By Christine Stebbins CHICAGO (Reuters) - Crop scientists in the United States, the world's largest food exporter, are pondering an odd question: could the danger of global warming really be the heat? [More]
Read More »Tag Archives: article
Feed SubscriptionFly on wall sees things it wishes it hadn’t
"Where there are humans, you’ll find flies, [More]
Read More »What Is the Secret to a Happy Marriage? A New Film Offers Unusual Answers
Filmmaker Kate Schermerhorn cuts the cake with her second husband. The couple started filming "After Happily Ever After" together on their honeymoon
Read More »Should Scientists Use Genetically Modified Insects to Fight Disease?
In the November 2011 issue of Scientific American, author Bijal Trivedi looks at the ongoing controversies surrounding the use of genetically modified mosquitoes to fight dengue fever.
Read More »The Wipeout Gene (preview)
Outside Tapachula, Chiapas, Mexico--10 miles from Guatemala.
Read More »Bangkok Tense as Thailand Floods Set to Swamp More of Capital
By Apornrath Phoonphongphiphat and Martin Petty BANGKOK (Reuters) - More districts of Thailand's capital were on high alert on Monday with floods bearing down from northern Bangkok as authorities raced to pump water toward the sea and defend the business district. [More]
Read More »X-Rays Reveal What Lies Beneath
Art and politics don’t generally mix. Just ask Spanish painter Francisco Goya
Read More »Are Men Funnier Than Women?
In a 2007 Vanity Fair article Christopher Hitchens asked: Why are men, taken on average and as a whole, funnier than women? Well a recent study finds that men might have a tiny edge over women in producing humor but the gap is too small to account for the stereotype. [More]
Read More »Earthquake Hits Turkey, Up to 1,000 Possibly Killed
* Quake was magnitude 7.2, Turkish observatory says * Up to 1,000 may have been killed [More]
Read More »An American Cycling in Paris: My Ode to Bike Sharing
Bike-share stands: a common sight around Paris. Credit: John Matson/Scientific American I recently spent three days in Paris on the way home from a conference , becoming just the latest in a long history of visitors to fall in love with the City of Light. It wasn’t the sights, the cafes, or the croissants that got me--although all those things helped.
Read More »Dispatches from the European-American Planetary Science Meeting
Pluto Might Be the Largest Dwarf Planet, After All For years Pluto has appeared to rank behind its fellow dwarf planet Eris in terms of diameter. New data, however, have cut Eris down to size [More]
Read More »Pathogen Genomics Has Become Dirt Cheap
“The human genome was sequenced, and in the process of moving that forward the technology that was developed was incredible. And because of their efforts in the human genome, that technology is available to folks like us.” Northern Arizona University’s Paul Keim at the ScienceWriters2011 conference. The ability to compare genomes is a powerful tool for identifying the origins of a natural disease outbreak or bioterrorism
Read More »What Impact Could Gaddafi’s Death Have on Arab Spring Unrest?
The execution of Col. Muammar Gaddafi earlier this week closes one chapter on Libya’s version of the “Arab Spring” movement.
Read More »Skeptical Research Effort Confirms Global Warming, Again
The Earth's surface is warming, after all, says a team of researchers who sought to investigate claims that flawed data and methods had skewed existing analyses of global temperature trends. The work by the Berkeley Earth Project shows that, on average, global land surface temperatures have risen about 1 degree Celsius since the mid-1950s -- on par with the warming trend described by research groups at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, NASA and the U.K
Read More »EPA Plans to Issue Rules for Fracking Wastewater
The EPA took another step toward tightening oversight of hydraulic fracturing today, announcing it would initiate a process to set national rules for treating wastewater discharged from gas drilling operations. Until now, the agency has largely left it to states to police wastewater discharges. Some have allowed drillers to pump waste through sewage treatment plants that aren't equipped to remove many of the contaminants, leading to pollution in some rivers and to problems at drinking water facilities.
Read More »