The island of Key Biscayne, Fla., sits in the Atlantic Ocean 10 miles southeast of Miami. Its 10,000 residents depend on the Rickenbacker Causeway, a four-mile-long toll bridge connecting the island to the mainland, for all their supplies
Read More »Tag Archives: facebook
Feed SubscriptionBoat Noise Makes Fish Miss Meals
Do you dislike restaurants where noise drowns out dinner? Seems that fish don't like a din with dinner either.
Read More »SciFoo: 1 billion dollars
If you had $1 billion to spend on just one project, what would it be? Here's how an astrobiologist, a broadcaster, a skeptic and a Nobel Laureate, amongst others, would spend the money. Filmed at the 2010 Science Foo Camp in California.
Read More »Water, CO2 the priorities for China’s 5-year plan
By David Stanway BEIJING (Reuters) - Tackling environmental problems from carbon emissions to water pollution will be a key focus of a new five-year plan that China will launch during its annual parliament session starting on Saturday. [More]
Read More »How Tumors Resist Chemotherapy
By Cassandra Willyard Potent chemotherapy drugs such as Taxol (paclitaxel) prompt cancer cells to self-destruct -- but some tumours stubbornly survive the treatment. Two studies have now independently pinpointed a gene that lies behind at least part of this resistance
Read More »Libya’s ‘Extraordinary’ Archaeology under Threat
By Declan Butler Eleven Italian researchers who were evacuated from Libya in a C-130 Hercules military aircraft on Saturday are thought to have been among the last foreign archaeologists in the country. [More]
Read More »Cosmological crowd-sourcing: Amateur’s nebula pic wins ESO astro-image competition
[More]
Read More »Creationism Controversy: State by State [Updated Map]
[More]
Read More »Mate Idealization Makes for Happy Early Marriage
They say that love is blind. And that’s probably for the best
Read More »The Forgotten History of Muslim Scientists [Slide Show]
A millennium ago a physicist under house arrest rewrote the scientific understanding of optics--the study of the behavior and properties of light.
Read More »U.N. climate talks seen missing aid plan deadline
By Alister Doyle, Environment Correspondent OSLO (Reuters) - A plan by almost 200 countries to step up efforts to fight climate change is set to miss a March deadline for starting work on a green fund to help developing nations, delegates said on Wednesday. [More]
Read More »Virtual Archaeology at Stonehenge [Video]
Theories about Stonehenge have historically tended to regard it as a stand-alone monument. But an increasingly well-supported view holds that Stonehenge was just part of a much larger ceremonial landscape, as this article in the March issue of Scientific American explains
Read More »Putting Stonehenge in Its Place (preview)
With the click of a mouse, archaeologist Vince Gaffney proudly summons up a vision of an ancient landscape.
Read More »Looking for patterns in your electric use: The eMonitor home energy monitor
Last month, I wrote about the EcoDog home power monitoring system , which lets you see how much electricity your house is pulling, circuit by circuit. Apart from being fun for energy geeks like me who have an insatiable appetite for data, the device lets you discover patterns in your power consumption you might never have known about and that are burning up your money. Soon afterwards, I got a call from EcoDog's competitor Powerhouse Dynamics
Read More »How National Security Depends on Better Lithium Batteries
NATIONAL HARBOR, Md.--Lithium spontaneously combusts in air, yet the battery in your computer--and any of the stacks in the new breed of electric vehicles--is made from it. Lithium even burns in water, which is too bad because a lithium-water battery could be both cheap and powerful.
Read More »