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Scientists: Mussels, without noses, use smell to find homes
Where Is the Most Lightning-Prone Place in the World? Lake Maracaibo in Venezuela has a new claim to fame: This large bay has been revealed as the lightning capital of the world, with storms lighting up the skies almost 300 nights each year, according to a NASA study. The largest lake in South America, Lake Maracaibo sits along the northern Andes Mountains, where the mountains form a natural barrier, pushing air up and mixing it with warm, moist air above the lake to create nocturnal thunderstorms. Researchers found that the lake gets 603 bolts of lightning per square mile (233 bolts per square kilometer) every year. Read More »Get 'Bionic Hearing' with New Smart Earbuds Read More » | ||||
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Tuesday, May 10, 2016
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
Monday, May 9, 2016
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
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520-Million-Year-Old Fossil Larva Preserved in 3D Read More » Oldest Crystals on Earth Originated in Asteroid Craters Read More » Head Games: This Male Spider Is an Oral Sex Champ Read More » Fearsome Dinosaur-Age 'Hammerhead' Reptile Ate … Plants? Read More » Splat! Paintball Blow Causes Liver Damage in Teen A game of paintball had an unfortunate ending when a teen in England wound up needing liver surgery after being struck in the abdomen, according to a new report of the young man's case. The injury was the first instance of a person suffering liver damage from playing paintball, the doctors who treated the teen wrote in their report of his case, published May 5 in the journal BMJ Case Reports. Based on the patient's symptoms, the doctors there diagnosed him with appendicitis. Read More »The Universe Has Probably Hosted Many Alien Civilizations: Study Many other planets throughout the universe probably hosted intelligent life long before Earth did, a new study suggests. The probability of a civilization developing on a potentially habitable alien planet would have to be less than one in 10 billion trillion — or one part in 10 to the 22nd power — for humanity to be the first technologically advanced species the cosmos has ever known, according to the study. "To me, this implies that other intelligent, technology-producing species very likely have evolved before us," said lead author Adam Frank, a professor of physics and astronomy at the University of Rochester in New York. Read More »How Cultural Pressures May Affect Your Sleep Habits Our biological clocks may not dictate our bedtimes, but they do influence when we wake up in the morning, a new study finds. However, people's wake-up times are still highly dependent on their biological clocks, as opposed to just on their morning responsibilities, such as going to work or school, the researchers said. The new findings show that "bedtime is more under the control of society, and wake time is more under the control of the [biological] clock," Olivia Walch, a graduate student at the University of Michigan and a co-author of the study, told Live Science. Read More »Bionic Implant Improves Vision for Some Eye Patients It may sound like something out of "Star Trek": Doctors have implanted a device in patients that has restored some central vision after advanced eye disease left those individuals with only limited peripheral vision. This is the first time that artificial and natural vision has ever been integrated in humans, the U.K.-based research team said. The study was small and preliminary, involving only four patients with age-related macular degeneration (AMD). Read More »Christina's Diagnosis: Famous Painting Gets New Look It ranks as one of the most iconic paintings in modern American history: Andrew Wyeth's 1948 "Christina's World" depicting a woman crawling across a bleak, rural landscape with her sights focused on a distant, gray farmhouse. Wyeth's inspiration for the painting was his real-life friend and neighbor, Anna Christina Olson, a lifelong resident of the Cushing, Maine, farm on which she's pictured. Now, after being challenged to diagnose Olson's condition, neurologist Dr. Marc Patterson of the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, said it was very unlikely that Olson had polio. Read More »Scientists peel back the carrot's genetic secrets Read More » Scientists peel back the carrot's genetic secrets Read More » Gorgeous New Mercury Maps Showcase Planet's Striking Features Read More » Earthlings watch as tiny Mercury sails past the sun Read More » | ||||
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Sunday, May 8, 2016
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'Boaty McBoatface' Vessel Named for David Attenborough Read More » Mercury poised for rare 'transit' across sun's face on Monday By Irene Klotz CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (Reuters) - Stargazers will have a rare opportunity on Monday to witness Mercury fly directly across the face of the sun, a sight that unfolds once every 10 years or so, as Earth and its smaller neighboring planet come into perfect alignment. The best vantage points to observe the celestial event, known to astronomers as a transit, are eastern North America, South America, Western Europe and Africa, assuming clouds are not obscuring the sun. In those regions, the entire transit will occur during daylight hours, according to Sky and Telescope magazine. Read More »U.S. traders reject GMO crops that lack global approval Read More » The Mercury Transit of the Sun on Monday is a Science Smorgasbord Read More » Mercury Transit: The History and Science of This Rare Celestial Event Read More » | ||||
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