Stanford University physicist Leonard Susskind revels in discovering ideas that transform the status quo in physics. Forty years ago he co-founded string theory, which was initially derided but eventually became the leading candidate for a unified theory of nature. For years he disputed Stephen Hawking’s conjecture that black holes do not merely swallow objects but grind them up beyond recovery, in violation of quantum mechanics
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Feed SubscriptionGame App Aims to Show Pakistan Flood Shadow lingers
By Nita Bhalla NEW DELHI, June 22 (Reuters Life!) - A game application is [More]
Read More »Unwanted Housemates: Dishwashers Provide Habitat for ‘Extremotolerant’ Fungi
A dishwasher makes a nice addition to any home. But the appliances also make a nice home for a number of fungi, some of which are pathogenic, according to a new study
Read More »Severe Storms, Tornadoes Developing across Midwest
Severe thunderstorms, some producing tornadoes, are beginning to develop across the Midwest this afternoon. A potent storm tracking through this region is tapping into a warm, moist air mass, setting the stage for widespread showers and strong thunderstorms
Read More »Are Babies Dying in the Pacific Northwest Due to Fukushima? A Look at the Numbers
A recent article on the Al Jazeera English web site cites a disturbing statistic: infant mortality in certain U.S. Northwest cities spiked by 35 percent in the weeks following the disaster at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant . The author writes that "physician Janette Sherman MD and epidemiologist Joseph Mangano published an essay shedding light on a 35 per cent spike in infant mortality in northwest cities that occurred after the Fukushima meltdown, and [ sic ] may well be the result of fallout from the stricken nuclear plant.” The implication is clear: Radioactive fallout from the plant is spreading across the Pacific in sufficient quantities to imperil the lives of children (and presumably the rest of us as well)
Read More »SoundCitizen
A community-based water sampling network based in Washington's Puget Sound region [More]
Read More »Dams May Be Rated for Environmental and Social Impacts Under New Agreement
By Jeff Tollefson of Nature magazine Hydropower is booming in the devel
Read More »Commentary: Supreme Court Decision Is Good, Bad and Ugly for U.S. Climate Policy
By Douglas Kysar of Nature magazine The US Supreme Court this week gave its opinion on American Electric Power v. [More]
Read More »Snake Genome Suggests Treatments for Human Heart Disease
NORMAN, Okla.--Snakes have been around for some 150 million years, but their ancient physiology might hold some important clues to developing new drugs. [More]
Read More »The Intelligent Homosexual’s Guide to Natural Selection and Evolution, with a Key to Many Complicating Factors
June is Pride Month in the United States, and in communities across the country, lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgendered Americans are celebrating with carnivals, parades, and marches. Pride is a rebuke to the shame and marginalization many LGBT people face growing up, and a celebration of the freedoms we've won since the days when our sexual orientations were considered psychological diseases and grounds for harrassment and arrest
Read More »Adult Stem Cells Reverse Rare Genetic Blindness in Retinal Cells
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Read More »Warming Accelerates Sea Level Rise on U.S. East Coast
Sea level is rising faster along the U.S.
Read More »Rock Mapping a Challenge for Biology Student
Editor's Note: MSU China Paleontology Expedition is a project led by Frankie D. Jackson and David J
Read More »Vaccines for Malaria, TB and HIV Warrant Firm Focus
By Erika Check Hayden of Nature magazine As president of global health at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, based in Seattle, Washington, 66-year-old Tachi Yamada has been responsible for allocating billions of dollars to health projects around the world.
Read More »World’s First Transatlantic Flight… on Biofuels [Video]
This past weekend, the Paris Air Show witnessed two historic firsts: the first transatlantic flight on biofuels , closely followed by the second, which involved a much larger jet (although a smaller percentage of bio-jet fuel).
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