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Ancient wildebeest cousin boasted bizarre dinosaur-like trait Read More » Europe's shift to dark green forests stokes global warming-study Read More » Race Is a Social Construct, Scientists Argue More than 100 years ago, American sociologist W.E.B. Du Bois was concerned that race was being used as a biological explanation for what he understood to be social and cultural differences between different populations of people. In an article published today (Feb. 4) in the journal Science, four scholars say racial categories are weak proxies for genetic diversity and need to be phased out. They've called on the U.S. National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine to put together a panel of experts across the biological and social sciences to come up with ways for researchers to shift away from the racial concept in genetics research. Read More »Energy Evolves as 4th Industrial Revolution Looks to Nature (Op-Ed) Lynn Scarlett is global managing director for policy at The Nature Conservancy. In Davos, Switzerland, at the 2016 World Economic Forum annual meeting, industry leaders focused on what they call the Fourth Industrial Revolution. Whereas the First Industrial Revolution used steam and waterpower in manufacturing, the second used electricity to power factories, allowing production on a much larger scale. Read More »Five Facts That Reveal a Warming Planet (Op-Ed) "Sixty years ago, when the Russians beat us into space, we did not deny Sputnik was up there," Obama said. Despite decades of research, too many U.S. politicians still deny climate change , a phenomenon so thoroughly documented as to find agreement among virtually every leading body of American scientists — NASA, NOAA, the National Academy of Sciences, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the American Geophysical Union and the American Meteorological Society, just to name a few. 1) Climate change never took a break. Read More »Italian consortium set to win giant Chile telescope contract An Italian consortium, including construction company Astaldi Spa, is close to securing a contract to build the world's largest telescope in the Chilean desert, project owner the European Southern Observatory (ESO) said on Thursday. The ESO said its finance committee had agreed to enter into final discussions with the consortium, which was the winning bidder to design, manufacture, transport and build the main dome and structure for the European Extremely Large Telescope (E-ELT). The consortium includes major Italian builder Cimolai and subcontractor the EIE Group, as well as Astaldi. Read More »Inadequate testing thwarts efforts to measure Zika's impact Read More » Here's the Happiest State in the Country Read More » Millennials See Themselves As Narcissistic, Too (And It Bothers Them) Millennials, roughly defined as the generation born between the early 1980s and the early 2000s, often hear that they're the most narcissistic, entitled generation of all time. Millennials do view themselves as a bit more narcissistic than generations before them, but not to the extent that older generations do, according to new research presented Jan. 29 at the annual meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology (SPSP) in San Diego. Different research methods have found that individualism is on the rise in American culture, with younger generations reporting less empathy and more self-focus than generations before. Read More »Weird Ancient Wildebeest Sported Duck-Billed Dinosaur Nose Read More » India says no rush on GM food but will not stand in way of science Read More » Dutch Police Deploy Drone-Disabling Birds of Prey Read More » Conquer Mont Blanc from Your Couch with Google Street View
Fine-Tune the World with 'Augmented Reality' Earbuds Read More » Scientists find Zika in saliva, urine; unclear if can transmit infection Zika has been identified in the saliva and urine of two patients infected by the virus, a leading Brazilian health institute said on Friday, adding that further studies are needed to determine if those fluids could transmit the infection. Scientists at the Oswaldo Cruz Foundation, a public health institute, said they used genetic testing to identify the virus in samples from two patients while they had symptoms and were known to have Zika, the mosquito-borne viral infection that has sparked a global health scare. It is the first time the virus has been detected in saliva and urine, scientists told reporters in Rio de Janeiro. Read More »Scientists find Zika in saliva, urine; unclear if can transmit infection Read More » Tarantula in Black: Dark, Hairy Spider Named After Johnny Cash Read More » Scientists turn to drones to count growing seal colonies Read More » Scientists find Zika in saliva, urine; unclear if can transmit infection Read More » | ||||
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Friday, February 5, 2016
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Thursday, February 4, 2016
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Smart band-aid on the horizon By Ben Gruber Cambridge, MASS (Reuters) - Wearable electronics will revolutionize the way doctors diagnose and treat patients, according to researchers at MIT, who are developing stretchable hydrogels that share many of the same properties of human tissue. "Hydrogel is a polymer network infiltrated with water. Read More »U.S. private space companies plan surge in launches this year U.S. private space companies Space Exploration Technologies and United Launch Alliance, a partnership of Lockheed Martin and BoeingN , have scheduled more than 30 launches from Florida this year, up from 18 last year, according to company and Air Force officials. The jump in planned launches reflects increasing demand for commercial communications and imaging satellites, as well as business from the U.S. military, International Space Station cargo ships and a NASA asteroid sample return mission. Read More »Russian cosmonauts breeze through spacewalk outside space station Read More » Human Brain's Bizarre Folding Pattern Recreated in a Vat Read More » Why Sand Tiger Shark Devours Aquarium Mate (Video) Any sharks that want to enhance their reputation as fearsome predators should follow the lead of a sand tiger shark at the Coex Aquarium in Seoul, South Korea, that surprised aquarium goers by devouring a fellow shark — and taking nearly a day to finish the job. This sand tiger shark (not to be confused with a tiger shark) is an 8-year-old female, measuring 7.22 feet (2.2 meters) long, Reuters reported. "It's unfortunate anytime you see something like that, regardless of what the circumstances are," said Chris Plante, assistant curator at the Aquarium of the Pacific, after viewing the video at Live Science's request. Read More »Short-legged Oregon arachnid gets 'behemoth' name By Courtney Sherwood PORTLAND, Ore. (Reuters) - Researchers have bestowed a grandiose scientific name on a tiny, spider-like cousin of the daddy longlegs, officially dubbing the newly discovered denizen of remote Oregon forests the Cryptomaster behemoth. The diminutive, short-legged arachnid made its published debut late last month in the peer-reviewed scientific journal ZooKeys, where San Diego State University biologists who made the discovery first described it. Like the daddy longlegs, which is commonly but mistakenly referred to as a spider, the Cryptomaster behemoth actually belongs to an order of arachnids called Opiliones, or harvestmen. Read More »Daddy Longlegs Fossil Keeps Erection for 99 Million Years Read More » Head Trauma Linked to Same 'Plaques' Seen in Alzheimer's People with brain injuries from trauma to the head may have a buildup of the same plaques seen in people with Alzheimer's disease in their brains, a small, new study suggests. Moreover, the areas of the brain where the plaques were found in people with brain injuries overlapped with the areas where plaques are usually found in people with Alzheimer's. "People, after a head injury, are more likely to develop dementia, but it isn't clear why," study co-author David Sharp, a neurology professor at Imperial College London in the United Kingdom, said in a statement. Read More »Aging May Slow When Certain Cells Are Killed Killing off certain aging cells in the body may lead to a longer life, suggests a new study done in genetically engineered mice. The drug that the researchers administered to the mice only worked because the mice were transgenic, and researchers "can't make transgenic humans," noted Christin Burd, an assistant professor of molecular genetics at The Ohio State University, who was not involved in the new study. In the study, the researchers developed the genetically engineered mice. Read More »Riding High: Pot-Smoking Drivers Evade Blood Tests People who drive after smoking marijuana are at greater risk of car crashes, but blood tests to check for the drug may not be a reliable way to catch impaired drivers, a new study suggests. Researchers found that levels of marijuana's active ingredient — tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC — decrease very quickly in the blood. This means that a person who was impaired by marijuana while behind the wheel might not have a positive test result by the time a test is administered a few hours later, the researchers said. Read More »4 New 'Flatworm' Species: No Brains, No Eyes, No Problem Read More » | ||||
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