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Science News

Location American Science News for 7 April 2014
Following an X-class solar flare on March 31, the sun emitted an M-class solar flare on April 2. There was a coronal mass ejection associated with the solar flare that hit Earth but didn't cause a geomagnetic storm on Ea...
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Biologists who want to know what types of fish live in the Tennessee Valley Authority lakes have an uncanny technique for uncovering what lurks beneath the surface. The method involves researchers putting a generator in ...
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Rare Earthquake Strikes Southern France

Live Science - 7 Apr 2014 23:30
Rare Earthquake Strikes Southern France An earthquake of preliminary magnitude 5.0 shook southern France today (April 7), according to France's National Seismic Monitoring Network.
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Pancreas: Function, Location & Diseases

Live Science - 7 Apr 2014 23:09
Pancreas: Function, Location & Diseases The pancreas helps regulate blood sugar levels. It is also an important aid in digestion.
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In Films, Viewers Often Miss The Little Things

Live Science - 7 Apr 2014 23:04
In Films, Viewers Often Miss The Little Things A lack of attention to detail can be a good thing.
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Arctic Sea Ice Peak Is 5th Lowest on Record

Live Science - 7 Apr 2014 22:45
Arctic Sea Ice Peak Is 5th Lowest on Record Arctic sea ice hit its annual peak on March 21. It was the fifth-lowest maximum extent since 1979.
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Based on a fundamental chemical discovery by scientists at Oregon State University, it appears that trees may soon play a major role in making high-tech energy storage devices.
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Rebar technique strengthens case for graphene

e! Science News - 7 Apr 2014 22:15
Carbon nanotubes are reinforcing bars that make two-dimensional graphene much easier to handle in a new hybrid material grown by researchers at Rice University.
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New research from North Carolina State University and UNC-Chapel Hill reveals that energy is transferred more efficiently inside of complex, three-dimensional organic solar cells when the donor molecules align face-on, r...
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Kids' Rates of Severe Obesity Are Troubling, Researchers Say The obesity rate in children hasn't declined in recent years, and severe obesity may even be on the rise, a new study has found.
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Earth's Oldest Living Things Immortalized in Stunning Photos Photographer Rachel Sussman traveled the planet for a decade in search of organisms that have witnessed thousands of years of history. Her stunning images are featured in a new book, "The Oldest Living Things in the Worl...
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Photos: Earth's Most Ancient Organisms

Live Science - 7 Apr 2014 21:13
Photos: Earth's Most Ancient Organisms Photographer Rachel Sussman traveled the planet in search of organisms that have been living for 2,000 years or more, compiling images for her book, "The Oldest Living Things in the World."
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Legendary Stradivarius Loses to New Violins in Blind Tests Despite myths about original Strads and Guarneri violins, expert soloists pick new instruments more often in blind tests. The study suggests that perception may cloud listeners' senses in the debate between old and new.
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Could you tell a new violin from a vintage Stradivarius? Top-notch soloists couldn't in a blind test, and they even preferred new instruments
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Who really decoded Down's syndrome?

New Scientist - 7 Apr 2014 21:00
The Frenchman credited with finding the genetic cause of Down's is in line for sainthood. Now his colleague says it was her who made the crucial breakthrough (full text available to subscribers)
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Off to See the Wizard? Ancient Fossils Had Heart and Brain An extinct marine predator entombed in a seafloor "Pompeii" for 520 million years had a sophisticated heart and blood vessel system similar to those of its distant modern relatives, arthropods such as spiders, lobsters a...
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Astronomers from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey have used 140,000 distant quasars to measure the expansion rate of the Universe when it was only one-quarter of its present age. This is the best measurement yet of the expan...
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Like zombies returning from the grave, certain cancer cells might be able to overcome death even after being destroyed by chemotherapy, according to new research. Normal cells routinely undergo a process called autophagy...
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Stress Response May Help Teens Avoid Car Accidents

Live Science - 7 Apr 2014 22:34
Stress Response May Help Teens Avoid Car Accidents Responsive stress hormones are linked to a lower rate of automobile crashes or near crashes for teenage drivers, new research finds. The stress response may be a crucial part of learning to cope with challenges on the ro...
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Why do we love to organise knowledge into trees?

New Scientist - 7 Apr 2014 22:00
From studying the bible to visualising computer storage, Manuel Lima's sumptuous The Book of Trees explores the tree diagram's appeal for showing information
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Fabulous Fossils: Gallery of Earliest Animal Organs

Live Science - 7 Apr 2014 20:19
Fabulous Fossils: Gallery of Earliest Animal Organs The Chengjiang fossil deposit in China has yielded amazing fossils of arthropod organ systems. These animals lived 520 million years ago, during the Cambrian period.
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Cold war in space? What NASA's Russia boycott means

New Scientist - 7 Apr 2014 19:50
NASA has suspended engagements with Russia, apart from on the International Space Station. We look at what the move means for space activities
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