By Adam Mann A showdown over the course of Solar System exploration has ended with a qualified victory for Mars. [More]
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I'd like to imagine that an intense passion for sailing coupled with a severe case of hydrophobia were what compelled Mr.
Read More »Satellites Present a Better Picture of Deforestation
The picture of Southeast Asia's deforestation is coming into greater focus. Scientists have developed a new satellite-imaging technique that allows them to have a better bird's eye view of when carbon-rich peatlands were cleared and to what extent they have been replaced by palm oil trees. [More]
Read More »Do genes make people evil?
Do genes make people evil? --Robert Schreib, Jr., Toms River, N.J.
Read More »Eco-farming can double food output by poor: U.N.
By Alister Doyle, Environment Correspondent OSLO (Reuters) - Many farmers in developing nations can double food production within a decade by shifting to ecological agriculture from use of chemical fertilizers and pesticides, a U.N. report showed on Tuesday. [More]
Read More »The Future Is Now
As an understocked purveyor of large dried fruit might say, we’re out of big dates for a while. The Orwellian 1984 came and went, we partied like it was 1999, the most ominous monoliths in 2001 turned out to be ideological and the Clarkesque follow-up of 2010 recently ended without interplanetary incident. We have another five centuries before we judge the prescience of Zager and Evans, if we are still alive.
Read More »Alcoholic Beverages Induce Superconductivity
Wine can help keep conversation flowing at a dinner party. And now it looks like that wine may aid in materials science as well. Japanese researchers discovered that hot alcoholic beverages induce superconductivity in iron-based compounds.
Read More »Gene Study Challenges Human Origins in Eastern Africa
By Matt Kaplan A genetic analysis of modern hunter-gatherer populations in Africa suggests that humans evolved in the south of the continent, rather than the east, as has been thought. [More]
Read More »Egypt’s Outgoing Antiquities Chief Warns Heritage Is at Risk
By Jo Marchant Whoever saves Egypt's endangered antiquities, it will not be Zahi Hawass. [More]
Read More »Justice Department to set up oil spill probe task force
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Justice Department said on Monday that it will create a single task force to oversee all aspects of its criminal investigation into last year's oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. A department spokesman said the task force will be led by a criminal division senior counsel, John Buretta, and will be supervised by Assistant Attorney General Lanny Breuer, who is in charge of the department's criminal division.
Read More »Stretchy Electronics Promises Speedier Heart Surgery
By Zeeya Merali Researchers have developed a multifunctional catheter fitted with malleable electronics that has many of the necessary tools for cardiac surgery. [More]
Read More »Easier Said Than Done: Using Implants to Electrically Stimulate Paralyzed Vocal Cords
Vocal cord paralysis can strike as a result of a stroke, disease or trauma to the head or neck, thereby making breathing, swallowing and speaking difficult.
Read More »You can increase your intelligence: 5 ways to maximize your cognitive potential
"One should not pursue goals that are easily achieved. One must develop an instinct for what one can just barely achieve through one's greatest efforts." --Albert Einstein While Einstein was not a neuroscientist, he sure knew what he was talking about in regards to the human capacity to achieve. He knew intuitively what we can now show with data--what it takes to function at your cognitive best.
Read More »How Failure of Climate Satellite Sets Back Earth Science
The crash Friday of NASA's Glory satellite couldn't have come at a worse time. The incident is a blow for climate science and the space agency's efforts to rebuild an Earth observation program weakened by years of lean budgets
Read More »Monkey in the Mirror
Looking in the mirror and recognizing oneself was long thought to be an ability reserved for humans. Recently, however, researchers have found that other apes, such as chimpanzees and gorillas, seem to show signs of self-awareness, including recognizing and inspecting themselves in a mirror. Now one group of investigators claims that rhesus macaques have joined this elite group of self-aware animals.
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