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Peanut-Shaped Asteroid Zooms Past Earth in Incredible Video
How to Get Electricity to 300 Million People in India, Without Fossil Fuels The company provides carbon capture technologies to chemical, power and natural-gas plants. This Op-Ed is part of a series provided by the World Economic Forum Technology Pioneers, class of 2015. In the fight against climate change, the world needs a global accord to eliminate carbon dioxide emissions. Read More »An Encrypted Internet Is a Basic Human Right (Op-Ed) Nico Sell is co-founder and co-chairman of Wickr Inc. This Op-Ed is part of a series provided by the World Economic Forum Technology Pioneers, class of 2015. George Washington could have become a king, but instead devoted his life to giving power back to the people. Technology, as well as the hopes it fuels, has empowered millions of people across the globe to demand social and political change from some of its most oppressive governments. Read More »Helping Kids Beat the Summertime Bulge During long summer vacations from school, children are often home all day, watching television, playing video games and surfing the Internet. Therefore, during long, hot summers, America's children — especially those who prefer indoor and sedentary activities — can gain weight. If they lose the weight when school resumes, they may find themselves beginning a yo-yo weight cycle that lasts for years and results in obesity. Read More »Butter, Gravy and Sweet Tea? Southern Foods Tied to Heart Risks Adults who chow down on traditional Southern foods — such as fried chicken, gravy-smothered liver, buttered rolls and sweet tea — may be at an increased risk of acute heart disease, a new study finds. During the study, there were 536 cases of acute heart disease, which included fatal and nonfatal heart attacks. After controlling for other factors that may influence people's risk of heart disease — such as their level of education, income, physical activity, smoking and age — the researchers found that the people who frequently ate Southern fare were 56 percent more likely to have a heart attack or die from heart disease during the almost six-year study than those who ate it less. Read More »Spacewalking Cosmonauts Give Space Station Window a Shine Read More » Beautiful, Rat-Filled Island Seen From Space Read More » Lightning Can Warp Rocks at Their Core Read More » Thirsty Butterflies Disappearing from the UK Read More » It's Official: The Universe Is Dying Slowly Read More » Perseid Meteor Shower Gets a Boost from Dark Moon, Jupiter Read More » Publicly Chosen Names for Alien Planets to Be Announced Today Read More » Scientists say fetal tissue essential for medical research Read More » Biggest Art Heist Ever: Will Released Tape Bring Paintings Back? Read More » | ||||
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Tuesday, August 11, 2015
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Monday, August 10, 2015
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Is That Really Alien Life? Scientists Worry Over False-Positive Signs Read More » Alien of the Deep Has Needle-Sharp Teeth & a Shiny Head Lure Read More » Why 10,000-Year-Old Gravity-Defying Rocks Haven't Toppled Read More » Space Station Cosmonauts Taking Spacewalk Today: Watch It Live Read More » 'Fantastic Four' Jettisons Space-Age Origins of Marvel's First Family Read More » Woman Loses Vision After Mosquito Bites A woman who caught chikungunya fever while vacationing in the Caribbean wound up losing some of the vision in her right eye permanently, according to a new report of her case. The findings suggest that vision problems may be an underreported effect of the mosquito-transmitted virus, which has spread in recent years from Africa and Asia to the Caribbean, Latin America and parts of the United States, the report's authors said. "Sight-threatening visual loss can be a late complication of infection with chikungunya," said Dr. Abhijit Mohite, who treated the woman and co-authored the report of her case. Read More »Want 1, 2 or 3 Kids? Study Estimates When to Start Building Your Family More and more couples are postponing having children as they try to balance their careers and other life goals with their desire to have kids. Researchers estimated the maximum age at which a woman should start trying to become pregnant, depending on how many children she wants to have and whether she is open to using in vitro fertilization (IVF), given that fertility declines progressively with a woman's age. For example, the results showed that couples who want a 90 percent chance of having at least one child and who don't want to use IVF should start trying to get pregnant no later than when the woman is 32. Read More »Ancient Mayan Tablet with Hieroglyphics Honors Lowly King Read More » 5 Ways Cecil the Lion Helped Scientists Understand Big Cats When an American big-game hunter shot and killed a famous lion named Cecil in Zimbabwe last month, he did more than kill an animal — he killed an important research subject. Cecil, a 13-year-old male Southwest African lion, had been part of an ecological study in Zimbabwe's Hwange National Park since 2008. The initiative was developed by researchers at the University of Oxford in the United Kingdom, and is one of several conservation projects managed by the university's Wildlife Conservation Research Unit (WildCRU). Read More »Nepal Quake Could Have Been Much Deadlier, Scientists Say Read More » US House panel asks NASA why it isn't probing SpaceX blast Read More » Cosmonauts embark on six-hour spacewalk outside ISS Read More » Tesla Unveils Snakelike Robot Charger for Electric Cars Read More » Astronauts Snack on Space-Grown Lettuce for First Time Read More » New tadpole disease affecting frogs across globe, scientists find Tadpoles are contracting a new, highly infectious disease that may be threatening frog populations worldwide, British scientists have found. A parasitic disease caused by single-celled microbes known as "protists" was found in the livers of tadpole samples taken from six countries across three continents, the scientists said in a study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Journal on Monday. "Global frog populations are suffering serious declines and infectious disease has been shown to be a significant factor," said Thomas Richards of Exeter University, who co-led the study. Read More »New tadpole disease affecting frogs across globe, scientists find Read More » | ||||
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