By Kim Palmer CLEVELAND (Reuters) - An Ohio state agency said on Friday there is evidence that the high-pressure injection of fluid underground related to fracking caused a series of Ohio earthquakes culminating in a New Year's Eve tremor in any area not known for seismic activity. The Ohio Department of Natural Resources, which overseas the oil and gas industry, said in a report that the state should pass a new law prohibiting drilling at what is called the Precambrian basement rock level (a depth that begins at 9,184 ft) and would require companies to "review existing geologic data" before drilling.
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Feed SubscriptionU.S. Implements New Fukushima Nuclear Safety Policy
By Scott DiSavino (Reuters) - Regulators on Friday told the owners of the nation's nuclear reactors to implement new safety rules based on the lessons learned from the earthquake and tsunami that crippled Japan's Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant a year ago. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) said it authorized its staff to issue three immediately effective orders implementing some of the more urgent recommendations. The NRC gave the plants until December 31, 2016, to complete modifications and requirements for the three orders.
Read More »LSD Helps to Treat Alcoholism
By Arran Frood of Nature magazine The powerful hallucinogen LSD (lysergic acid diethylamide) has potential as a treatment for alcoholism, according to a retrospective analysis of studies published in the late 1960s and early 1970s. The study, by neuroscientist Teri Krebs and clinical psychologist P
Read More »‘Chum Cam’ Helps Catalog Endangered Sharks
Scientists have been trying to answer the question of whether marine protected areas, where sharks and their prey are off-limits to fishermen, are indeed home to more sharks than non-protected areas of the ocean. [More]
Read More »NASA Crushes 2012 Mayan Apocalypse Claims
Scientists at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory have put out a new video to address false claims about the "Mayan apocalypse," a non-event that some people believe will bring the world to an end on Dec. 21.
Read More »Facebook Pages: Big Changes Coming Soon
Your company's Facebook pages are about to get a big makeover. Here's how to make sure you're ready for it. Spent a lot of time learning about and building out your company's existing Facebook page?
Read More »How Safe Are U.S. Nuclear Reactors? Lessons from Fukushima
The meltdown started when water to cool the reactors fell to dangerously low levels four hours after a the fourth-largest recorded earthquake rattled the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant .
Read More »Facebook Launches Lists, Dropbox Reorganizes Website, Raspberry Pi Delayed
Breaking news from your editors at Fast Company, with updates all day. Dropbox Redesigns Website
Read More »Vevo, Echo Nest Team For Personalized Music Video Recommendations Based On Your iTunes Library
Watching Vevo, the online music-video service, used to be all about one-off experiences. Viewers would head to Vevo or YouTube to watch music videos by artists such as Jay-Z or LMFAO, but rarely would they venture beyond what they searched for
Read More »Supercomputers Can Save U.S. Manufacturing
The U.S.
Read More »Proposed Wildlife Policy Change Draws Fire
By Steve Gorman and Laura Zuckerman (Reuters) - Dozens of conservation groups and nearly 100 scientists voiced opposition on Thursday to an Obama administration proposal they say would make it much harder for imperiled creatures to qualify for protection under the Endangered Species Act.
Read More »What single quality predicts a good doctor?
What is the most important characteristic a medical student should have?
Read More »Chimp Cops Arbitrate Disputes
It sounds like the premise for a bad police drama, maybe NYPD Chimp. But scientists have found that high-ranking chimpanzees can act like cops: intervening to settle public disputes. The study appears in the journal Public Library of Science ONE
Read More »One Year Later: A Fukushima Nuclear Disaster Timeline
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Read More »Flavor of the Ray: Neutrino Measurement May Help Solve Mystery of Matter’s Domination over Antimatter
Neutrinos are devious little particles. Only in the late 1990s were they shown to have mass, after decades of head-scratching hints to that effect
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