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Humans Butchered Elephants 500,000 Years Ago, Ancient Tool Suggests Read More » Rosetta Spacecraft Makes Nitrogen Discovery on Comet Read More » How Real-Life AI Rivals 'Chappie': Robots Get Emotional Read More » Weird 'Water Tongue' Lets Fish Feed on Land Read More » Amazon's FAA Approval May Not Give Commercial Drones a Lift Read More » No More Lions and Mammoths: Real Explorers Eat Bugs Read More » Astronaut and Cosmonaut to Launch on 1-Year Space Mission This Week Read More » Tumors grown in dishes could help customize cancer treatment Experiments conducted at an underground laboratory at Vanderbilt University could prove vital in the fight against cancer. Alex Walsh, a biomedical researcher, is using a laser to make what she calls organoids glow. The organoid is then dosed with a cocktail of cancer drugs and placed under a microscope at which point it is blasted with a laser. Measuring the variations in the intensity of the resulting fluorescence provides a readout of cellular metabolism which, Walsh says, is an accurate and speedy biomarker of drug response. Read More »Marijuana Science: Why Today's Pot Packs a Bigger Punch The marijuana that is available today may be much more potent than marijuana cultivated in the past, according to the results of new tests. The psychoactive component in the marijuana plant is the chemical THC, and the new tests showed that today's marijuana may contain 30 percent THC, Andy LaFrate, the author of the new report, said in a statement. By contrast, THC levels in marijuana 30 years ago were lower than 10 percent, said LaFrate, who is the president and research director at Charas Scientific, one of eight labs certified by the state of Colorado to conduct marijuana potency testing. At the same time, the marijuana samples tested had very low levels of a compound called cannabidiol, or CBD, that is touted for its medicinal properties. Read More »Kids Whose Ears Stick Out Are Cuter, Science Confirms The findings show that "protruding ears catch the eye, but not necessarily the imagination in a negative way," said Dr. Ralph Litschel, the lead author of the study. For some kids in the study, "protruding ears may have added to their cuteness," said Litschel, an ear, nose and throat specialist and facial plastic surgeon at Cantonal Hospital St. Gallen in Switzerland. Read More »Can You Really Freshen Up Women's 'Aging' Eggs? One fertility treatment company claims it can, by rejuvenating women's aging eggs. The company, called OvaScience, says its method aims to improve the health of an egg's mitochondria, which are the tiny powerhouses that give cells the energy to divide and grow. Although some early evidence suggests aging mitochondria could reduce a woman's fertility, expert say, there are no studies that prove the new method will work. "They're quite private and secretive about what they're doing," said Dr. Aimee Eyvazzadeh, a San Francisco Bay Area ob-gyn and fertility specialist who has no affiliation to OvaScience. Read More »As Forests Burn, Conservationists Launch Global Wildlife Rescue (Op-Ed) Read More » Hiding Out of Sight, Are Sharks Self Aware? (Op-Ed) Read More » Will We Combat Global Warming, Despite Our Nature? (Op-Ed) In a recent article (Human Nature May Seal the Planet's Warming Fate), I used the allegory of "Who Moved my Cheese?" to suggest that people's innate biases may in fact be an evolutionary adaption, one that thwarts the changes demanded by climate change. This in contrast to simpler life forms such as mice: They have seemingly lower cognitive abilities, yet adapt far easier and more willingly to changes in their habitat. Read More »Did Cosmic Inflation Really Jump-Start the Universe? (Kavli Hangout) Read More » What Would It Be Like to Live on Jupiter's Moon Europa? Read More » Obama, wowed by young scientists, announces new STEM pledges Read More » First (Contraband) Corned Beef Sandwich in Space 50 Years Ago Read More » | ||||
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Monday, March 23, 2015
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
Sunday, March 22, 2015
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
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The 10 Happiest Countries Are All in Latin America For the first time in a decade, the top 10 happiest countries in the world are all in Latin America, according to the 2014 Gallup Positive Experience Index. Gallup researchers released the results for the United Nations' third annual International Day of Happiness today (March 20). Read More »This Zero Gravity Cocktail Glass Could Be Out This World Read More » See Venus and the Crescent Moon Shine Together Tonight Read More » | ||||
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Saturday, March 21, 2015
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
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DIY robotics device developed It's a revolution in robotics that makes building your own personal robot a reality for the masses. The new device developed by Polish scientists Dominik Nowak and Radoslaw Jarema of the Husarion Company, acts as a robot's central nervous system and provides people with the hardware and software to build almost any type of robot they can think of.. ... So you don't need any programming or engineering skills. Read More »U.S., United Arab Emirates move forward on space cooperation The United States and the United Arab Emirates have agreed to work toward greater civil and national security space cooperation after officials from the two countries met in Washington this week, the U.S. State Department said on Friday. The officials reviewed "a broad list of potential areas of space cooperation," department spokesman Jeff Rathke said in a statement. Read More »Flight to Totality: How I Chased the Total Solar Eclipse of 2015 on a Jet Read More » 'Haunting' Pony Uterus Wins Top Prize in Medical Image Contest Read More » Mars One Colony Project Delays Manned Red Planet Mission to 2026 Read More » Arctic Sea Ice's Winter Peak Is Lowest on Record Read More » Richard III Reburial Celebration Starts Sunday Read More » | ||||
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