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July was hottest month recorded worldwide: U.S. scientists Read More » Ghostly Particles from Outer Space Detected in Antarctica Read More » Bad Habits Put Many Contact-Lens Wearers at Risk of Eye Infection Most Americans who wear contacts have bad hygiene habits with their lenses that could increase their risk of eye infection, according to a new report. About 99 percent reported engaging in habits known to increase their risk of eye infections. For example, 85 percent said they showered with their contact lenses, 61 percent reported swimming with their lenses and 35 percent reported rinsing their lenses with water, according to the report, released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Read More »European Rocket Launches 2 Communications Satellites Into Orbit
Massive Aztec human skull rack found in Mexico City Read More » Wormhole Created in Lab Makes Invisible Magnetic Field Read More » 'The Martian' Lands at NASA's Mars Mission Control (Photos) Read More » Lake Mead's Water Sinks to Lowest Level Since 1930s Read More » Can You Trust Wikipedia on Science? That kind of flux isn't unusual: Wikipedia pages on hot-button issues such as global warming and evolution may change much more frequently than pages on less controversial subjects, according to a new study. The findings raise the question: Which science pages on Wikipedia can be trusted? Wikipedia relies on the wisdom of the crowds, allowing anyone to create or edit any Wiki page while others go in and tweak, update or delete revisions. Read More »Science will prevail in doping firestorm - WADA chief Read More » Are Vitamin E Supplements Healthy or Harmful? Dr. John Swartzberg is an internist and specialist in infectious disease and chairman of the editorial board of the UC Berkeley Wellness Letter and berkeleywellness.com. It's been nearly a century since researchers at the University of California, Berkeley discovered vitamin E, and since then, many studies have looked at the potential health benefits of this antioxidant. Over the years, supplement makers and some researchers predicted that vitamin E would help prevent cancer, heart disease and Alzheimer's disease, as well as help maintain eyesight and keep skin glowing. Read More »Why Magnetars Should Freak You Out Read More » Parents, Choose the Shot: Every Newborn Needs Lifesaving Vitamin K Read More » Science will prevail in doping firestorm - WADA chief Read More » Why California's Droughts are Just Going to Get Worse (Op-Ed) Read More » 3 Critical Fixes for the US Health Care System (Op-Ed) Anmol Madan is co-founder and CEO of Ginger.io, which provides digital mental health support for people with depression and anxiety. Madan has published extensively on modeling large-scale human behaviour using statistical models and pattern recognition, and is a frequent speaker on behavioral analytics, machine learning, data privacy and health care entrepreneurship. Read More »Women's Libido Pill Faces Skepticism After Approval Read More » Breast-Fed Babies Show Buildup of Potentially Harmful Chemical Scientists have found that a widespread and potentially harmful class of industrial chemicals accumulates easily in human breast milk and can build up to worrying levels in infants who are breast-fed. For human infants, protein-rich breast milk appears to be the major source of PFAS exposure. In the new study, scientists at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health in Boston and Danish institutions found that in children exclusively breast-fed, PFAS concentrations in their blood increased by about 20 to 30 percent each month. Read More »Plague Cases in California: What's Behind the Rise? After nearly 10 years without any cases of plague, California has seen two people contract the age-old illness already this summer. Experts say it's hard to know why there are more cases of plague in California this year than in recent years. A number of factors — including the behavior of people or rodents, or even the California drought — could play a role in the cases of this bacterial infection. Read More »German scientists find rare dinosaur tracks By Josie Le Blond BERLIN (Reuters) - German scientists have found an unusually long trail of footprints from a 30-tonne dinosaur in an abandoned quarry in Lower Saxony, a discovery they think could be around 145 million years old. "It's very unusual how long the trail is and what great condition it's in," excavation leader Benjamin Englich told Reuters at the site, referring to 90 uninterrupted footprints stretching over 50 metres. Englich said the elephant-like tracks were stomped into the ground sometime between 135 and 145 million years ago by a sauropod - a class of heavy dinosaurs with long necks and tails. Read More »Spot Has Your Back: Dogs Avoid People Who Slight Owners "So far, it is not clear what dogs understand about human interactions," said Marie Nitzschner, a postdoctoral researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Germany, who was not involved in the study. As many dog owners know, the animals eagerly watch people all the time, said the study's senior author, Kazuo Fujita, a professor of psychology and comparative cognition at Kyoto University in Japan. Read More » | ||||
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Friday, August 21, 2015
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Thursday, August 20, 2015
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Japan cargo ship embarks on International Space Center supply mission By Irene Klotz CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla (Reuters) - After three botched missions to resupply the International Space Center since October, an unmanned cargo ship blasted off from southern Japan on Wednesday with food, water and gear needed to keep the research station and its crew functioning. A 19-story H-2B rocket lifted off from the Tanegashima Space Center at 1150 GMT and put the HTV capsule into orbit 15 minutes later, a NASA Television broadcast showed. Japanese astronaut Kimiya Yui, who arrived at the outpost last month, will use the station's robot arm on Monday to pluck the capsule from orbit and anchor it to the Harmony module. Read More »Epic Trailer for 'The Martian' Questions the Value of a Human Life in Space Read More » Scientists call for new review of herbicide, cite 'flawed' U.S. regulations U.S. regulators have relied on flawed and outdated research to allow expanded use of an herbicide linked to cancer, and new assessments should be urgently conducted, according to a column published in the New England Journal of Medicine on Wednesday. There are two key factors that necessitate regulatory action to protect human health, according to the column: a sharp increase in herbicide applied to widely planted genetically modified (GMO) crops used in food, and a recent World Health Organization (WHO) determination that the most commonly used herbicide, known as glyphosate, is probably a human carcinogen. The opinion piece was written by Dr. Philip Landrigan, a Harvard-educated paediatrician and epidemiologist who is Dean for Global Health at the Mount Sinai Medical Centre in New York, and Chuck Benbrook, an adjunct professor at Washington State University's crops and soil science department. Read More »Scientists call for new review of herbicide, cite 'flawed' U.S. regulations U.S. regulators have relied on flawed and outdated research to allow expanded use of an herbicide linked to cancer, and new assessments should be urgently conducted, according to a column published in the New England Journal of Medicine on Wednesday. There are two key factors that necessitate regulatory action to protect human health, according to the column: a sharp increase in herbicide applied to widely planted genetically modified (GMO) crops used in food, and a recent World Health Organization (WHO) determination that the most commonly used herbicide, known as glyphosate, is probably a human carcinogen. The opinion piece was written by Dr. Philip Landrigan, a Harvard-educated pediatrician and epidemiologist who is Dean for Global Health at the Mount Sinai Medical Center in New York, and Chuck Benbrook, an adjunct professor at Washington State University's crops and soil science department. Read More »No Asteroid Is Threatening to Hit Earth Next Month, NASA Says Read More » 'Smart Drug' Modafinil Actually Works, Study Shows The "smart drug" modafinil actually does work for some people, improving their performance on long and complex tasks, also enhancing decision-making and planning skills, a new review of studies finds. Modafinil, also known by its brand name Provigil, is approved by the Food and Drug Administration to treat people with sleep disorders such as narcolepsy. "This is the first overview of modafinil's actions in non-sleep-deprived individuals since 2008, and so we were able to include a lot of recent data," Ruairidh McLennan Battleday, a co-author of the new review and a lecturer at the University of Oxford in England, said in a statement. Read More »New GMO Controversy: Are the Herbicides Dangerous? Although genetically modified organisms (GMOs) don't appear by themselves to have ill effects on human health, the herbicides used on these crops could be an overlooked health threat, some researchers say in a controversial new opinion piece. People have been manipulating genes in plants for centuries, but arguing that this means GMOs are safe "misses the point that GM crops are now the agricultural products most heavily treated with herbicides, and that two of these herbicides may pose risks of cancer," Dr. Philip Landrigan, a professor of preventive medicine at Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York, and Charles Benbrook, a crop and soil scientist at Washington State University, wrote in an opinion article published in the Aug. 20 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM). Read More »Vomit Machine Proves Viruses Can Go Flying Bad news: You know that last stomach bug you picked up, the one that gave you stomach cramps, diarrhea and nausea? "Even though it's a small percentage [of the virus particles] that makes it into the bio-aerosolized form, and the majority is in the liquid form, when you convert these small percentages to absolute numbers, the numbers are large enough that they're above the infectious dose of the norovirus," study researcher Francis de los Reyes III, an environmental engineer at North Carolina State University, told Live Science. Read More »Why the 'Prime Meridian of the World' Shifted Hundreds of Feet Read More » 'Base Jumping' Spider Soars from Rainforest Treetops Read More » Long Misunderstood, Hummingbird Tongue Works Like Micropump Read More » Fire blazes at Paris science museum; 2 firefighters injured
To Pluto and Beyond: Planetarium Show Wows Space Fans Read More » Curiosity Rover Snaps Awesome Selfies on Mars During Mountain Trek
Detecting Ripples in Space-Time, with a Little Help from Einstein Read More » Denver's 'Corpse Flower' Really Does Smell Like Rotting Meat Read More » Skin Cancer More Aggressive with Fewer Moles Present Read More » Post-Workout Ice Baths May Weaken Muscles Taking a post-workout ice bath — a technique promoted for relieving muscle soreness — may actually reduce gains in muscle mass and strength, a small new study suggests. The other half cooled down actively, by riding exercise bikes after each workout. The researchers found that, at the end of the study, muscle strength and mass increased more in the men who cooled down on exercise bikes than in those who took ice baths. Read More »Giant 'Battle Bot' Could Get Makeover Ahead of Epic Duel Read More » Land Vanishes Under Monsoon Floods in New Satellite Image Read More » You Can Send Your Name to Mars Aboard NASA's InSight Lander Read More » Where Are All the Dark Energy and Dark Matter? Read More » | ||||||
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