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Location American Science News for 29 September 2014

Behind the smile: What dolphins really think

New Scientist - 29 Sep 2014 21:00
They have been hailed as the second most intelligent animal on the planet, but could a soft spot for dolphins have led us to terribly misjudge them? (full text available to subscribers)
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Scientists have discovered a new species of poison dart frog in the Donoso district of Panama. The tiny, orange-colored frog, which is as small as a fingernail, measures only half an inch.
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Suzie Pun accepts Biomaterials Science Lectureship Award at SIPCD 2014 Suzie Pun, recipient of the inaugural Biomaterials Science lectureship, accepted her award at the 3rd Symposium on Innovative Polymers for Controlled Delivery (SIPCD 2014), which took place in Suzhou, China on 16-19th Se...
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Quantum Bits Compressed for the First Time

Scientific American - 29 Sep 2014 23:40
Quantum Bits Compressed for the First Time Physicists have now shown how to encode three quantum bits, the kind of data that might be used in the computers of tomorrow, using just two photons --
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Researchers develop new transparent nanoscintillators for radiation detection A University of Texas at Arlington research team says recently identified radiation detection properties of a light-emitting nanostructure built in their lab could open doors for homeland security and medical advances.
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Marine Archaeology Goes High-Tech

Scientific American - 29 Sep 2014 22:43
Marine Archaeology Goes High-Tech Editor's Note: Veteran science journalist Philip Hilts is working and diving with a team of archeologists, engineers and divers off the shore of Antikythera, a remote Greek island, where a treasure... --
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Why Deadly Japan Volcano Erupted Without Warning

Live Science - 29 Sep 2014 22:39
Why Deadly Japan Volcano Erupted Without Warning Japan's deadly blast at Mount Ontake was likely a phreatic eruption, a steam explosion that is nearly impossible to predict.
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'O' My: Ring-Shaped Cloud Spotted Over the Pacific (Photo) NASA's Earth Observatory released an image of an 'O'-shaped open-cell cloud that formed over the Pacific Ocean in early September.
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Sophisticated 600-Year-Old Canoe Discovered in New Zealand Sophisticated oceangoing canoes and favorable winds may have helped early human settlers colonize New Zealand, a pair of new studies shows.
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Live Science Thanks You, Our 1 Million+ Facebook Fans! (Infographic) Live Science, founded in 2004, has grown to have more than 1 million fans on Facebook and continues to grow as more readers find us on social media and spread the word about our coverage of science, technology and the na...
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Archaeology's Enemy Number One: Salt

Physics Buzz - 29 Sep 2014 20:13
Originally published: Sep 26 2014 - 12:00pm, Inside Science News ServiceBy: Joel N. Shurkin, Contributor(Inside Science) -- The enemy of archaeology everywhere is salt. It destroys buildings, disassembles art works, and ...
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Well-Armed Design: 8 Octopus-Inspired Technologies

Live Science - 29 Sep 2014 20:04
Well-Armed Design: 8 Octopus-Inspired Technologies Octopuses, with their underwater dexterity and camouflage abilities, have inspired much technological innovation. Here are some novel technologies that have been created based on the sea creature.
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How to be genuinely yourself when always online

New Scientist - 29 Sep 2014 20:00
If you want to be free in a digital age, must you switch off your computer, ask two new books, The End of Absence and The Glass Cage
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Now hear this: Simple fluid waveguide performs spectral analysis in a manner similar to the cochlea (Phys.org) --Within the mammalian inner ear, or cochlea, a remarkable but and long-debated phenomenon occurs: As they move from the base of the cochlea to its apex, traveling fluid waves - that is, surface waves, in whic...
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Today on New Scientist

New Scientist - 29 Sep 2014 18:30
All the latest on newscientist.com: electronics-frying space invaders, Japanese volcano, Arctic impact on jet stream, India's Mars triumph and more
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Physicists use supercomputer to gain insight into plasma dynamics Studying the intricacies and mysteries of the sun is physicist Wendell Horton life's work. A widely known authority on plasma physics, his study of the high temperature gases on the sun, or plasma, consistently leads him...
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Japan eruption practically undetectable in advance

New Scientist - 29 Sep 2014 17:54
The type of eruption that left an ashen landscape at the peak of Mount Ontake could occur at many apparently sleeping volcanoes
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Higgs Boson to the World Wide Web: 7 Big Discoveries Made at CERN The world's biggest atom smasher, which made possible a host of monumental discoveries, is celebrating its 60th anniversary today (Sept. 29).
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CERN turns 60

Symmetry Magazine - 29 Sep 2014 17:15
CERN celebrates six decades of peaceful collaboration for science. Today, CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research, is blowing out 60 candles at an event attended by official delegations from 35 countries. Fo...
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Smart, eco-friendly new battery to solve problems

e! Science News - 29 Sep 2014 16:59
Present-day lithium batteries are efficient but involve a range of resource and environmental problems. Using materials from alfalfa (lucerne seed) and pine resin and a clever recycling strategy, Uppsala researchers have...
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Bodies Recovered From Japan Volcano Eruption | Video

Live Science - 29 Sep 2014 16:09
Bodies Recovered From Japan Volcano Eruption | Video Rescue crews finished recovering the remaining 27 bodies from atop Japan's Mount Ontake Monday. At least 31 people were killed Saturday in the mountain's first fatal volcanic event in modern history.
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A Higgs-gravity connection may leave traces in white dwarfs (Phys.org) --The discovery of the Higgs boson at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) in 2012 marked an important step toward understanding the origin of the mass of fundamental particles. Since mass plays a major role in gra...
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