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How mushrooms fueled a scientist's flight out of North Korea HWASEONG, South Korea (AP) — Lee T.B. fled North Korea not because he suffered from dire poverty or persecution at home, as many other defectors have. He did it for mushrooms, and to fulfill his wife's dying wish. Read More »Solar plane lands in Spain after three-day Atlantic crossing Read More » Screwworm Sex Wins 'Golden Goose' Award for Unusual Research Read More » Sharks Near You? Global Survey Reveals Predators' Top Spots Read More » In Shellfish, Cancer Can Be Contagious Read More » Virtual Reality Could Be Film's Next 'New Wave' Read More » Hair on Demand: Researchers Create 3D-Printed Fur Read More » 17th-Century French Ship Gets New Berth: A Texas Museum Read More » Previous exposure to dengue may make Zika worse, scientists find * Findings may explain why current Zika outbreak is severe * Dengue virus is also carried by mosquitoes * Dengue antibodies attach to Zika, but only partially By Kate Kelland LONDON, June 23 (Reuters) - Scientists studying the Zika outbreak in Brazil say previous exposure to another mosquito-borne virus, dengue, may exacerbate the potency of Zika infection. The scientists said their results, published in the journal Nature Immunology, suggested that some dengue antibodies can recognise and bind to Zika due to the similarities between the two viruses, but that these antibodies may also amplify Zika infection in a phenomenon called antibody-dependent enhancement. Read More »Previous exposure to dengue may make Zika worse, scientists find Read More » Human skin cells used in animal-free cosmetic tests By Matthew Stock A UK-based laboratory is working to eradicate animal testing in the cosmetics industry by developing alternative methods which are not only cruelty-free but more scientifically advanced than other current tests. XCellR8 uses scaffolds of cells from human skin donated by plastic surgery patients, which they say are ideally suited to testing cosmetic products. "For skin irritation testing the cells are isolated from human skin that has been donated by people who have had plastic surgery and they've said that they're quite happy for the tissue to be used for research purposes. Read More »Previous exposure to dengue may make Zika worse, scientists find By Kate Kelland LONDON (Reuters) - Scientists studying the Zika outbreak in Brazil say previous exposure to another mosquito-borne virus, dengue, may exacerbate the potency of Zika infection. The scientists said their results, published in the journal Nature Immunology, suggested that some dengue antibodies can recognize and bind to Zika due to the similarities between the two viruses, but that these antibodies may also amplify Zika infection in a phenomenon called antibody-dependent enhancement. This effect is already known with dengue, they said, and is thought to explain why, when a person gets dengue fever a second time, the infection is often more serious than the first. Read More » | ||||
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Thursday, June 23, 2016
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Wednesday, June 22, 2016
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India launches 20 satellites at one go; most to serve U.S. customers India successfully launched 20 satellites in a single mission on Wednesday, with most of them set to serve international customers as the South Asian country pursues a bigger share of the $300 billion global space industry. It was the most satellites India has put in space at one go, though Russia set the record of 37 for a single launch in 2014. Prime Minister Narendra Modi described the launch as "a monumental accomplishment" for the state-run Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO). Read More »Stem cell scientist suspected of involuntary manslaughter STOCKHOLM (AP) — Swedish prosecutors say a disgraced stem cell scientist is facing preliminary charges of involuntary manslaughter in connection with two patients who died after windpipe transplants. Read More »Human flights to Mars still at least 15 years off: ESA head Read More » Male Doctors, Female Nurses: Subconscious Stereotypes Hard to Budge Read More » Bizarre, Long-Headed Woman from Ancient Kingdom Revealed Read More » Rays Don't Stray: Giant Mantas Stick Close to Home Read More » Augmented-Reality Diving Helmets Join the US Navy Read More » Ancient Greek Naval Base Held Hundreds of Warships
Lost 5,000-Year-Old Neolithic Figurine Rediscovered in Scotland Read More » E.T. Phones Earth? 1,500 Years Until Contact, Experts Estimate Read More » | ||||
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Tuesday, June 21, 2016
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Deadly Degrees: Why Heat Waves Kill So Quickly Read More » Blame the Parents? Child Tragedies Reveal Empathy Decline Read More » Great Pyramid of Giza Is Slightly Lopsided Read More » British astronaut Tim Peake would return to space station 'in a heartbeat' Read More » Tour Secret WWII Lab with Manhattan Project App Read More » Brain Tumor Risk Linked with Higher Education, Study Finds People with higher levels of education may be more likely to develop certain types of brain tumors, a new study from Sweden suggests. Researchers found that women who completed at least three years of university courses were 23 percent more likely to develop a type of cancerous brain tumor called glioma, compared with women who only completed up to nine years of mandatory education and did not go to a university. Read More »Centuries-old African soil technique could combat climate change - scientists By Kieran Guilbert DAKAR (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - A farming technique practised for centuries in West Africa, which transforms nutrient-poor rainforest soil into fertile farmland, could combat climate change and revolutionise farming across the continent, researchers said on Tuesday. Adding kitchen waste and charcoal to tropical soil can turn it into fertile, black soil which traps carbon and reduces emissions of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, according to a study carried out by the University of Sussex in England. The soils produced by the 700-year-old practice, known as "African dark earths", contain up to 300 percent more organic carbon than other soils, and are capable of supporting far more intensive farming, said the anthropologist behind the study. Read More »Europe's robots to become 'electronic persons' under draft plan Read More » Centuries-old African soil technique could combat climate change - scientists By Kieran Guilbert DAKAR (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - A farming technique practised for centuries in West Africa, which transforms nutrient-poor rainforest soil into fertile farmland, could combat climate change and revolutionise farming across the continent, researchers said on Tuesday. Adding kitchen waste and charcoal to tropical soil can turn it into fertile, black soil which traps carbon and reduces emissions of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, according to a study carried out by the University of Sussex in England. The soils produced by the 700-year-old practice, known as "African dark earths", contain up to 300 percent more organic carbon than other soils, and are capable of supporting far more intensive farming, said the anthropologist behind the study. Read More » | ||||
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