Researchers working on the island of Borneo have discovered two tiny new populations of Miller’s grizzled langurs ( Presbytis hosei canicrus ), one of the world’s 25 most endangered primates. The species is so rare that it has probably disappeared from all of its previously known habitats, which have been almost completely logged and burned out of existence. The langur was last observed in 2008 ( pdf ) in an isolated patch of mangrove forest on the banks of the Baai River which flows through Borneo’s Sangkulirang Peninsula, when just five of the primates were found
Read More »Category Archives: Personal Development News
Feed SubscriptionDigital Health Care Puts Control in Consumer Hands
For years, do-it-yourself health care meant looking up your symptoms on WebMD. But smart phones are extending our control, with apps that let people plan and track workouts, monitor important health indicators, and even locate nearby clinical trials. Apple's App Store alone offers thousands of mobile health apps
Read More »Where You Vote May Affect How You Vote
On election day, where do you vote? If it's in a church, you might be inclined to vote more conservatively than if you cast your ballot at a school or government building. That’s according to research published in the International Journal for the Psychology of Religion .
Read More »EPA to Test Water in Pennsylvania near Fracking Site
By Edward McAllister (Reuters) - U.S. regulators said on Thursday they will perform water tests at about 60 homes in the small town of Dimock in Pennsylvania where residents say natural gas drilling has polluted wells.
Read More »Sex Is Safe for Many with Heart Disease, Report Says
Image courtesy of iStockphoto/Yuri_Arcurs Sex might seem like a risky occupation for the more than 27 million Americans who have been diagnosed with heart disease.
Read More »Genetically Engineered Stomach Microbe Converts Seaweed into Ethanol
Seaweed may well be an ideal plant to turn into biofuel. It grows in much of the two thirds of the planet that is underwater, so it wouldn't crowd out food crops the way corn for ethanol does. Because it draws its own nutrients and water from the sea, it requires no fertilizer or irrigation.
Read More »U.S. Aims for Effective Alzheimer’s Treatment Strategy by 2020
By Meredith Wadman of Nature magazine In December 2010, the US Congress passed the National Alzheimer's Project Act. [More]
Read More »In Bowerbird Romance, Master Illusionists Get the Girls [VIDEO]
Male great bowerbird. Image by algaedoc via Flickr Male bowerbirds are virtuoso architects
Read More »Charting a Course for Brazil’s Rivers and Hydropower
Brazil boasts the industrialized world's most renewable energy mix. To maintain this status while growing its electricity system to serve millions of new customers, the country is planning a major expansion of hydroelectric power in the Amazon Basin -- one of the most important ecological systems in the world. [More]
Read More »Solar Swan Song: NASA Satellite Witnesses a Comet’s Plunge into the Sun
As dramatic exits go, it's on par with Major T. J. "King" Kong riding a falling nuclear bomb like a rodeo bull at the end of Dr
Read More »Dish Color Affects Serving Size
One reason Americans have such a huge weight problem? Our dishware. When faced with a bigger plate, people are inclined to heap on--and consume--more food
Read More »Fruitfly Genome Mapped in 3-D
By Rebecca Hill of Nature magazine A decade ago, hot on the heels of whole-genome sequencing, the idea of three-dimensional genome mapping was developed. [More]
Read More »NASA Science Head Sees "No Difference" Between Scientific and Human Exploration
By Eric Hand of Nature Magazine On 4 January, John Grunsfeld, the fix-it-man for the Hubble Space Telescope, became the head of NASA's Science Mission Directorate. [More]
Read More »Fight Slippage with Friction
Key concepts [More]
Read More »Email: Undead, Now Mutating
By David Zax So says Fiesta.cc CEO Michael Dirolf, who is trying to revamp that least sexy of communications tools: the listserv. Many of us live in our inboxes; for all intents and purposes, our Gmail is our homepage.
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