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Science News

Location American Science News for 19 February 2015

Onwards and upwards

The Economist - 19 Feb 2015 17:58
Onwards and upwards VACCINES are medical science's nuclear weapons. Clean water and sewage disposal aside, they have saved more lives than any other public-health measure. Vaccines have wiped smallpox, a disease once dreaded by rich and poo...
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Chemical in Plastics May Alter Boys' Genitals Before Birth Baby boys who were exposed to a chemical in plastics may show some signs of altered genital development, according to new research published today.
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Ruby-Red Sea Dragon Is Brand-New Species

Live Science - 19 Feb 2015 00:08
Ruby-Red Sea Dragon Is Brand-New Species For the first time in 150 years, researchers have found a new species of sea dragon, a marine creature with "unusual red coloration," according to a new study.
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Why It's So Freakin' Cold: Here's the Science

Live Science - 19 Feb 2015 23:49
Why It's So Freakin' Cold: Here's the Science As if the outdoors weren't harsh enough with Boston buried under ungodly amounts of snow and the rest of the Northeast unable to shake the bitter cold, more winter weather is on the way. So what's behind this extreme chi...
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Cities Birth More Thunderstorms Than Rural Areas

Live Science - 19 Feb 2015 23:32
Cities Birth More Thunderstorms Than Rural Areas Hot and humid cities can birth more summer thunderstorms than rural areas in the Southeast.
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New Residents: Dolphins Swam into Mediterranean 18,000 Years Ago Bottlenose dolphins moved into the Mediterranean, once too salty to harbor much marine life, at the end of the last ice age about 18,000 years ago, a new study finds.
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Mars on Earth? What Life Is Like on the 'Red Planet'

Live Science - 19 Feb 2015 22:13
Mars on Earth? What Life Is Like on the 'Red Planet' In a Mars environment, it appears even brewing may be possible.
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Lichen, Pizza and Mars Crew 149 (Gallery)

Live Science - 19 Feb 2015 22:08
Lichen, Pizza and Mars Crew 149 (Gallery) The 149th crew to "explore" the Red Planet care of the Mars Desert Research Station has made some interesting discoveries -- not all what you would expect.
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New nanogel for drug delivery

e! Science News - 19 Feb 2015 22:06
Scientists are interested in using gels to deliver drugs because they can be molded into specific shapes and designed to release their payload over a specified time period. However, current versions aren't always practic...
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No need for color correction: Perfect colors, captured with one ultra-thin lens Most lenses are, by definition, curved. After all, they are named for their resemblance to lentils, and a glass lens made flat is just a window with no special powers. But a new type of lens created at the Harvard School...
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Shrimpy Sharks to Great Whites: Marine Animals Have Gotten Bigger Over Time Animals tend to evolve toward a larger body size over time, and marine animals are no exception, a study suggests.
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Out of the Sun? Ultraviolet Rays Can Harm Skin Hours Later UV rays can keep harming your skin hours after you step out of the sunshine, researchers say.
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Robo-raven morphs its wings to back flip in mid-air

New Scientist - 19 Feb 2015 21:00
A flying robot that can move each wing independently is capable of precise aerial manoeuvres that mimic a real bird's abilities
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Dance with Your Sweater

Scientific American - 19 Feb 2015 21:00
Dance with Your Sweater Learn about static electricity with Exploratorium --
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Stellar intruder's daring fly-by of the solar system

New Scientist - 19 Feb 2015 20:28
A nearby star passed within a light year of the sun 70,000 years ago, close enough that early humans could have seen it
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Crunch time for Mars One to avoid two-year delay

New Scientist - 19 Feb 2015 20:19
The ambitious Dutch firm hoping to make a reality TV series out of their attempt to colonise Mars has just months to decide whether the plan will go forward on schedule
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Today on New Scientist

New Scientist - 19 Feb 2015 20:10
All the latest on newscientist.com: your other brain, Darkleaks secret selling, pricey medicines and more
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No need to starve to get fasting's immune benefits

New Scientist - 19 Feb 2015 19:18
Fasting and exercise suppress the immune system's inflammatory response. A drug may replicate the effect now we've identified the chemical responsible
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Keep an eye on your city's pollution in real time

New Scientist - 19 Feb 2015 19:14
High resolution cameras can now capture haze and air pollution activity in real time and post it online
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Researchers at the University of California, Riverside's Bourns College of Engineering have developed a novel paper-like material for lithium-ion batteries. It has the potential to boost by several times the specific ene...
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Stone Age Skull Reveals Astonishing Human Diversity

Live Science - 19 Feb 2015 18:52
Stone Age Skull Reveals Astonishing Human Diversity A partial skull found at a site called Lukenya Hill in Kenya suggests that early populations of modern humans in Africa had greater diversity than previously thought.
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Can technology solve the world's rising food problems? [Video] Emerging technologies like synthetic meat, GMOs, and robotic farms provide a glimpse of a coming era in which technology solves the world's food problems. But some sobering statistics from the World Food Programme frame ...
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