More » Warmer Indian Ocean could be 'ecological desert', scientists warn Read More » Red, Dead Galaxies Are Also LIERs, Scientists Say Many galaxies are LIERS, says Francesco Belfiore, a graduate student at the Kavli Institute for Cosmology at the University of Cambridge. Earth lies in a galaxy that is flush with new star birth. In trying to study the chemistry of these "dead" galaxies, researchers have found a different chemical fingerprint than the one that dominates star-forming galaxies. Read More »Worm in the Eye! Creepy Crawly Removed in Odd Case "His occupation as a fruit vendor may have increased his risk for infection, as fruit flies may carry the parasite," said Dr. Bhagabat Nayak, an ophthalmologist and eye surgeon at the Dr. R.P. Centre for Ophthalmic Sciences in New Delhi, India. Worms inside the eye are generally rare in India, he added. Read More »Poor Sleep Tied to Hardened Brain Arteries in Older Adults Older people who sleep poorly may have a slightly increased risk of having hardened blood vessels in the brain, and oxygen-starved brain tissue, according to a new study. Both of these issues may contribute to a greater risk of stroke and cognitive impairment, the researchers said. "The forms of brain injury that we observed are important because they may not only contribute to the risk of stroke but also to chronic progressive cognitive and motor impairment," study author Dr. Andrew Lim, a neurologist and scientist at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Center in Toronto, said in a statement. Read More »Doctors Reflect on 'Surreal' Day of 2013 Asiana Airlines Crash On July 6, Flight 214 from Incheon International Airport in South Korea crashed just short of the runway at San Francisco International Airport, striking the airport's seawall with its landing gear and tail section. It was San Francisco General that received the most patients of any area hospital that day, and doctors are now reporting their experience in the hopes of helping other hospitals prepare for a similar event. "The day was a surreal experience," said Dr. Rachael Callcut, a surgeon, and the lead author of a new article about the tragedy published today (Jan. 14) in the journal JAMA Surgery. Read More »Self-Filling Water Bottle Converts Humid Air into Drinkable H2O Read More » NASA to Capture Best-Ever Portrait of Coral Reef Health Read More » Hawking: Threats to human survival likely from new science LONDON (AP) — Physicist Stephen Hawking has warned that new technologies will likely bring about "new ways things can go wrong" for human survival. Read More » | ||||
| ||||
|
Tuesday, January 19, 2016
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
Monday, January 18, 2016
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
| ||||
Belgian drone mixes plane and quadcopter technology By Jim Drury Researchers in Belgium have devised a prototype delivery drone which they say could rival the likes of Amazon Prime Air and Google's Project Wing. The University of Leuven team behind VertiKUL 2 (KUL is the acronym for Katholieke Universiteit Leuven) say the drone combines the ability of quadcopters to take-off and land vertically with both the speed of conventional aircraft and their capacity to fly long distances. Lead researcher Bart Theys told Reuters that combining aspects of multicopters and conventional aircraft created great potential for a future drone delivery service. Read More »Fossils of Largest Marine Croc Found … on Tatooine! Read More » SpaceX narrowly missed Falcon 9 rocket landing, video shows Read More » How the cat got its spots A team of biologists and mathematicians from three British universities are challenging conventional thinking on piebaldism - a benign genetic disease caused by a mutation which results in the distinctively colored fur patches of cats, horses, pigs, dogs, and deer, while human hair is occasionally affected. In a paper published in Nature Communications, the team, led by University of Bath mathematical biologist Dr Christian Yates, say their findings have potential implications for a wide range of serious embryonic diseases. Read More » | ||||
| ||||
|
Sunday, January 17, 2016
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
| ||||
SpaceX rocket to launch climate satellite, re-try ocean landing Read More » SpaceX rocket blasts off from California with science satellite: NASA Read More » | ||||
| ||||
|
Saturday, January 16, 2016
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
| ||||
SpaceX success launches space startups to new heights Read More » Largest Giraffe Relative Found Read More » Real Heavy Metal: Fans Want Motörhead Singer on Periodic Table Motörhead fans still mourning the death of the band's singer, songwriter and bassist, Ian 'Lemmy' Kilmister, in December are seeking commemoration for the rock icon in an unusual location — the periodic table. A petition launched on Change.org by John Wright of York, United Kingdom, proposed "Lemmium" as a name for element 115, quickly gathering thousands of signatures. The element holds the cumbersome temporary working name "ununpentium" and the temporary symbol Uup, according to a statement issued by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) on Dec. 30, 2015. Read More »Cruz's Birthplace Debated: Here's Where Most US Presidents Were Born At the Republican debates last night, Donald Trump argued that fellow Republican presidential candidate Ted Cruz might be ineligible to be U.S. president, given that the Constitution requires the president to be a "natural born citizen" of the country. One man, Houston attorney Newton Schwartz Sr., has even filed a suit against Cruz, aiming to settle the question before the primaries or party conventions get under way, Bloomberg Business reported. Whatever your opinion may be, it is true that all of the presidents to date have been born in one of the 50 U.S. states. Read More »A Look at Alex: NASA Satellite Spies Oddball January Hurricane Read More » West Africa Is Not 'Ebola Free' After All, New Case Shows The Ebola outbreak in West Africa is not over — just one day after the region was declared "Ebola-free," a new case of the virus was confirmed in Sierra Leone. The new case involved a 22-year-old woman, who was found dead in northern Sierra Leone and tested positive for the disease today (Jan. 15), according to The New York Times. Just yesterday, the World Health Organization declared the end of the Ebola outbreak in West Africa, because the three hardest-hit countries in the region — Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone — had not reported a new Ebola case for at least 42 days. Read More »Butchered Mammoth Suggests Humans Lived in Siberia 45,000 Years Ago Read More » Tapping the Human Microbiome (Kavli Hangout) Late last year, 48 scientists from 50 U.S. institutions proposed the "Unified Microbiome Initiative," a national effort to decipher the nature, and applications, of microbiomes, ecosystems of microscopic life forms such as bacteria, viruses, archaea and fungi. Scientists can now identify microbes by the organisms' DNA, and have thereby discovered that microbiomes are far more diverse than anyone ever imagined. Each microbiome potentially includes hundreds of thousands of microbial species, all interacting with one another. Read More » | ||||
| ||||
|