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Location American Science News for 16 October 2013
Humanoid Robots to Flying Cars: 10 Coolest DARPA Projects The U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, or DARPA, has a reputation for working on some of the most cutting-edge, futuristic projects. From humanoid robots to flying armored cars, here are 10 of the coolest DA...
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Elusive secret of HIV long-term immunity

EurekAlert! - 16 Oct 2013 06:00
(Northwestern University) Scientists have discovered a long sought, critical new clue about why some people are able to control the HIV virus long term without taking antiviral drugs. The finding may be useful in shorten...
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Cocktail-Drink Boat Powered by Booze

Live Science - 16 Oct 2013 23:47
Cocktail-Drink Boat Powered by Booze The cocktail boat that zips around your drink was inspired by water-walking insects.
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Fenced In, Animal Migrations Cannot Survive (Op-Ed)

Live Science - 16 Oct 2013 23:39
Fenced In, Animal Migrations Cannot Survive (Op-Ed) Society's progress, well planned, can coexist with ancient animal migration routes.
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Facts About Lawrencium

Live Science - 16 Oct 2013 23:36
Facts About Lawrencium Properties, sources and uses of the element lawrencium.
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New Wave Wi-Fi: Wireless Underwater Internet in the Works An underwater wireless Internet? Researchers have a solution, and it's about to make the ocean a noisy place.
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Wipha Hits But Does Not Damage Fukushima Plant

Live Science - 16 Oct 2013 23:23
Wipha Hits But Does Not Damage Fukushima Plant Typhoon Wipha has not created any new problems at the crippled Fukushima nuclear power plant.
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Pre-Incan Culture Expanded Through Trade, Not Conquest The Pre-Incan culture of the Wari was not ruled predominantly through tight centralized control, but instead likely expanded through trade and semi-autonomous colonies, new research suggests.
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Life After Death? New Techniques Halt Dying Process

Live Science - 16 Oct 2013 23:01
Life After Death? New Techniques Halt Dying Process The line between life and death is not as clear as once thought, now that developments in the science of resuscitation have made it possible to revive people even hours after their heart has stopped beating and they are ...
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Perfect Storm: Blizzard, Shutdown Pummel South Dakota Ranchers On the same week that a federal budget standoff shut down vast swaths of the U.S. government, a freak blizzard shut down vast swaths of South Dakota. And both disasters have combined to devastate one of the state's bigge...
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Human evolution: Unity or diversity?

The Economist - 16 Oct 2013 21:03
Human evolution: Unity or diversity? What a piece of work is a man HOW many human species roamed Africa when the genus Homo emerged there about 2.4m years ago is a vexed question. Conventional wisdom suggests that there were as many as four--Homo erectus, H...
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Medical Journals Refuse to Publish Tobacco-Funded Research (Op-Ed) Editors of journals published by the BMJ Group will no longer consider publishing research that is partly or wholly funded by the tobacco industry, the journals have said in an editorial published this week.
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1 in 2000 Britons may carry 'mad cow' prion protein

New Scientist - 16 Oct 2013 20:39
The prion protein responsible for the human version of BSE is twice as common in the UK as the previous best estimate, suggests the biggest survey yet     
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Podcast: Weightlessness in Movies

Physics Buzz - 16 Oct 2013 20:12
This week's podcast is all about movie magic. How do filmmakers simulate weightlessness when they want to make movies that take place in space? Today I talk about three movies that each tried different approaches to this...
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Biologists call for part privatisation of oceans

New Scientist - 16 Oct 2013 20:07
We have a decade to save the oceans - is the solution public-private partnerships?     
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The Unique Life Forms In Deep-Sea Canyons Face Numerous Threats | Video A menajerie of rare life living in the deep sea canyons off the east coast of the United States are under threat from deep sea oil drilling, bottom trawling, and seismic exploration.
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Earth's super-siblings grew up very differently

New Scientist - 16 Oct 2013 20:00
The super-Earths spotted in our galaxy so far formed in a very different way to our own celestial home, which could affect their suitability for life     
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Golden Rice creator wants to live to see it save lives

New Scientist - 16 Oct 2013 19:42
Ingo Potrykus, the man behind rice modified to boost dietary vitamin A, explains why, decades on, he is still fighting to make it widely available     
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Ancient 'Mega-Clawed' Creature Had Brain Like a Spider's The discovery of a fossilized brain in the preserved remains of an extinct "mega-clawed" creature has revealed an ancient nervous system that is remarkably similar to that of modern-day spiders and scorpions, according t...
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Are You Part Iceman? Famous -tzi Has 19 Living Relatives : -tzi the Iceman, one of the best-preserved Neolithic mummy ever discovered, has at least 19 living male relatives, new research suggests. -tzi and the modern men share a common ancestor who lived about 10,000 to 12,000...
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Virtual role-playing teaches kids the harm of bullying

New Scientist - 16 Oct 2013 19:00
SchoolLife, a virtual reality game, aims to cut bullying by letting students experience the motivations and feelings of people in a conflict situation     
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Back from the dead: Reversing walking corpse syndrome

New Scientist - 16 Oct 2013 19:00
A herpes drug can make people with renal failure insist they are dead - a condition called Cotard's syndrome - and may provide insights into consciousness     
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