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The 10 Strangest Animal Discoveries of 2015
Pocket-Size Device Turns Smartphone into a High-Powered Microscope Read More » Turtles' Wayward Travels May Mean BP Oil Spill's Impact Was Global Read More » From Blood Rain to Green Poo: 10 Weirdest Science Stories of 2015 Read More » HyQ2Max: the robot you can't keep down Step forward HyQ2Max - the latest and most powerful four-legged robot to come out of the Italian Institute of Technology (IIT). Animal-like in posture and movement, HyQ2Max is an improved version of their hydraulic quadruped robot HyQ. Read More »Smart wheelchair moves by dummy sucks A Barcelona-based disability foundation has created an intelligent chair so that severely disabled children can better explore their surroundings. Previous models of wheelchair were usually joystick-operated and were unusable for children without the necessary motor skills or with limited awareness of their environment. This model of wheelchair responds to voice command, head movement, or sucks of a dummy. Read More »Ram Statue Unearthed on Christmas Eve May Represent Jesus Read More » New Kind of Hydrothermal Vent Forms Ghostly Chimneys Read More » Russia to rewrite space program as economic crisis bites By Dmitry Solovyov MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia is to revise its space program, the national space agency said on Tuesday after a newspaper published a report that billions of dollars of cuts may be afoot including to ambitious Moon exploration plans. Several Russian government ministries were engaged in revising the space program up to 2025, Roscosmos said in a written statement to Reuters. The authoritative Izvestia newspaper published details of what it said was a draft proposal sent by Roscosmos to the government which showed big spending cuts were being proposed to the Moon exploration program. Read More » | ||||
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Tuesday, December 29, 2015
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Monday, December 28, 2015
Venomous Sea Snake Washes Up on California Beach, Surprising Scientists
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12 Flavors of Rainbows Identified
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Huh? Could Cleaner Air Be Worsening Global Warming?
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Ancient Mom: Oldest Brood of Preserved Embryos Found
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Venomous Sea Snake Washes Up on California Beach, Surprising Scientists
A venomous sea snake washed up on a Southern California beach recently, striking fear in the hearts of beachgoers but eliciting excitement from the scientists who study these marine reptiles. The stranded snake, which was dead when it was discovered on Dec. 12, was a yellow-bellied sea snake (Pelamis platura), the most widespread marine snake in the world. "North of the tip of Baja [California], we have only five documented observations of this snake ever. Read More »
'Writable' Circuits Could Let Scientists Draw Electronics into Existence
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Thursday, December 24, 2015
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Curbing Premature Birth May Hinge on a Single Molecule Blocking a molecule in the uterus could delay or even halt premature birth, the leading cause of death and disability of newborns worldwide, according to a new study in rodents. As many as 3 percent are born quite prematurely, after less than 31 weeks of pregnancy, said study co-senior author Dr. David Cornfield, a pediatric pulmonary medicine physician and scientist at Stanford University in California. Premature birth can lead to major problems because many organs, including the brain, lungs, and liver, need the final weeks of pregnancy to fully develop. Read More »US Twin Birthrate Hits All-Time High The country's twin birthrate hit 33.9 twins per 1,000 births in 2014, up from 33.7 twins per 1,000 births in 2013, according to the report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The "twinning rate" has nearly doubled since 1980, when the rate was 18.9 twins per 1,000 births, the researchers wrote in their report, published today (Dec. 23) by the CDC's National Center for Health Statistics. However, the birthrates of triplets and higher-order births declined in 2014, from 119.5 per 100,000 in 2013 to 113.5 per 100,000 in 2014 — the lowest rate in 20 years and down more than 40 percent from the peak in 1998, when the birth rate of triplets and higher-order births reached a record 193.5 per 100,000, according to the report. Read More »Stem Cells May Save Northern White Rhinos Read More » Gilman, 1994 Nobel Prize-winning scientist in Texas, dies DALLAS (AP) — Dr. Alfred Gilman, a 1994 Nobel Prize-winning scientist and former dean of the University of Texas Southwestern Medical School, has died after a lengthy illness. He was 74. Read More » | ||||
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Wednesday, December 23, 2015
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Toddler Tech Pros? 2-Year-Olds Adept at Touch Screens Kim Kardashian recently blamed her 2-year-old daughter, North, for posting a photo to Kardashian's Instagram account — but can toddlers really use touch screens? In the study, 91 percent of parents with touch-screen devices, such as smartphones or tablets, reported that their toddlers were able to swipe on the devices. "Children as young as 12 months of age are able to use [touch-screen] devices, and by 24 months have developed an array of skills allowing them to interact purposefully with a touch screen," the researchers wrote. Read More »Hail the Hydra, an Animal That May Be Immortal Read More » 2 'Extinct' Sea Snakes Discovered Off Australian Coast Read More » Evil-Thwarting 'Rattles' Found in Prehistoric Infant's Grave Read More » Oh, Rats: Pet Rodent's Bite Gives Teen Rare Fever A teenage girl who was scratched when breaking up a scuffle among her three pet rats wound up in the hospital with an extremely rare case of rat-bite fever. The infection, which is caused by a bacterium found in rat saliva, generally causes fever, joint pain and rash, and is fatal in up to 13 percent of cases, according to the report of the young woman's case. Rat-bite fever, which was described in writings dating back 2,300 years, is rare: Only about 200 cases of the disease have been reported in the past 150 years, the authors wrote in their report, published today (Dec. 22) in the journal BMJ Case Reports. Read More »Skin-to-Skin 'Kangaroo-Style' Care May Benefit Newborns' Health Babies born with a low birth weight who are regularly held by their mothers skin-to-skin — or "kangaroo style" — may have a lower risk of dying prematurely, according to a new analysis of previous research. In the analysis, researchers looked at 124 studies that examined the relationship between so-called kangaroo mother care and health outcomes in newborns. Newborns born at a low birth weight — less than 4.4 lbs. (2 kilograms) — who received kangaroo mother care had a 36 percent lower chance of dying prematurely, compared with low-birth-weight newborns who did not receive such care, the researchers found. Read More » | ||||
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