By Patricio Segura Ortiz of Nature magazine You might not expect bacteria living in Antarctic ice to be well suited to life in a boiling kettle, but that is what Chilean scientists discovered during an expedition last year. [More]
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By Patricio Segura Ortiz of Nature magazine You might not expect bacteria living in Antarctic ice to be well suited to life in a boiling kettle, but that is what Chilean scientists discovered during an expedition last year. [More]
Read More »Overheated rhetoric: Why Bill McKibben’s global-warming fear-mongering isn’t helpful
Bill McKibben is one of civilization's most civilized critics. For decades this humane journalist-activist has been warning that our high-technology, high-consumption ways are harming nature and our psyches
Read More »U.S. oil-spill panel focuses on blowout preventer
By Kathy Finn [More]
Read More »Rare-Diseases Project Hopes for Diagnostic Tool for All Diseases by 2020
By Alison Abbott of Nature magazine Prader-Willi syndrome. [More]
Read More »Japan to dump 11,500 tons low-radioactive water
VIENNA (Reuters) - Japan will need to discharge a total of 11,500 tons of low-contaminated water into the ocean from the site of a stricken nuclear reactor, a senior Japanese nuclear official said in Vienna on Monday.
Read More »Deteriorating Oil and Gas Wells Threaten Drinking Water Across the Country
A version of this story was co-published with the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. In the last 150 years, prospectors and energy companies have drilled as many as 12 million holes across the United States in search of oil and gas. Many of those holes were plugged after they dried up
Read More »What Is It?
Smaller fleas: What appears as a mere speck to the human eye has plenty of character when observed under a microscope. [More]
Read More »Gateway Disorder?: Kids with ADHD Show Higher Risk for Later Substance Abuse Problems
One of the top worries for parents of kids with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is the long-term consequences of this condition. "Families want to know, 'So what does this mean?'" says Alice Charach , head of the neuropsychiatry team at The Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto. [More]
Read More »Vietnam finally nets legendary turtle for treatment
By John Ruwitch HANOI (Reuters) - Experts in Hanoi captured a legendary giant turtle for medical treatment on Sunday, a milestone in a case that has grabbed national attention and cast a spotlight on environmental degradation in Vietnam. [More]
Read More »What’s the deal with male circumcision and female cervical cancer?
Recently, while I was getting drinks at a pub with about a dozen or so other biologists, I was involved in a very animated discussion about circumcision -- because that's what biologists argue about when they're drinking, apparently. [More]
Read More »The Slow March of Big Earthquakes
When an earthquake strikes, the shaking doesn't start instantaneously. Instead, the most violent energy spreads out from the epicenter at a relatively modest 3.5 kilometers per second
Read More »Climate Change Could Leave One Billion Urbanites High and Dry by 2050
Rapid urban growth and climate change will leave more than 1 billion urban dwellers with a water shortage by 2050, according to a study released last week.
Read More »Can the Dead Sea Live? (preview)
The Dead Sea is a place of mystery: the lowest surface on Earth, the purported site of Sodom and Gomorrah, a supposed font of curative waters and, despite its name, a treasure trove of unusual microbial life.
Read More »Being John Malkovich: Personal Control of Individual Brain Cells
In philosophy of mind, a “cerebroscope” is a fictitious device, a brain-computer interface in today’s language, which reads out the content of somebody’s brain. An autocerebroscope is a device applied to one’s own brain.
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