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Location American Science News for 10 December 2014
ONE reason children are so fond of dinosaurs is that the giant reptiles are reassuringly extinct. They perished after an asteroid hit Earth 65m years ago. That collision kicked off the fifth great mass extinction in the ...
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Engineers at the University of California, San Diego have demonstrated a new and more efficient way to trap light, using a phenomenon called bound states in the continuum (BIC) that was first proposed in the early days o...
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Researchers from North Carolina State University and Qatar University have developed a new "high-entropy" metal alloy that has a higher strength-to-weight ratio than any other existing metal material.
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Touch can be a subtle sense, but it communicates quickly whether something in our hands is slipping, for example, so we can tighten our grip. For the first time, scientists report the development of a stretchable "electr...
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Windows allow brilliant natural light to stream into homes and buildings. Along with light comes heat that, in warm weather, we often counter with energy-consuming air conditioning. Now scientists are developing a new ki...
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Like a baseball player sliding into third, a hot monomer skids in a straight line along a cold surface until it's safely among its fellow molecules.
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The Taj Mahal's iconic marble dome and soaring minarets require regular cleaning to maintain their dazzling appearance, and scientists now know why. Researchers from the United States and India are pointing the finger at...
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When a large protein unfolds in transit through a cell, it slows down and can get stuck in traffic. Using a specialized microscope -- a sort of cellular traffic camera -- University of Illinois chemists now can watch the...
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Google's new bot-trap trains machines to see the world

New Scientist - 10 Dec 2014 23:00
From now on you'll be matching images to prove you're not a bot - and training Google's computers to recognise real-world objects at the same time
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Space Diamonds in Gold Country: California Meteorite's Secrets Revealed A meteorite that crashed down in California's gold country is showing off treasures of a different sort: small diamonds that could tell scientists more about the insides of asteroids.
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Researchers from North Carolina State University and Qatar University have developed a new "high-entropy" metal alloy that has a higher strength-to-weight ratio than any other existing metal material.
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Researchers demonstrate new way to plug 'leaky' light cavities Engineers at the University of California, San Diego have demonstrated a new and more efficient way to trap light, using a phenomenon called bound states in the continuum (BIC) that was first proposed in the early days o...
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Prenatal Exposure to Common Chemicals Linked to Lower IQ in Kids Chemicals called phthalates may disrupt brain development, researchers say.
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Oldest Horned Dinosaur in North America Was the Size of a Crow A skull of a small, crow-size dinosaur found in Montana, the oldest horned dinosaur ever found in North America, suggests that these dinos migrated from Asia to North America between 113 million and 105 million years ago...
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Photos: Oldest Known Horned Dinosaur in North America A fossilized skull unearthed in Montana is the oldest horned dinosaur on record in North America, a new study finds.
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Awash in Plastic: Oceans May Hold 250,000 Tons of Trash Ocean waters may hold 10 times more garbage than a previous estimate.
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Rosetta pours cold water on cometary origins of Earth's oceans

Scientific American - 10 Dec 2014 21:01
Rosetta pours cold water on cometary origins of Earth's oceans In the Enuma Elish, a Babylonian epic that recounts the creation of the world, the heavens and the Earth emerge from a primordial abyss of brackish water. --
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#RosettaWatch: Comet water is not like Earth's

New Scientist - 10 Dec 2014 21:00
The idea that comets brought water to the young Earth has taken a blow after the discovery that comet 67P's water is very different to that of our planet
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Infant Born in Water Dies of Legionella Infection

Live Science - 10 Dec 2014 20:38
Infant Born in Water Dies of Legionella Infection An infant in Texas died from Legionnaires' disease few weeks after being born in a heated birthing pool at home, highlighting the risk of waterborne pathogens to babies born in water.
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Spider-Inspired Sensor Detects Vibrations and Speech

Live Science - 10 Dec 2014 20:31
Spider-Inspired Sensor Detects Vibrations and Speech Some of humanity's greatest technologies were inspired by animals. Now, scientists, inspired by the movement-sensing organ of a spider, have developed a wearable sensor that can detect music, recognize speech and monitor...
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That CIA torture methods were pointless is no shock

New Scientist - 10 Dec 2014 20:30
While the US intelligence agency brutalised detainees, evidence that torture was counterproductive was staring it in the face, says Michael Bond
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Physicists explain puzzling particle collisions An anomaly spotted at the Large Hadron Collider has prompted scientists to reconsider a mathematical description of the underlying physics. By considering two forces that are distinct in everyday life but unified under e...
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