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Science News

Location American Science News for 19 August 2014
Researchers at Columbia University Medical Center say a drug used to treat bone marrow cancer can restore hair for people suffering from alopecia areata. The researchers found ruxolitinib, which already has been approved...
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A wildfire is spreading uncontrolled in Yosemite National Park in Northern California, prompting authorities on Monday night to close a nearby highway and evacuate 13,000 people from the popular tourist area. The fire is...
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Flu Shot Recommended for All Pregnant Women

Live Science - 19 Aug 2014 23:20
Flu Shot Recommended for All Pregnant Women Pregnant? Then you should get a flu shot, according to new guidelines from the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists.
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Food Poisoning From an infographic for Foodborne Chicago by Payal Patel Designs Those moules frites you had at the French bistro last night were delicious, but now you're feeling kind of funny. Worse than funny. Actually...
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Beyond Bulletproof: New 'X-Vehicles' Take Stealth to the Extreme Imagine an armored truck that can drive itself, is invisible to enemies and can travel at extreme speeds. That's the type of truck the Pentagon is hoping to develop through its new ground X-vehicle (GXV-T) program.
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In Images: Stealthy Armored Vehicles Go Beyond Bulletproof Imagine an armored truck that can drive itself, is invisible to enemies and can travel at extreme speeds. That's the type of truck the Pentagon is hoping to develop through its new ground X-vehicle program.
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Researchers demonstrate ultra low-field nuclear magnetic resonance using Earth's magnetic field Earth's magnetic field, a familiar directional indicator over long distances, is routinely probed in applications ranging from geology to archaeology. Now it has provided the basis for a technique which might, one day, b...
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Bored with Your Fitness Tracker? Better Devices Are on the Way About a third of people who buy a smart wearable, such as a fitness tracker or smartwatch, abandon the device after six to 12 months, according to a recent poll.
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How Do Monster Black Holes Form? New Find May Provide 'Missing Link' Black holes are some of the strangest objects in the universe, and they typically fall into one of two size extremes: "small" ones that are dozens of times more massive than the sun and other "supermassive" black holes t...
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How daydreaming can help you beat information overload

New Scientist - 19 Aug 2014 21:00
Life is throwing ever more information our way. But there are simple tracks that can help us cope, says neuroscientist Daniel Levitin (full text available to subscribers)
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Just how rare is intelligent life in the universe?

New Scientist - 19 Aug 2014 20:00
Although intelligent life may exist on other planets, The Copernicus Complex by Caleb Scharf argues that Earth will still be special after all
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Zombie Fungus Makes 'Sniper's Alley' Around Ant Colonies A fungus that turns worker ants into zombie henchmen has a surprisingly clever strategy to recruit new hosts.
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Rare Mid-Sized Black Hole Discovered In Old Probe Data | Video NASA's decommissioned Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer (RXTE) satellite is still bearing fruit with the discovered of the object in the Messier 82 galaxy. The black hole (M82 X-1) weighs in at about 400 solar masses. Full Sto...
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Today on New Scientist

New Scientist - 19 Aug 2014 18:30
All the latest on newscientist.com: enigma of shrinking Y chromosome, dark net, Michael Brown autopsy, California's drought plan, Ebola quackery and more
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Bubbling down: Discovery suggests surprising uses for common bubbles Anyone who has ever had a glass of fizzy soda knows that bubbles can throw tiny particles into the air. But in a finding with wide industrial applications, Princeton researchers have demonstrated that the bursting bubble...
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The invention of fibre optics revolutionized the way we share information, allowing us to transmit data at volumes and speeds we'd only previously dreamed of.
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These Adorable Fur Balls Survived a Raging Forest Fire Pint-size pikas survived Oregon's Dollar Lake fire, providing new insight into their resiliency to environmental change.
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Ebola fight hindered by rumours and bogus cures online

New Scientist - 19 Aug 2014 18:15
Rumours of dubious treatments are spreading on social media in West Africa, while fishy Ebola treatments are being peddled to anxious US citizens
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African elephants are being poached to extinction

New Scientist - 19 Aug 2014 18:15
The surge in the illegal ivory trade is shrinking Africa's elephant population by up to 3 per cent a year, which could ultimately wipe out the species
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Dirt and Corn? Test Reveals Hidden Coffee Ingredients Chemists can now use a test to identify counterfeit coffee made with filler ingredients like soybean, corn and twigs.
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Floods in India and Nepal will only become more common

New Scientist - 19 Aug 2014 17:40
The floods that have killed over 100 people in the Himalayan region are exactly what climate scientists have been warning of
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An ancient fossil, discovered in the early 1900s and long considered an "evolutionary misfit," finally found its rightful place in the tree of life after a team of scientists at the University of Cambridge linked it to t...
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