Here's one advantage to armadillos' steady northward march across the Southeast United States: They're awfully handy to have as bait if, say, you're a wildlife biologist looking to trap an alligator that has inexplicably settled into your local pond in north Georgia. [More]
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Feed SubscriptionWhen Hackers Knocked Out the Lights [Slide Show]
Computers now control even the largest pieces of industrial machinery, making critical infrastructure vulnerable to electronic attack.
Read More »Cool Science Classics for Summer Reading, Part 2
Last week I recommended 20 great science books , in authorial alphabetical order from A to J, picked from my personal library.
Read More »Incredible Find in Temple Museum, Harrowing Rescue on Crumbly Mudstone
Editor's Note: MSU China Paleontology Expedition is a project led by Frankie D. Jackson and David J
Read More »Stem Rust Ug99–the Agricultural Bully
Remember 1999? It was the year in which the European Union first unveiled its uniform currency and Y2K threatened to bring the technological rapture to global information systems. 1999, the year the artist then-known as Prince declared the benchmark for partying (although he sang it in 1982).
Read More »Far from Conflict: Physical Distance May Improve a Negotiating Climate
Buying a house or car? Perhaps you should try making the deal via e-mail.
Read More »Stop Mining for Oil (and Coal), Start Drilling for Heat
The center of the Earth is a roiling ball of heat, roughly 6,000 degrees Celsius as near as we can tell without a sci-fi tunneling effort. The closest humanity has come to that molten core is some 12 kilometers beneath the continental crust in Russia, which isn't even halfway through said crust and akin to drilling into an apple without piercing the skin
Read More »Fossil hunting in China very different than in Montana
Editor's Note: MSU China Paleontology Expedition is a project led by Frankie D.
Read More »Good Dads and Not-So-Good Dads in the Animal Kingdom
Happy father’s day! First off, to every father out there (biological or not), this is the time where we stand up and say thank you. We may not always show it, but we love you and appreciate everything you have done for us thus far. [More]
Read More »Sunspot-Related Cooling Can’t Offset Greenhouse Warming
How much light the sun emits affects the Earth's weather and climate.
Read More »Squid Studies: Scientists Seeking and Savoring Squid
Editor's Note: Marine biologist William Gilly embarked on new expedition this month to study jumbo squid in the Gulf of California on the National Science Foundation-funded research vessel New Horizon . This is his second blog post about the trip. [More]
Read More »Fact or Fiction: Do Babies Resemble Their Fathers More Than Their Mothers?
Does junior really have his father's nose? [More]
Read More »Art and Science Meet in Images of Museum Specimens and Artifacts
The convergence of art and science gets a new treatment in an exhibition opening next week at the American Museum of Natural History. " Picturing Science: Museum Scientists and Imaging Technologies " features more than 20 sets of large-format and visually engaging images that showcase the wide range of research being conducted at the museum, as well as how various optical tools are used in scientific research. A preview: Tibetan deity wood figure [More]
Read More »Small Study: Young Gang Members Want Dogs Mostly For Companionship
“I don’t know if you’ve ever walked a pit bull. You owe it to your life to walk a pit bull down the street, I’m telling you. It’s like a gun you can pet, it’s the only way to describe it, it’s awesome.” Comedian Bill Burr.
Read More »Engineers Take Step Closer To Smell-A-Vision
How many times has it happened to you: you’re sitting around watching a rerun of Friends and you think: Man, if only I could catch a whiff of that hazelnut mocchaccino they’re all pretending to drink.
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