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Location American Science News for 2 October 2014
Promising Method for Detecting Pancreatic Cancer Years Before Traditional Diagnosis In cancer diagnosis, earlier is better--treatments are more effective and so survival is more likely too. Some forms, like skin or breast cancer, lend themselves to early detection with regular checkups as they can be fo...
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Nanoparticles give up forensic secrets

e! Science News - 2 Oct 2014 17:33
A group of researchers from Switzerland has thrown light on the precise mechanisms responsible for the impressive ability of nanoparticles to detect fingermarks left at crime scenes.
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A closer look at the perfect fluid

EurekAlert! - 2 Oct 2014 06:00
(DOE/Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory) By combining data from two high-energy accelerators, nuclear scientists have refined the measurement of a remarkable property of exotic matter known as quark-gluon plasma. The ...
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Podcast: September Physics News Roundup

Physics Buzz - 2 Oct 2014 19:42
School has started and Halloween's just around the corner: that mean's it's time for our September news podcast! First up: do you know how old your water is? New research shows that some of the water on Earth predates th...
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Plunge deep into an undersea mountain crater

New Scientist - 2 Oct 2014 18:30
Gaze into the underwater abyss where hidden mountains lurk and new islands rise from the sea
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The first U.S. Ebola victim has been identified as Thomas Eric Duncan, a resident of Monrovia in his mid-40s. Many Americans became fearful Tuesday after it was revealed that someone had contracted the Ebola virus in the...
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The man who became the first person to be diagnosed with Ebola in the U.S. on Tuesday was seen vomiting outside his Dallas apartment building as paramedics ushered him into an ambulance Sunday. "His whole family was scre...
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At least four Americans have died of a severe respiratory illness that has spread to 42 states, public health officials said Wednesday. The outbreak of enterovirus 68 has caused a rash of child illnesses nationwide, some...
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(University of California - San Diego) Scientists at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego and their colleagues have created a new map of the world's seafloor. Twice as accurate as the previous version, the...
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4 New Substances Added to List of Carcinogens

Live Science - 2 Oct 2014 23:23
4 New Substances Added to List of Carcinogens Four new substances have been added to a list of carcinogens compiled by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
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Fermi Bubbles: Remodelling the Milky Way

Physics Buzz - 2 Oct 2014 23:02
Image courtesy NASA. If someone asked you what the galaxy looks like from afar, you might tell them it's a spiral. You'd be half-right. If you thought to include dark matter in your answer, you might say that it's a disk...
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Ebola Ruled Out for Hawaii Patient

Live Science - 2 Oct 2014 22:44
Ebola Ruled Out for Hawaii Patient Health officials in Hawaii said they have determined a man hospitalized in isolation is no longer being evaluated for Ebola.
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Ebola in Texas: Most Patient's Contacts Interviewed

Live Science - 2 Oct 2014 21:52
Ebola in Texas: Most Patient's Contacts Interviewed As many as 100 people may have come into contact with the Ebola patient in Texas, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
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New Way to Make Oxygen Doesn't Need Plants

Live Science - 2 Oct 2014 20:17
New Way to Make Oxygen Doesn't Need Plants Earth's atmosphere wasn't always full of life-giving oxygen -- it was once a choking mixture of carbon dioxide and other gases, more like the atmosphere of Mars or Venus.
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Geological Wonderland: Thousands of Seamounts Discovered in New Seafloor Map A new gravity map of Earth's seafloor fills in blanks and will reveal its geologic history in greater detail.
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Scientists have created some of the most vivid maps yet of the deepest and most mysterious spots beneath the ocean, revealing spreading ridges and undersea mountains once veiled by sediments and ocean waters.
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Majorana fermion: Physicists observe elusive particle that is its own antiparticle Princeton University scientists have observed an exotic particle that behaves simultaneously like matter and antimatter, a feat of math and engineering that could yield powerful computers based on quantum mechanics.
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Latinas in STEM: Making Bright Futures a Reality

Scientific American - 2 Oct 2014 20:00
Latinas in STEM: Making Bright Futures a Reality Editor's note: During National Hispanic Heritage Month (September 15 to October 15), Ciencia Puerto Rico and Borinqueña are celebrating the work of organizations inspiring, supporting and... --
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New Particle Is Both Matter and Antimatter

Scientific American - 2 Oct 2014 20:00
New Particle Is Both Matter and Antimatter Researchers see signature of “Majorana particles” inside superconducting iron --
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Researchers at Berkeley Lab and their collaborators have honed a way to probe the quark-gluon plasma, the kind of matter that dominated the universe immediately after the big bang.
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The rapid expansion of mining and railway links from Kinshasa, the epicentre of the pandemic, helped HIV spread, say a study tracing the virus's first steps
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Astronomers have used data provided by NASA's Gravity Recovery and Interior Laboratory, or GRAIL, mission to solve one of the oldest mysteries of the moon's surface. According to the space agency, a rocky outline of a re...
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