After the furies of birth, the mature cosmos now evolves more slowly.
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Feed SubscriptionJohn Glenn: The Man Behind the Hero
On March 1, 1962, thousands of people lined New York City s Broadway.
Read More »When 14 Billion Years Just Isn’t Enough Time (preview)
Time’s seemingly inexorable march has always provoked interest in, and speculation about, the far future of the cosmos. The usual picture is grim. Five billion years from now the sun will puff itself into a red giant star and swallow the inner solar system before slowly fading to black
Read More »Is the Keystone Pipeline a Shortcut to Catastrophic Climate Change?
“Game over” for climate change . So opines NASA climatologist Jim Hansen when it comes to the development of the Canadian tar sands.
Read More »Twitter Reveals People Are Happiest in the Morning
“Happy hour” is not when you might expect it to be, according to a new analysis of about half a billion Twitter messages from around the globe. On average, people are chipper when they wake up and become grouchy as the day wears on.
Read More »Raising the Dead: New Species of Life Resurrected from Ancient Andean Tomb
QUITO, ECUADOR--Long before the Spanish conquered the Incas in 1533, and centuries before the Incas inhabited this area, the present-day site of Quito International Airport was a marshy lake surrounded by Indian settlements--the Quitus on one shore and the Ipias on the other. Between A.D.
Read More »Fracking Could Work If Industry Would Come Clean
VANCOUVER Resistance to hydraulic fracturing in the U.S. has risen steadily in recent months.
Read More »Why Online Dating Doesn’t Work
Online dating might give you something, but it’s probably not a soulmate. [More]
Read More »Photo Quiz: What Is It?
The experience of indulging in your favorite foods involves not only tasting flavors but also feeling the textures sweep across your tongue. [More]
Read More »Robot Uses Lizard Tail to Leap
Science fiction often envisions worlds populated by humanoid robots. In reality, insects, reptiles and nonhuman animals often serve as a more practical template for automatons
Read More »Autism Signs Appear in Brains of 6-Month-Old Infants
The early signs of autism are visible in the brains of 6-month-old infants, a new study finds, suggesting that future treatments could be given at this time, to lessen the impact of the disorder on children. [More]
Read More »Australia to Assess Development Pressure on Barrier Reef
SYDNEY (Reuters) - Australia will carry out a comprehensive assessment of development pressure on the Great Barrier Reef to help preserve the world's largest coral reef system, ministers said Saturday. The assessment will take into account how development along Australia's northeast coast is affecting the reef, Environment Minister Tony Burke said in a joint statement with the Queensland state government
Read More »Journal Article Tweets May Predict Citations
In science, citations are gold.
Read More »What Processed Food Looks Like during Digestion-Of Course It’s Not Pretty [Video]
If you ever wondered how your body handled all those packaged ramen noodles you ate during college, this video s for you. Stefani Bardin , a TEDxManhattan fellow, wants to learn how digestion differs between food chock full of preservatives and food that can actually go bad in a day. To create this video, she and her collaborator swallowed a camera pill along with their meals (which included Gatorade and Gummi bears)
Read More »Parents play a crucial role in building kids’ interest in science and math
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