Years of shifting and smoothing Georgia red clay paid off today, as the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) voted to allow construction of two new nuclear reactors
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Feed SubscriptionBest Science Song of All Time, Verse 2
Yesterday I asked: what is the best pop science song of all time? Here’s where we stand: on the shoulder of giants (with apologies to Sir Isaac). One of those giants is Ryan Reid, our digital art guru, who not long ago did a wonderful post on 10 songs inspired by science .
Read More »Motion Pictured: How an Earthquake Warps a Landscape
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Read More »Alzheimer’s Disease Symptoms Reversed in Mice
A nearly 13-year-old skin cancer drug rapidly alleviates molecular signs of Alzheimer's diseas e and improves brain function, according to the results of a new mouse study being hailed as extremely promising.
Read More »Widespread Plasticizer Clouds Doping Tests of Cyclists
In the race to catch drug cheats, sports officials are turning to more sophisticated tests. Since cheaters are rarely caught red-handed, scientists devised a plan to catch them with the packaging inside their bodies.
Read More »Satellites Help Scientists Quantify Ice Melt and Sea-Level Rise
For years, scientists have warned that climate change is taking its toll on Earth's ice, thawing not just the massive ice sheets of Greenland and Antarctica but mountain glaciers and ice caps from the Andes to the Alps.
Read More »Zebra Stripes Clash with Insect Interest
How did the zebra get its stripes? One theory holds that stripes help confuse predators. But stripes might be primarily to protect zebras from ferocious…insects
Read More »Shiny Science: Make Homemade Nontoxic Glass Cleaner
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Read More »How a Book about the Future Inspired Me to Look into the Neural Underpinnings of the Past
I m about to make an embarrassing (to science fiction fans) confession: until last week, I had never read Dune . I wasn t even aware that I was supposed to have read Dune . Nor did I know I should be embarrassed at the failure.
Read More »New 367-Megawatt Offshore Wind Farm Opens in UK
LONDON (Reuters) - A new 367 megawatt offshore wind farm opened off the Cumbrian coast in Britain Thursday and will supply up to 320,000 households with renewable power a year, the companies behind the project said.
Read More »Does NIH Have a Bias against African-Americans?
Biomedical research scientists send proposals to the National Institutes of Health in the hopes of being funded. A recent study of this process, published in Science by the University of Kansas’s Donna Ginther and her colleagues, revealed that proposals from black applicants are significantly less likely to be funded than proposals from white applicants
Read More »It Detects Earthquakes and Lactose Intolerance
Nobel Prize winner C. V
Read More »Why Your Romantic Partner Annoys You (preview)
Excerpted with permission of the publisher John Wiley & Sons, Inc., from Annoying: The Science of What Bugs Us , by Joe Palca and Flora Lichtman. Copyright
Read More »Apple Will Reportedly Unveil iPad 3 in Early March
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Read More »Tiny, Tree-Dwelling Primate Called Tarsier Sends and Receives Ultrasonic Calls
The Philippine tarsier (Tarsius syrichta) makes ultrasonic calls. (Credit: Nathaniel Dominy, Dartmouth) Let’s be honest: tarsiers look odd. Among the smallest of all primates, most species of tarsier would fit easily in the palm of your hand.
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