By Marian Turner of Nature magazine Engineered bacteria that can detect and kill human pathogens could provide a new way to treat antibiotic-resistant bacteria.
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Feed SubscriptionHow Did BART Kill Cellphone Service?
The San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit system (BART) shut down subterranean cellular phone service on August 11, stifling protests that had been set to take place on its train platforms that day. Demonstrators had planned to stop trains from running in response to the fatal shooting of an unarmed passenger by the BART police on July 3
Read More »Rainlog.org
Help University of Arizona researchers track rainfall throughout the state [More]
Read More »Top 10 Cities for Green Living
Many Americans root for their hometowns, whether they do so by supporting a sports team, participating in local government or just bragging about their origins and environs.
Read More »The Smartest Cities Will Use People as their Sensors [Video]
Several projects coordinated by MIT's Senseable City lab have revealed the powerful urban insights that can occur when people are linked via networks of sensors. Video and animations about a selection of such projects can be seen below.
Read More »Street-Savvy
It’s hard to pin down the precise moment the world’s center of gravity shifted.
Read More »The Secret Language Code
Are there hidden messages in your emails? Yes, and in everything you write or say, according to James Pennebaker, chair of the department of psychology at the University of Texas at Austin. Pennebaker has been a leader in the computer analysis of texts for their psychological content
Read More »Special Report: How Indonesia Hurt Its Climate Change Project
By David Fogarty SINGAPORE (Reuters) - In July 2010, U.S. investor Todd Lemons and Russian energy giant Gazprom believed they were just weeks from winning final approval for a landmark forest preservation project in Indonesia. [More]
Read More »City Living and your Mental Health: Is city living driving you crazy?
I recently moved to a big city from a series of smaller, suburban cities and towns. [More]
Read More »Lilium urbanus: The perfect kickoff to Cities Week
When the topic of urbanization came up at Scientific American several weeks ago, I knew of the perfect short film to feature. [More]
Read More »Radioactive Chemicals in California Tracked to Fukushima Meltdown
By Geoff Brumfiel of Nature magazine Scientists in California are reporting raised levels of radioactive chemicals in the atmosphere in the weeks following the disaster at Japan's Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. [More]
Read More »‘Gustnado’ May Have Caused Indiana Stage Collapse
After studying video footage and radar images from Saturday's deadly stage collapse at the Indiana State Fair, AccuWeather.com Senior Meteorologist Henry Margusity suspects that a gustnado was a cause of the collapse.
Read More »Journey to a Giant World: Launch Shots of the Juno Mission to Jupiter [Slide Show]
NASA launched its Juno probe on August 5 from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida. The mission will be a meeting of mythological mates , as Juno is named after the queen of the Roman mythological gods and has been sent to enter orbit around the planet named after Juno's husband Jupiter
Read More »Review: New Documentary Explains Engineering Failures that Drowned New Orleans during Katrina
The Big Uneasy will make you squirm in your chair for two reasons: one good, one bad. [More]
Read More »Drug Companies’ Run-Off Linked to Sex Disruption in European Fish
By Natasha Gilbert of Nature magazine Consumers who flush unwanted contraceptives down the drain have long been blamed for giving fish more than their fair share of sex organs. [More]
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