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MERS, Ebola, bird flu: Science's big missed opportunities Read More » Insight: MERS, Ebola, bird flu: Science's big missed opportunities Read More » What Really Killed Notorious English Leader Oliver Cromwell? Read More » Secular People More Likely to See Science and Religion in Conflict Read More » Is It a Fake? DNA Testing Deepens Mystery of Shroud of Turin Is it a medieval fake or a relic of Jesus Christ? A new analysis of DNA from the Shroud of Turin reveals that people from all over the world have touched the venerated garment. "Individuals from different ethnic groups and geographical locations came into contact with the Shroud [of Turin] either in Europe (France and Turin) or directly in their own lands of origin (Europe, northeast Africa, Caucasus, Anatolia, Middle East and India)," study lead author Gianni Barcaccia, a geneticist at the University of Padua in Italy and lead author of the new study describing the DNA analysis, said in an email. Read More »'Chaos' on Jupiter's Moon Europa Perhaps Spawned by Comet Crashes Read More » James Webb Space Telescope Documentary Will Launch in Early 2016 Read More » Howler Monkeys with Deeper Calls Have Smaller Balls Read More » Plankton poo clue could aid climate predictions By Matthew Stock Scientists from the UK's National Oceanography Center (NOC) have set their sights on unmasking the ocean's 'twilight zone' - the area between 100 and 1000 meters deep where a small amount of the sun's light can still penetrate. This area has proved particularly troublesome for researchers to study, as scientific instruments are typically designed to either sink to the ocean floor or float on the surface. Read More »New Species of Giant Tortoise Found in the Galápagos Read More » Bug-Eating Plant Uses Raindrops to Capture Prey
Crocodiles Might Literally Sleep With One Eye Open Have you heard the expression "better sleep with one eye open?" Crocodiles may take that phrase literally, according to a new study. To stay abreast of potential threats in their environment, crocs sometimes keep an eye open while snoozing, scientists found. Lots of animals close only one eye while sleeping, including birds and some aquatic mammals, said John Lesku, a research fellow at La Trobe University in Australia and one of the authors of the new study. Read More »Organs on Demand? 3D Printers Could Build Hearts, Arteries Read More » Underwater Fossil Graveyard Reveals Toll of Human-Caused Extinction Read More » Plague Began Infecting Humans Much Earlier Than Thought The germ that causes the plague began infecting humans thousands of years earlier than scientists had previously thought. The earliest sample that had plague DNA was from Bronze Age Siberia, and dated back to 2794 B.C., and the latest specimen with plague, from early Iron Age Armenia, dated back to 951 B.C. "We were able to find genuine Yersinia pestisDNA in our samples 3,000 years earlier than what had previously been shown," said Simon Rasmussen, a lead author of the study and a bioinformatician at the Technical University of Denmark. Read More »Off the Deep End: Man's Drunken Lake Dive Bursts His Bladder The injury tore a hole in the 24-year-old's bladder wall, allowing urine to leak into his abdomen, according to a new report of the man's case. Hitting the water with a full bladder was "the equivalent of throwing a water balloon on the sidewalk," said Dr. Bradley Gill, a resident in urology at the Cleveland Clinic who was not involved in treating the patient. The young man's alcohol consumption likely contributed to the injury, Gill told Live Science. Read More »Magnets Might 'Unlock' Paralyzed Arm After Stroke People who suffer a stroke face many physical and emotional hurdles on their long road to recovery. Researchers have found that strong pulses of magnetic energy to the brain, called transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), can be used as probes to identify undamaged, untapped brain regions that may be recruited to move the arm. The stimulation did not cure stroke patients of their paralysis. Read More »Chameleon double vision is a highly coordinated effort Chameleons have many abilities, the most famed of which is their talent to camouflage themselves by changing color. Israeli researchers from the department of neurobiology in the University of Haifa, have recently discovered in laboratory experiments that a chameleon's eyes movements are indeed co-ordinated. "Until now, it was thought to be that chameleons and other vertebrates with lateral placed eyes cannot track two different targets at the same time, cannot divide their attention into two targets at the same time. Read More » | ||||
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Monday, October 26, 2015
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Saturday, October 24, 2015
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Aquarius Dawns: 'Water Boy' Constellation Appears This Week Read More » New Horizons Pluto Probe Heads Toward 2nd Flyby Target Read More » NASA's SLS Rocket Sheds Saturn V Color Scheme in Design Review Read More » Hurricane Patricia: How Big Can Tropical Cyclones Get? Read More » | ||||
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Friday, October 23, 2015
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'Spooky' Halloween Asteroid May Actually Be a Comet Read More » How to Help Someone Who's Addicted to Drugs Odom's experience echoes the worst nightmares of the friends and family of people with drug addictions: a downward spiral, a medical crisis and even the possibility of death. But experts say that friends and family are among the greatest resources drug-addicted people have to help them recover. Convincing someone to seek treatment is often difficult, but it can be done in many cases — and friends and family don't have to wait for the person to hit rock bottom. Read More »Many Ads in Parenting Magazines Show Unsafe Practices for Kids The heartwarming images of children — smiling, laughing out loud and snuggling — that fill the pages of parenting magazines actually hold a less-than-obvious problem: Many of these ads show kids doing things that are not safe. In fact, about one in six advertisements in two of the top-selling parenting magazines in the United States contains images or promotes products that could be considered unsafe for a child's health, a new study reveals. Read More »Scientist eats, drinks and paints simultaneously By Matthew Stock Scientists from Imperial College London have developed computer software that enables a person to control a robotic arm to paint a picture using just the movement of their eyes. The researchers say the technology demonstrates a potential use for robots to help people extend their range of abilities and do more than one task at a time. At the college's Brain and Behavior Lab, engineers have taken a robotic arm and devised a system for it to be used as an extension of the human body. Read More »'Black Death' germ has afflicted humankind longer than suspected Read More » Not Rocket Science! NASA's 3D Camera Could Improve Brain Surgery Read More » 2 Comets Collided to Form Rosetta's 'Rubber Ducky' Target Read More » Cadaver Experiment Suggests Human Hands Evolved for Fighting Read More » Talks on climate deal heat up over bill for global warming BONN, Germany (AP) — The trillion-dollar question of who should pay for global warming is coming to a head in talks on an international climate pact, as developing countries worry they won't get enough money to tackle the problem. Read More »Neil deGrasse Tyson's 'StarTalk' Returns to TV Sunday with Guest Bill Clinton
Ingredients for Life Were Always Present on Earth, Comet Suggests Read More » Astronaut's Watch Worn on the Moon Sells for Record $1.6 Million Read More » Photo of Iceberg that Sank Titanic for Sale: Is It Real? Read More » Howl of a good time: Deep monkey roars come with intimate secret Read More » | ||||
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