Kids spend an increasing fraction of their formative years online, and it is a habit they dutifully carry into adulthood. Under the right circumstances, however, a love affair with the Internet may spiral out of control and even become an addiction
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Feed SubscriptionSad Sacks: Can Reusable Shopping Bags Leach Lead into Food?
Dear EarthTalk : I heard that some reusable bags contain lead. Is this a major health concern?
Read More »MIND Reviews: Neuroscience of Bullying
Three new books reveal how we deal with suffering and trauma. A child who is bullied by her playmates may kick her kitten in retaliation. Passing pain to others is not just a human trait--payback can also be seen in many animals
Read More »China Raises Flood Alert to Top Level, 555,000 Evacuated
By Royston Chan ZHUJI, China (Reuters) - China has mobilized troops to help with flood relief and raised its disaster alert to the highest level after days of downpours forced the evacuation of more than half a million people in central and southern provinces. [More]
Read More »Hadrian-henge: Roman Emperor’s Villa Oriented to Catch Solstice Rays
By Eric Hand of Nature magazine Hadrian's villa 30 kilometers east of Rome was a place where the Roman Emperor could relax in marble baths and forget about the burdens of power. [More]
Read More »Caught in the Act: A Black Hole Scuttles a Star
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Read More »Senate Votes to End $6 billion in Ethanol Subsidies
By Tom Doggett WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Senate voted overwhelmingly on Thursday to eliminate billions of dollars in support for the U.S. ethanol industry, sending a strong message that the era of taxpayer support for biofuels is ending. [More]
Read More »Lost Ladybug Project
Help entomologists better understand ladybug species distribution across North America [More]
Read More »Analysis: Gas Is Killing Green Energy in Price War
By Gerard Wynn LONDON (Reuters) - A widening shale gas revolution is killing the economics of renewable energy, even as falling costs allow wind and solar to overtake fossil fuels in niche areas, say energy executives and analysts.
Read More »Where Will Our Energy Come from in 2030?
It may seem slightly ridiculous to consider the prospects for a future solar-hydrogen economy at an institute for theoretical physics at the University of Waterloo in Canada. After all, Canada is the capital of unconventional oil , also known as oil sands, also known as tar sands, which supply more than a million barrels of oil per day to the U.S. And the primary use of today's existing hydrogen economy--a $200 billion a year proposition--is adding the energetic molecule to such unconventional oils to make them more palatable to the global energy infrastructure.
Read More »The Science of Fatherhood
A look at research into the paternal bond and how evolution and modern society combine to shape the experience of fatherhood [More]
Read More »New Expedition – MSU student research with dinosaur eggs in China
MSU China Paleontology Expedition is a project led by Frankie D. Jackson and David J. Varricchio who are professors in the Department of Earth Sciences, Dinosaur Paleontology at Montana State University and Jin Xengsheng who is a paleontologist and Vice Director of the
Read More »Voyager 1 Reaches Surprisingly Calm Boundary of Interstellar Space
By Geoff Brumfiel of Nature magazine Seventeen and a half billion kilometers from Earth, mankind's most distant probe seems to be on the edge of interstellar space. The Voyager 1 spacecraft is at the limit of the 'heliosheath', where particles streaming from the Sun clash with the gases of the galaxy. [More]
Read More »Doctors Prepare to Explain and Treat Climate-Related Symptoms
Dr. Anthony Szema is used to seeing patients with red eyes and runny noses. But in the past couple of years, the New York-based allergist has been faced with an onslaught of patients complaining their symptoms are starting earlier and hitting harder than ever before
Read More »Climate Change Increases Cattle Breed’s Newborn Mortality
Climate change affects seasonal events--spring flowers open earlier, songbirds breed sooner.
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