Burning fossil fuels releases significant quantities of carbon dioxide, aggravating climate change. Although it gets less attention these days, combustion also emits volumes of pollutants, which can cause a variety of illnesses. The most extensive consequences across the U.S
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Feed SubscriptionTwin Towers Forensic Investigation Helps Revise Building Codes, Despite Critics
Even veteran disaster investigators were stunned by the fall of the Twin Towers on September 11, 2001 .
Read More »Exxon Scores Russian Arctic Oil Deal
By Darya Korsunskaya and Braden Reddall SOCHI, Russia/SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Exxon Mobil Corp and Rosneft signed an agreement to extract oil and gas from the Russian Arctic, in the most significant U.S.-Russian corporate deal since President Barack Obama began a push to improve ties. [More]
Read More »Listen Carefully: The Evolutionary Secret To Making a Hit Record
Laid bare on a stark piece of paper, removed entirely from their imposing instrumentals, strong emotions, and intimidating vocal talent, most song lyrics have all the literary force of a puff of flatulence.
Read More »Best Acne Treatment Remains Elusive
Pimples are part of teenage life about as dreaded and unavoidable as the SATs. To get rid of these blemishes, Americans spend more than a billion dollars each year.
Read More »Gulf Oil Spill Tracker
Help track oil still coming ashore from the 2010 BP Deepwater Horizon disaster [More]
Read More »New Glasses-Free 3-D Approach Could Work on Thin, Flexible Displays
Three-dimensional television and the like got a major marketing push nearly two years ago from the consumer electronics and entertainment industries, yet the technology still has major limitations. Whereas glasses-free 3-D on television screens and computer monitors is seen as crucial to generating widespread interest in new consumer electronics, for the most part, viewers still need to wear glasses to experience stereoscopic 3-D images, although glasses-free TVs are starting to hit in Japan
Read More »Newly Discovered Hawaiian Bird Could Already Be Extinct
Here’s something amazing: a new bird species has been discovered in the U.S. [More]
Read More »Friendly Bacteria Cheer Up Anxious Mice
From Nature magazine Most everyone knows that stress can cause a clenched, gurgling, unhappy stomach. What's less well known is that the relationship goes both ways
Read More »A long lost relative of ticks pops up again
The most precious fluid in the world isn’t black. [More]
Read More »Using National Parks as Climate Change Education Grounds
YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK, Calif. – On any given summer evening about 60 tourists gather in campground amphitheatres here for park ranger presentations. Astronomy, geology, human history, fire ecology are on the regular schedule of program topics.
Read More »Smartphone System Saves Gas
Smart phones can provide music, movie times, bus schedules.
Read More »What is the Sex of 17?
Gender is so fundamental to the way we understand the world that people are prone to assign a sex to even inanimate objects. We all know someone, or perhaps we are that person, who consistently refers to their computer or car with a gender pronoun (“She’s been running great these past few weeks!”) New research
Read More »In Fairness to Cities
Not long ago New York, Chicago, Boston and Washington, D.C., were poster children for urban decay. But these cities came roaring back: they tapped deep wells of experience in finance, communications and technology to flourish in a globalized world. They illustrate perfectly the power and resilience of the city as brain trust.
Read More »Street Talk: What Innovations Would Make Cities More Livable? (preview)
Cell-Phone Paradise Communication is at the heart of the future. A future city would need to respond to people on a personal level
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