Ada Lovelace Day allows us an opportunity to highlight the work of women in science.
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Feed SubscriptionCelebrating Ada Lovelace Day
Lady Ada Lovelace was a contemporary and colleague of Charles Babbage , he innovator of the programmable
Read More »Celebrating Ada Lovelace Day
Lady Ada Lovelace was a contemporary and colleague of Charles Babbage , he innovator of the programmable
Read More »Drought-Stricken Pacific islands Down to Last Few Days of Water
WELLINGTON (Reuters) - A drought-stricken Pacific island nation is down to its last few days of water, prompting a mercy dash by New Zealand and Australia with water-making equipment. Tuvalu, the world's fourth-smallest nation sitting just below the Equator, has declared a state of emergency and is rationing water. [More]
Read More »U.K. Geoengineering Tests Delayed until Spring
Cambridge University Engineering Department Controversial tests of geoengineering hardware, initially set to start in October, have been delayed. The British government agency that provides funding to the project issued the delay on September 29, in order “to allow time for more engagement with stakeholders.” [More]
Read More »U.K. Geoengineering Tests Delayed until Spring
Cambridge University Engineering Department Controversial tests of geoengineering hardware, initially set to start in October, have been delayed. The British government agency that provides funding to the project issued the delay on September 29, in order “to allow time for more engagement with stakeholders.” [More]
Read More »Workplace Pollutants Tied to Kids’ Asthma Risk
(Reuters) - A mother's exposure to airborne pollutants at work during her pregnancy may increase the likelihood that her unborn child will later develop asthma, a Danish study said. The review of registry data on 45,658 seven-year-old children and their mothers found that 18.6 percent of children of mothers who were exposed to low-molecular-weight particles at work during pregnancy developed asthma, compared to 16.1 percent of the general population. [More]
Read More »Workplace Pollutants Tied to Kids’ Asthma Risk
(Reuters) - A mother's exposure to airborne pollutants at work during her pregnancy may increase the likelihood that her unborn child will later develop asthma, a Danish study said. The review of registry data on 45,658 seven-year-old children and their mothers found that 18.6 percent of children of mothers who were exposed to low-molecular-weight particles at work during pregnancy developed asthma, compared to 16.1 percent of the general population.
Read More »Prostate Cancer Screening: The Pros and Cons
The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force is about to recommend that healthy men forgo being screened for prostate cancer with the familiar PSA (prostate-specific antigen) blood test.
Read More »Prostate Cancer Screening: The Pros and Cons
The U.S.
Read More »San Francisco Bay Area Enacts Sea-Level Rise Policy
The San Francisco Bay Area yesterday became the first region in California to pass regulations governing development in areas prone to sea-level rise.
Read More »San Francisco Bay Area Enacts Sea-Level Rise Policy
The San Francisco Bay Area yesterday became the first region in California to pass regulations governing development in areas prone to sea-level rise. The San Francisco Bay Conservation and Development Commission (BCDC) voted unanimously to pass a development plan for land within 100 feet of the coastline, giving the agency a tool to deny permits for development in coastal areas susceptible to flooding.
Read More »Hellbender Salamander Gets Endangered Species Designation, but No Habitat Protection–and That May Be a Good Thing
The U.S.
Read More »Hellbender Salamander Gets Endangered Species Designation, but No Habitat Protection–and That May Be a Good Thing
The U.S.
Read More »Book Review: The Better Angels of Our Nature: Why Violence Has Declined
According to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), worldwide military expenditures have been growing annually for the past 15 years, and between 15 and 20 major armed conflicts--yes, wars--are in progress as you read this. All told, upward of 175 million people died in war-related violence during the 20th century, plus another eight million because of conflicts among individuals. Even so, according to a weighty new book, The Better Angels of Our Nature: Why Violence Has Declined (Viking Adult, 2011), by Harvard University psychologist Steven Pinker , the "better angels" of human nature have actually brought about a dramatic reduction in violence during the past few millennia.
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