Scientists are still trying to understand the full purpose of sleep.
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Feed SubscriptionWarfare in 1912: A Look in Scientific American ‘s Archives [Slide Show]
These implements of warfare were developed to fill a perceived need or follow a specific doctrine. Some, such as the development of artillery, became a central facet during the Great War, the first “total war” that involved all of its citizens, industries and scientific ingenuity. [More]
Read More »100 Years Ago: Vickers Machine Gun
February 1962 [More]
Read More »Can A Middle-Aged Neophyte Make It to Carnegie Hall?
Gary Marcus suffers from what a friend jokingly describes as congenital arrhythmia--the inability, despite many hours of his youth spent practicing and taking lessons, to learn to play a musical instrument. A few years ago Marcus, a cognitive psychologist at New York University, decided at 38 to make one last try when he took up guitar. No surprise: He did not succeed in becoming the next Jimi Hendrix, but managed to acquire a modicum of skill--and went on to describe his experience in Guitar Zero: The New Musician and the Science of Learning
Read More »Schoolkids Name Moon Orbiters
Two washing-machine-sized satellites recently went into orbit around the moon. In March, they’ll start to gather detailed data about the quirks of the moon’s gravity.
Read More »The Smart Way to Play God with Earth’s Limited Land
Editor's Note: The following is an excerpt from Mark Lynas's book , The God Species: Saving the Planet in the Age of Humans .
Read More »How the Dutch Make "Room for the River" by Redesigning Cities
For centuries, the Dutch have built higher and higher dikes to keep waters at bay in a country where 55 percent of housing is located in areas prone to flooding. But climate change has convinced them this approach will no longer work, so the country is embarking on a mammoth task of moving dozens of dikes back to make room for swelling rivers
Read More »Are Controls on Bird Flu Research a Good Idea?
Two scientists who independently concocted potentially dangerous strains of bird flu viruses and have had the bioweapons community in a tizzy for the past month with the pending publication of their work today said that they would suspend their research for 60 days .
Read More »Leap Second Granted Extra Time
From Nature magazine [More]
Read More »Fracking Would Emit Large Quantities of Greenhouse Gases
Add methane emissions to the growing list of environmental risks posed by fracking.
Read More »Scientists Call for 60-Day Suspension of Mutant Flu Research
Reprinted from Nature magazine [More]
Read More »An Abundance of Exoplanets Changes our Universe
Earth-sized planets near and far (NASA/Ames/JPL-Caltech) Planets in habitable zones, planets orbiting twin suns, miniature solar systems , rogue planets, planets, planets, planets. If there is one single piece of information you should take away from the recent flood of incredible exoplanetary discoveries it is this: Our universe makes planets with extraordinary efficiency – if planets can form somewhere, they will
Read More »Recommended: Science on Ice: Four Polar Expeditions (preview)
Science on Ice: Four Polar Expeditions [More]
Read More »MIND Reviews: The Better Angels of Our Nature
The Better Angels of Our Nature: Why Violence Has Declined [More]
Read More »Digital Health Care Puts Control in Consumer Hands
For years, do-it-yourself health care meant looking up your symptoms on WebMD. But smart phones are extending our control, with apps that let people plan and track workouts, monitor important health indicators, and even locate nearby clinical trials. Apple's App Store alone offers thousands of mobile health apps
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