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'Big Bang' particle collider restarts after refit: CERN Read More » CERN restarts 'Big Bang' collider after two-year refit Read More » CERN restarts "Big Bang" collider after two-year refit Read More » How Easter Helped Bring Down a Medical Myth About Ulcers Some people will celebrate Easter this Sunday. Some scientists, meanwhile, will celebrate the birthday of the humble bacterium Helicobacter pylori. H. pylori infects more than half of the world's population. Many people who carry the bacterium won't ever experience any symptoms of the infection, but it's the culprit behind most ulcers and many cases of stomach cancer — and it hid, unidentified, inside human stomachs for thousands of years. Read More » | ||||
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Sunday, April 5, 2015
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Saturday, April 4, 2015
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
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World Will Get More Religious by 2050 The world is becoming more religious, as the number of agnostics and others who don't affiliate with a certain religion shrinks as a percentage of the global population. By 2050, just 13 percent of people in the world will say they are unaffiliated, compared with 16 percent who said the same in 2010, according to a new Pew Research Group survey. The United States is an exception, where more Americans are expected to flee organized religion. Islam will grow faster than any other major religion, and at a higher rate than the world population balloons, the survey found. Read More »Shortest Total Lunar Eclipse of the Century Visible Early Saturday Read More » Easter Science: 5 Odd Facts About Eggs Read More » 2011 Japan Tsunami Unleashed Ozone-Destroying Chemicals Read More » Amped-Up Atom Smasher Will Restart This Weekend Read More » Bizarre Syndrome Makes Visitors to Jerusalem Go Crazy Read More » For Some Kids, Easter Egg Hunts Pose Allergy Risk Several children in Florida experienced allergic reactions after they secretly ate chocolate during an Easter egg hunt, without their parents realizing it, according to a new report of the cases. The four children — two boys and two girls, ages 4 to 7 years old — had all previously been diagnosed with a nickel allergy, a condition in which people experience skin rashes when they come in contact with the metal. In each child's case, their symptoms had improved for two to five months, but then they all wound up at the doctor with flare-ups about two to five days after that year's Easter Sunday. "They all came in on the same two-day period," said Dr. Sharon Jacob, a dermatologist who treated the children at the University of Miami. Read More » | ||||
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Friday, April 3, 2015
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Deadly snakes 'milked' to create potent new anti-venom By Mathew Stock LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND / KADUNA, NIGERIA - The puff adder is one of sub-Saharan Africa's most deadly snakes. The venom extracted here is being used to create a potent new anti-venom that could treat bites from every poisonous snake found in the region. Dr. Robert Harrison is leading the research at the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, where they've collected 21 of the region's most lethal snake species - 450 animals in total. "32,000 people are dying from snake bite every year in sub-Saharan Africa. Read More »Oh, baby: study shows how surprises help infants learn "Our hypothesis was that infants might be using these surprising events as special opportunities to learn, and we show that is indeed the case," said cognitive psychologist Aimee Stahl of Baltimore's Johns Hopkins University, whose research appears in the journal Science. The study involved 110 11-month-olds, with roughly equal numbers of girls and boys. Read More »Joni Mitchell's Mysterious Skin Disease: What Causes Morgellons? Read More » How a Zero Gravity Cocktail Glass Could Be Space Hospitality's Future Read More » Manned Mars Mission Plan: Astronauts Could Orbit by 2033, Land by 2039 Read More » U.S. to halt expanded use of some insecticides amid honey bee decline (Reuters) - The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) said on Thursday it was unlikely to approve new or expanded uses of certain pesticides while it evaluates the risks they may pose to honey bees. The EPA notice came the day after Oregon's largest city suspended the use of the pesticides on its property to protect honey bees. The unanimous vote on Wednesday by the Portland City Commission came despite protests from farmers, nursery owners and others who claimed the insecticide was crucial in combating pests that destroy crops and other plants. Portland is among at least eight municipalities that have banned the chemicals. The EPA is conducting an assessment of the six types of neonicotinoids and their impact on honey bees, with its evaluation of four expected by 2018 and the remaining two a year later. Read More »What It Would Be Like to Live on Uranus' Moons Titania and Miranda Read More » What It Would Be Like to Live on Saturn's Moons Titan and Enceladus Read More » Super Species: Animals with Extreme Powers Invade Museum Read More » Total Lunar Eclipse Saturday: How to See the Blood Moon Read More » Anne Frank Likely Died Earlier Than Believed Anne Frank, the young Jewish teenager whose diary became one of the most iconic portrayals of the Holocaust, likely died about a month earlier than her official death date, a new historical analysis finds. The Frank sisters died of typhus at the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp, but the exact dates of their deaths are unknown. Now, the Anne Frank House, an organization devoted to preserving Anne's memory and her family's hiding place in Amsterdam, has released a new study that puts Anne's death in February 1945, earlier than previously believed. During the Nazi occupation of Amsterdam, Annelies Marie Frank and her family spent two years living in a secret apartment in the building where her father, Otto, worked. Read More »Cleaning with Bleach May Lead to Childhood Infections Read More » Odd Tune: Trumpeter's Neck Swells Like a Bullfrog Read More » Drug-Resistant Stomach Bug Increasing in US The bacteria caused several outbreaks in the United States in the past year, according to a new report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The bacteria, called Shigella sonnei, can cause diarrhea, stomach cramps and fever and is typically treated with the antibiotic ciprofloxacin. There was also an outbreak of 95 cases in San Francisco that was not linked with international travel. Shigella causes about half a million cases of diarrhea in the United States each year, and the disease can be spread from person to person, or through contaminated food or water, the CDC says. Read More »Eerie Green Space Clouds Glow in New Hubble Photos Read More » | ||||
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