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Social Media For Scientists Part 3: Win-Win

I confidently believe that increasing the use of social media for outreach by scientists will positively affect how the public views and understands science . I stand by my statement that part of our job is to improve science communication, and as the world turns to the internet, social media is vital to that cause . So let’s get selfish for a moment here: I’m telling you that you should take the extra time to add social media to your schedule ( see my post on having time, too ).

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Tiny Drone Reveals Ancient Royal Burial Sites

A miniature airborne drone has helped archaeologists capture images for creating a 3-D model of an ancient burial mound in Russia, scientists say. Archaeological sites are often in remote and rugged areas . As such, it can be hard to reach and map them with the limited budgets archaeologists typically have.

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A Day on Neptune Is Less Than 16 Hours Long

Not long after Neptune completed its first orbit around the sun since its discovery in 1846, scientists have managed to calculate the exact length of one day on the distant gas giant planet .

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A Day on Neptune Is Less Than 16 Hours Long

Not long after Neptune completed its first orbit around the sun since its discovery in 1846, scientists have managed to calculate the exact length of one day on the distant gas giant planet . Unlike their rocky counterparts, gas giants have long challenged astronomers when it comes to calculating their rotation .

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Monarchs flood New York City

New Yorkers can catch a fleeting glimpse of Nature's royalty if they hurry. On Saturday I observed dozens of migrating monarch butterflies - glorious kings of the insect world - quivering atop goldenrods on the coast lining Dead Horse Bay in Brooklyn.

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Monarchs flood New York City

New Yorkers can catch a fleeting glimpse of Nature's royalty if they hurry. On Saturday I observed dozens of migrating monarch butterflies - glorious kings of the insect world - quivering atop goldenrods on the coast lining Dead Horse Bay in Brooklyn.

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Smoking Is a Drag at the Box Office

It could almost be enough to make Cruella de Vil consider a nicotine patch: a new analysis has found that films with scenes that show smoking reliably make less money at the box office than their cigarette-free counterparts. The finding, says Stanton Glantz , director of the Center for Tobacco Control Research and Education at the University of California, San Francisco, adds to the case for giving any movie that depicts smoking to an automatic 'R' rating

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Chemistry for a New Era

The International Year of Chemistry commemorates the achievements that have made life better. Breakthroughs promise a greener and more productive future. [More]

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Cooperation Is Child’s Play

Cooperation confounds us: Humans are the only members of the animal kingdom to display this tendency to the extent that we do, and it’s an expensive endeavor with no guarantee of reciprocal rewards. While we continue to look for answers about how and why cooperation may have emerged in human social and cultural evolution, we are beginning to trace the developmental roots of prosocial behaviors. A recent PLoS paper presents evidence that children as young as 15 months old may have a rudimentary sense of fairness

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Pull Up a Chair

The next time you find yourself seated in a roomful of strangers, take a close look at your nearest neighbor. Does he or she resemble you in subtle ways

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The Scent of Your Thoughts (preview)

The moment that started martha mcclintock’s scientific career was a whim of youth. Even, she recalls, a ridiculous moment. It is summer, 1968, and she is a Wellesley College student attending a workshop at the Jackson Laboratory in Maine.

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