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Location American Science News for 3 January 2014
Pointer Dogs: Pups Poop Along North-South Magnetic Lines Dogs apparently prefer to poop while aligned with the north-south axis of the Earth's magnetic field. That's the surprising conclusion of scientists who observed dogs pooping and peeing for two years.
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Mystery of Bizarre Amazon Web Formations Unraveled

Live Science - 3 Jan 2014 22:43
Mystery of Bizarre Amazon Web Formations Unraveled Strange circular towers found in the Amazon jungle were made by spiders to hatch their eggs, new research found. But the spider species that made the towers remains a mystery.
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In Photos: Spiders Hatched from Web Towers

Live Science - 3 Jan 2014 22:39
In Photos: Spiders Hatched from Web Towers Strange circular towers found in the Amazon jungle were made by spiders to hatch their eggs, new research found. But the spider species that made the towers remains a mystery.
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Personality Traits Help Explain Creationist Beliefs

Live Science - 3 Jan 2014 22:33
Personality Traits Help Explain Creationist Beliefs Myers-Briggs personality type may contribute to whether one believes the Earth was created in six days versus a more symbolic view of the Bible's Book of Genesis, new research suggests.
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Shapeshifting Northern Lights Dance Over Alaska in Amazing Photos Night sky photographer LeRoy Zimmerman captured these amazing images of aurora borealis over Alaska. See how he captured the views near Fairbanks in early December.
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Cosmic Horsehead Dances with Flame Nebula in Amateur Astronomer's Photo Amateur astronomer David Ellison captured this beautiful image of the Horsehead and Flame Nebulas from his backyard in Chatanooga, Tenn. See how he did it here.
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Bizarre Earthquake Lights Tied to Rifts in Earth

Live Science - 3 Jan 2014 21:59
Bizarre Earthquake Lights Tied to Rifts in Earth Bizarre electrical flashes known as earthquake lights may occur at rifts where a buildup of stress causes the flow of electrical current from magmatic rocks, new research suggests.
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Elite of Ancient Pompeii Dined on Sea Urchin, Giraffe Contrary to earlier belief, even the middle- and lower-class residents of the doomed city of Pompeii had a fairly varied diet, new research suggests.
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Embrace Your Regrets in the New Year (Op-Ed)

Live Science - 3 Jan 2014 21:26
Embrace Your Regrets in the New Year (Op-Ed) Regret can be healthy, embrace it.
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Kilauea Eruption Turns 31

Live Science - 3 Jan 2014 21:03
Kilauea Eruption Turns 31 The eruption at the Pu'u 'O'o cone on Hawaii's Kilauea volcano has been going for 31 years, teaching volcanologists plenty about how the volcano works.
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Stonehenge Man: not just a pretty face

New Scientist - 3 Jan 2014 20:40
Forensic analysis of a prehistoric skull gives the UK's most iconic monument a human face     
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Bald Eagles in Utah Died of West Nile

Live Science - 3 Jan 2014 20:26
Bald Eagles in Utah Died of West Nile Wildlife experts in Utah have found the culprit behind an unusual string of bald eagle deaths: West Nile virus.
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If the NSA succeeds in building a quantum computer, what might the agency use it for and how could citizens preserve their privacy?     
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Major Blizzard Visible from Space

Live Science - 3 Jan 2014 19:35
Major Blizzard Visible from Space NASA satellite imagery has captured the enormity of the first snowstorm of 2014.
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Earth-Friendly Packaging Made of Organic Mushroom Parts The typical packing plastic that comes with most consumer gadgets is far from environmentally friendly, but an innovative company has created a new mushroom based material that can be thrown in your garden instead of the...
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Gecko feet will let robot minions fix space stations

New Scientist - 3 Jan 2014 19:01
It may look like a circuit board stuck to the ceiling – but this sticky-footed climbing robot is paving the way for a mission in orbit     
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Mushroom Typical packing plastic is terrible for the environment, derived from petroleum and destined for the garbage. By using mushroom roots, Ecovative Design created a completely bio-degradable packing material made from farm ...
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Simple SkySweeper Robot a Mechanical Inchworm to Patrol Power Lines Nick Morozovsky, an engineering graduate student at UC San Diego, exemplifies how much you can do with how little these days. His SkySweeper robot that moves along cables like an inchworm, using naught but an Arduino mic...
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Land of make-believe: Fake archaeology in paradise

New Scientist - 3 Jan 2014 18:00
High politics meet big money and national pride on the Caribbean island of Roatán, where tourists flock to amazing Mayan ruins that no Maya ever saw (full text available to subscribers)     
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Life After Brain Death: Is the Body Still 'Alive'?

Live Science - 3 Jan 2014 17:50
Life After Brain Death: Is the Body Still 'Alive'? A 13-year-old girl in California continues to be kept on a ventilator after being declared brain-dead by doctors. Although a brain-dead person is not legally alive, how much of the body will keep on working with the help...
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Despite quantum's gains, standard computers still rule Quantum computing is getting the headlines these days, with buzz among scientists of giga-powered number-crunching and unbreakable encryption.
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Speak, Fido: Device Promises Dog Translations

Live Science - 3 Jan 2014 17:21
Speak, Fido: Device Promises Dog Translations A few inventors in Europe have received funding to develop "No More Woof," an electronic device that promises to analyze dogs' brain waves and translate a few of their thoughts into English, marking a possible breakthrou...
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