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Mass Grave Suggests Ancient Village Wiped Out by Massacre Read More » Wild Inflatable Space Elevator Idea Could Lift People 12 Miles Up Read More » Medicine's Dark Side: Docs' Bad Behavior Exposed The reason for publishing these accounts is to expose "dark underbelly" of medicine, and to encourage health professionals to speak up when they see such inappropriate behavior, according to the editors of the journal, Annals of Internal Medicine. In the essay, an anonymous author described one day when he was teaching a medical humanities class to medical students. One medical student, named David in the essay, spoke up and said that something happened to him that he can't forgive. Read More »Illumina partners with private equity firm on gene JV: sources Gene-sequencing giant Illumina Inc, private equity firm Warburg Pincus LLC and venture capital firm Sutter Hill Ventures have agreed to invest $100 million to seed a new consumer-facing human genome platform called Helix, according to people familiar with the deal. San Francisco-based Helix aims to provide a new kind of environment that will sequence, store and analyze individuals' genetic data and provide a marketplace of services through various partners, allowing people to explore their geneology or understand their risk for inherited disease. To accomplish that, Helix plans to create one of the world's largest next-generation DNA sequencing labs and make the data accessible on a secure and protected database. Read More »'Sea Monster' Figurehead Hauled from the Baltic Sea Read More » Constellation Sagittarius: Archer, Dipper or Teapot? Read More » Are Smart Mini Sensors the Next Big Thing? (Op-Ed) Dror Sharon is co-founder and CEO of Consumer Physics, developer of the SCiO palm-size molecular sensor. An electrical engineer, Sharon has previously served in leadership positions at two VC-backed hardware and optics startups and was an early stage technology investor. This Op-Ed is part of a series provided by the World Economic Forum Technology Pioneers, class of 2015. Read More »The Dangers of Going Gluten-Free (Op-Ed) This article is an exclusive for Live Science's Expert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights. More and more Americans are on the anti-wheat warpath trend, as the label "gluten free" appears on everything from craft beer to cat food. For those with celiac disease, a life-threatening autoimmune disorder that destroys the gastrointestinal tract, going gluten-free is critical to avoid damage to the small intestine. Such facts haven't stopped the food industry from taking advantage of the trend, and gluten-free products have grown to represent a $9 billion market in 2014, according to the Burdock Group, which specializes in food market research, among other issues. Read More »'Young Jupiter' 51 Eridani b: Why Directly Imaging an Exoplanet Is Big (Kavli Q+A) Read More » Swim On! Rescued Great White Shark Likely Still Alive Read More » People with ALS May Consume More Calories, But Weigh Less People with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) are known to experience changes in their metabolism after their diagnosis — for example, they burn more calories while at rest. In the study, the researchers surveyed about 670 people with ALS, also known as Lou Gehrig's disease, shortly after their diagnosis. The researchers found that before their symptoms started, the people with ALS had a higher calorie intake — consuming an average of 2,258 calories a day — than those who didn't develop ALS, who consumed an average of 2,119 calories per day. Read More »How to Combat the Global Cybercrime Wave (Op-Ed) Dmitri Alperovitch is a computer security researcher and co-founder & CTO of CrowdStrike Inc., which provides cloud-based endpoint protection. This Op-Ed is part of a series provided by the World Economic Forum Technology Pioneers, class of 2015. Alperovitch contributed this article to Live Science's Expert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights. Read More »Paying for Nature's Bounty? It May be the Cheaper Alternative (Op-Ed) Jane Carter Ingram is director of the Ecosystems Services Program for the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS). The recent encyclical "On Care for Our Common Home" by Pope Francis focused attention on the critical importance of our natural environment. Water filtration is a perfect example. Read More »Confederate Warship, Weapons Recovered from Georgia River Read More » Mom's Bacteria During Pregnancy Linked with Preterm Birth The bacteria in a pregnant woman's body may provide clues to her risk of going into labor early, according to a new study. Researchers found that the pregnant women in the study with lower levels of bacteria called Lactobacillus in the vagina had an increased risk of preterm labor, compared with women whose vaginal bacterial communities were rich in this type of bacteria. Moreover, among the women with lower levels of Lactobacillus, a higher abundance of two other bacterial species — Gardnerella and Ureaplasma — was tied to an even more pronounced risk of preterm labor, the investigators found. Read More »World's First Flowers May Have Bloomed Underwater Read More » Big Human Relative Sported Modern Hands Read More » | ||||
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Tuesday, August 18, 2015
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Monday, August 17, 2015
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Human bones in Pennsylvania thought to be from 1918 flu pandemic Read More » Hiking in Bear Country? How to Prevent an Attack News of a grizzly bear attacking a 63-year-old man, who was a skilled hiker, in Yellowstone on Friday (Aug. 7), may have even avid adventurers wondering what's the best way to escape the long and curved claws of such a wild animal. It's unclear how Lance Crosby, who had worked five seasons with Medcor, a company that runs three urgent-care clinics in the park, died. "But the preliminary results show that he was attacked by at least one grizzly bear," according to a National Park Service (NPS) statement. Read More »Medieval Earthquake Moved River 12 Miles Read More » Megacity: Beijing Quadrupled in Size in 10 Years Read More » Why Your Eyes Dart Around When Dreaming The vivid, bizarre images that infuse dreams are formed when people make the darting, rapid eye movements characteristic of a certain stage of sleep, new research suggests. The findings confirm a long-held scientific hypothesis that such rapid eye movements during sleep reflect a person viewing their dream-world in the same way that they would take in a scene when awake. "There was this idea that we scan the dream image, or the mental image when we dream," said study co-author Yuval Nir, a sleep researcher and neuroscientist at Tel Aviv University in Israel. Read More »Spacecraft Makes Final Close Flyby of Saturn Moon Dione Today Read More » Why Do Breakups Hurt More for Women? Blame Evolution Women tend to feel the emotional pain associated with a breakup more acutely than men, but men take longer to "get over" their former lover, according to researchers from Binghamton University and University College London, both in the United Kingdom. For the study, the researchers asked 5,705 people in 96 countries to rate the physical and emotional pain they felt after a breakup on a scale from 1 (no pain) to 10 (unbearable pain). On average, women ranked their emotional pain — including feelings like sadness and depression, as well as anxiety, fear and loss of focus — as being slightly higher than those of their male counterparts (a score of 6.84 versus 6.58). Read More »Hatfields & McCoys Gather (Peacefully) to Unearth Relics at Last Battle Site Those doing the excavating in Pike County, Kentucky, are the Hatfields and McCoys — two families that are infamous in the United States for their epic feud, which began around the time of the Civil War and ended in 1891 after several decades of violence that claimed at least a dozen lives. In 2012, the Hatfields and McCoys were featured on National Geographic Channel's "Diggers," a show that follows two amateur relic hunters around the U.S. as they search for historical objects buried in the dirt. The feud between the Hatfields and McCoys came to a head on New Year's night 1888, when members of the Hatfield clan set fire to Randolph McCoy's home, resulting in the death of two McCoys. Read More »Astronomical Sleuths Investigate Famous Times Square Kissers An unlikely group of scientists, including physicists and astronomers, is helping solve one of history's most romantic mysteries: Who are the sailor and the woman in white seen kissing in the iconic "V-J Day in Times Square" photo? Taken 70 years ago today, on Aug. 14, 1945, and published later in Life magazine, the photo is synonymous with the end of World War II and Victory over Japan Day, or V-J Day. In the United States, V-J Day is celebrated on Sept. 2, the day Japan signed the official surrender documents. Read More »Asia's Rapidly Shrinking Glaciers Could Have Ripple Effect Read More » How a Tick Bite Can Lead to Limb Amputations A woman in Oklahoma who contracted Rocky Mountain spotted fever from a tick bite recently needed to have all four of her limbs amputated as a result of her infection. The woman, 40-year-old Jo Rogers, may have been bitten by a tick while on vacation in Grand Lake, Oklahoma, in early July. Doctors tested her for West Nile virus, meningitis and other infections before finally diagnosing her with Rocky Mountain spotted fever, which is caused by the bacteria Rickettsia rickettsia and transmitted by ticks. Read More »Smart People Live Longer — Here's Why Smarter people tend to live longer than those with less luck in the intelligence department. About 95 percent of the relationship between intelligence and longevity is explained by genetic influences on both traits, researchers reported July 26 in the International Journal of Epidemiology. The study was somewhat limited in that most of the participants took intelligence tests during middle age, rather than in their youth. Read More »New Temperature Record Is Huge Achievement for Superconducting A new record-high temperature has been achieved for superconductors — extraordinary materials that conduct electricity without dissipating energy. The advance may be an important step in the long-standing quest to achieve a room-temperature superconductor, which could cities build vastly more efficient power grids, researchers say. Superconductors are materials that conduct electricity with zero resistance below a certain temperature. Read More »My Planet from Space: UN Photo Exhibit Showcases Earth's Stunning Beauty Read More » NASA Extracting Tanks from Retired Shuttle Endeavour for Use on Space Station Read More » | ||||
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