A different kind of truck stop is coming soon to Atlanta. Greg Roche, vice president for infrastructure at Clean Energy Fuels , is presently scouting locations to build one of the California-based company's natural gas fueling stations for long-haul trucks by the end of this year
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Feed SubscriptionExperimental Biology Blogging: Using a chemical from slime mold to stop cancer spread
For day 2 of Experimental Biology, I found an interesting poster on a new chemical, found in slime mold, that might have therapeutic potential for breast cancer treatment! Enjoy! We are always looking for new cancer treatments. Each type of cancer is different, from breast cancer to lung cancer or pancreatic, and there are also different subtypes of cancers within each type of cancer. Your breast cancer can be estrogen receptor positive or negative, and this can drastically effect what kind of treatments may work best.
Read More »The Illegal Trade of Twine
This is an installment in the On My Shelf series reviews about books demonstrating anthropology in practice. Book details follow the post
Read More »Brain Seeks THE Voice Among Many Speakers
It’s tough to pick a familiar face out of a crowd--but focusing on a known voice in a noisy room is easy. And a new study scanned volunteers’ brains to look at how we solve the so-called cocktail party problem.
Read More »Computer Effects Virtually Resurrect Tupac
[Sound of Tupac Shakur: "Yeah! Yeah!"] [More]
Read More »Celebrating Earth on Earth Day: A Few Favorite Places
Interviewer: So, how powerful are you? Could you …say… destroy the Earth? Tick: Destroy the Earth?
Read More »Brain Freeze Might Help Solve Migraine Mysteries
Image courtesy of iStockphoto/Neurostockimages Eager eaters know that gulping a Slurpee or inhaling a sundae can cause that brief seizing sensation known in the not-so-technical literature as “brain freeze” or “ ice cream headache .” [More]
Read More »MRSA Gene that Enhances Superbug’s Virulence Is On the Rise
By Amy Maxmen of Nature magazine Researchers have identified a gene that makes some strains of an antibiotic-resistant bacterium more virulent, and have found that the gene is becoming more prevalent. Epidemics of infection with methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) come in waves. [More]
Read More »Bacteria Talk, Plants Listen: The Discovery of Plant Immune Receptors, an Interview with Dr. Pamela Ronald
A series of graduate student conversations with leading women biologists, at the Women in Science Symposium at Cornell April 2-3. [More]
Read More »If We Feel Too Busy, It’s Probably Due To Too Much Free Time
Objectively time is constant. A minute is a minute
Read More »Earth Day Science for Kids: How Rain Drops Form
Step One: A Medical School Pivot Point
The morning of my Board exams, my mother packed me a lunch comprising of seedless grapes, two Greek yogurts, a cheese sandwich, a bag of pistachio nuts, two cappuccinos, a diet coke, chocolate-covered coffee beans and a pouch of pretzels. Mum, this isn t the Hunger Games, I joked
Read More »Herd Thinking
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Read More »Second Wind: Air-Breathing Lithium Batteries Promise Recharge-Free Long-Range Driving–If the Bugs Can Be Worked Out
Researchers predict a new type of lithium battery under development could give an electric car enough juice to travel a whopping 800 kilometers before it needs to be plugged in again--about 10 times the energy that today's lithium ion batteries supply. It is a tantalizing prospect --a lighter, longer-lasting, air-breathing power source for the next generation of vehicles--if only someone could build a working model. Several roadblocks stand between these lithium–air batteries and the open road, however, primarily in finding electrodes and electrolytes that are stable enough for rechargeable battery chemistry.
Read More »Oil Habit Unchanged on Two-Year Anniversary of BP’s Gulf of Mexico Spill
Two years ago, 11 men lost their lives as a backlash of gas exploded into the night from the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig in the Gulf of Mexico. In the ensuing months, roughly 5 million barrels of oil and more than 6 billion cubic feet of natural gas spewed into the ocean from the Macondo well more than a kilometer underwater. It took the combined efforts of the U.S.
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