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Science News

Location American Science News for 5 January 2015

Old Scientist: 50 years of deadly transport

New Scientist - 5 Jan 2015 15:20
From the January archives of New Scientist: we call for black boxes, ask if the Channel Tunnel is safe and worry about cosmic rays
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Flying high: Drones keep tabs on wildlife from above

New Scientist - 5 Jan 2015 16:00
Cheap, quiet and much safer than planes, researchers are turning to drones to help monitor animals at risk
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Two New Ocean Research Ships to Set Sail in 2015

Live Science - 5 Jan 2015 13:48
Two New Ocean Research Ships to Set Sail in 2015 Two new U.S. research ships will take to the seas in the Arctic and Atlantic in 2015, allowing scientists around the world to explore the geology, biology and health of the oceans.
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6 Healthy Habits Dramatically Reduce Heart Disease Risk in Women Up to three-quarters of heart attacks in younger women could be prevented if women followed a number of healthy lifestyle practices, a new study shows.
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Experimental Diet Pill Tricks Body into Thinking It Ate A new drug tricks mice into thinking they had an imaginary meal, a new study shows.
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Rapid Desert Formation May Have Destroyed China's 1st Kingdom The first known Chinese kingdom may have been destroyed when its lands rapidly transformed into deserts, possibly driving its people into the rest of China, a new study finds.
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Whale Genes Offer Hints to Longer Lifespans

Live Science - 5 Jan 2015 22:04
Whale Genes Offer Hints to Longer Lifespans Researchers have charted the bowhead whale's genome in a search for genes that fight off aging.
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Albatrosses fly fast for huge distances, barely flapping a wing. Can they teach us to build drones that will stay aloft for months or even years? (full text available to subscribers)
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Books to look forward to in 2015

New Scientist - 5 Jan 2015 21:00
A sneak preview of what's due to be published in the coming year suggests a promising crop
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Map a room by shining a laser through the keyhole

New Scientist - 5 Jan 2015 20:00
An imaging technique that measures the path of a laser can build up a three-dimensional picture and could let spies map an entire room
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With 1 Million Papers, Preprint Site Is Changing the Way Science Is Shared Researchers upload papers to arXiv before peer review for faster feedback --
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Eating Whole Grains May Help You Live Longer, Study Finds Eating whole grains such as popcorn, oats and quinoa is linked to increased longevity, and may decrease risk for deaths from cardiovascular disease over a 25-year period, but not cancer deaths, a new study finds.
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The monarch butterfly has caught the attention of the U.S. federal government, which will consider whether the insect should be protected under the Endangered Species Act. Doing so would mean the butterfly would receive ...
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A mass of frigid air moving down from the north will plunge much of the U.S. into Arctic conditions this week, with the cold rivaling that experienced during last year's so-called polar vortex. The winter déj vu is expe...
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Today on New Scientist

New Scientist - 5 Jan 2015 19:30
All the latest on newscientist.com: dating apps and disease, world-scale megaprojects, drones for wildlife, how iron blocked life and more
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Tomb of Unknown Queen Discovered in Egypt

Live Science - 5 Jan 2015 19:09
Tomb of Unknown Queen Discovered in Egypt The tomb of a previously unknown Egyptian queen was discovered in a pyramid necropolis southwest of Cairo, officials said yesterday (Jan. 4).
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Volcanic iron delayed explosion of life on Earth

New Scientist - 5 Jan 2015 18:35
Ancient microbes churned out oxygen for half a billion years before it reached levels adequate for complex life. A glut of iron may explain why it took so long
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Extreme bushfires consume South Australian homes

New Scientist - 5 Jan 2015 18:10
Many properties have been lost as the worst bushfires to hit the region in 30 years continue to blaze
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Acoustic levitation made simple

Phys.org - 5 Jan 2015 18:00
Acoustic levitation made simple A team of researchers at the University of São Paulo in Brazil has developed a new levitation device that can hover a tiny object with more control than any instrument that has come before.
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Lihong Wang, PhD, continues to build on his groundbreaking technology that allows light deep inside living tissue during imaging and therapy.
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With the first spacecraft to orbit Mercury about to fire its booster one last time, NASA is holding a public contest to name five of the planet's craters
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Genetic changes found in mysterious bacteria living deep under the sea may have let them survive for millions of years without passing genes on to offspring
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