MURCHISON SHIRE, Western Australia--The pilot of the eight-passenger Cessna turboprop lines up the nose of his plane with a red-dirt landing strip ahead, a band of cleared Earth not all that different from the flat, sparsely vegetated terrain below.
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Feed SubscriptionRenewables Could Be 80 Percent of Energy by 2050
By Stanley Carvalho ABU DHABI (Reuters) - Renewable sources such as solar, wind and hydropower could fulfill almost 80 percent of the world's energy demand by 2050 with the right policies, according to a U.N. report which won backing from governments on Monday.
Read More »Milky Way Should Have Much More Companionship
Dark matter. Nobody knows what it is, but it's thought to make up a quarter of the universe
Read More »Could Carbon Labeling Combat Climate Change?
While large-scale efforts to curb greenhouse gases aren't likely to happen in the near future, advocates are thinking of smaller ways to reduce emissions in the meantime. Recently, Vanderbilt University professor Michael Vandenbergh and two others proposed the idea of voluntarily labeling carbon footprints on products in the journal Nature Climate Change . [More]
Read More »What’s Behind Google’s Tactics?
A new lawsuit could shed some light. Plus, bringing off-shore insurance tactics to the U.S., and the rest of the day's news for entrepreneurs. Each day, Inc.'s reporters scour the Web for the most important and interesting news to entrepreneurs
Read More »Japan to Shut Nuclear Plant on Quake Fears
By Chikako Mogi and Risa Maeda NAGOYA/TOKYO, Japan (Reuters) - Japanese power firm Chubu Electric Monday agreed to shut a nuclear plant until it can be better defended against the type of massive tsunami that in March triggered the worst atomic crisis in 25 years. [More]
Read More »Too Hard for Science? Simulating the Human Brain
Supercomputers may soon approach the brain's power, but much is unknown about how it works In "Too Hard for Science?" I interview scientists about ideas they would love to explore that they don't think could be investigated. For instance, they might involve machines beyond the realm of possibility, such as particle accelerators as big as the sun, or they might be completely unethical, such as lethal experiments involving people
Read More »Addiction Centers Should Think Twice Before Banning Smoking
It’s not news that tobacco’s bad for your health--nearly half a million Americans die from tobacco-related illnesses every year. And among people who abuse drugs and alcohol, more than three-quarters use tobacco, which means tobacco is still the leading killer of the drug-dependent, not hard drugs. [More]
Read More »Burnout Gains More Recognition Among Psychologists
Most of us have seen it happen: a friend or colleague with enviable energy and dedication to a stressful job suddenly burns out. In place of tireless toil comes un
Read More »The Hidden Organ In Our Eyes [Web Exclusive]
Do Blind People Suffer from Seasonal Depression?
Read More »Yeast Alive! Watch Yeast Live and Breathe
Key concepts Life [More]
Read More »Ancient Marsupials Played Possum in Packs
By Matt Kaplan of Nature magazine Modern mammals often live in groups, but most marsupials are solitary. [More]
Read More »Human Brains Are Optimally Tuned for the Visual Hunt
Why is it that most of us are able to track down the tiny sketch of a be-spectacled cartoon man wearing a striped shirt and a funny hat--in the midst of a busy scene filled with distractions and look-alikes? [More]
Read More »Whales Return to NYC Harbor
[audio of blue whale song] That's the song of the blue whale, the largest animal on the planet . It's been sped up five [OR: 30] times faster so that our ears can hear it. In reality, these infrasound songs were captured in 2009, off the coast of… Long Island
Read More »Rival Anthropologists Donald Johanson and Richard Leakey Reunite after 30-Year Rift
On May 5 famed paleoanthropologists Donald Johanson and Richard Leakey convened at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City to discuss human origins. It is the first time Leakey and Johanson--longtime rivals--have shared a stage since a public falling out in 1981. Viewers in the live audience and those who tuned in to the webcast tweeted the discussion and uploaded photos to Facebook, so I decided to use Storify to document this historic event.
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