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Science News

Location American Science News for 4 March 2015
Cyborg Roaches Could Be Used to Find Disaster Survivors Fleets of cyborg cockroaches could someday roam into damaged nuclear power plants or collapsed mines to carry out reconnaissance or locate survivors.
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Strength in numbers

e! Science News - 4 Mar 2015 23:23
When scientists develop a full quantum computer, the world of computing will undergo a revolution of sophistication, speed and energy efficiency that will make even our beefiest conventional machines seem like Stone Age ...
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Argonne research expanding from injectors to inhalers There is a world of difference between tailpipes and windpipes, but researchers at the Department of Energy's Argonne National Laboratory have managed to link the two with groundbreaking research that could enable exciti...
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Researchers develop the first-ever quantum device that detects and corrects its own errors When scientists develop a full quantum computer, the world of computing will undergo a revolution of sophistication, speed and energy efficiency that will make even our beefiest conventional machines seem like Stone Age ...
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New materials discovered to detect neutrons emitted by radioactive materials Scientist Christopher Lavelle of the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory, together with a team of researchers from the University of Maryland and the National Institute of Standards and Technology, has su...
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Engineers at The University of Texas at Dallas have created semiconductor technology that could make night vision and thermal imaging affordable for everyday use.
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Still basking in the glory of the Higgs discovery, CERN's celebrity particle smasher is aiming for even wilder particles - and the truth about supersymmetry (full text available to subscribers)
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Jaws, Not Brains, Define Early Human Species

Live Science - 4 Mar 2015 20:06
Jaws, Not Brains, Define Early Human Species The extinct human species long thought of as the earliest known member of the human family may be at least a half million years older than previously thought, according to state-of-the-art computer models of the species.
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Earliest Human Species Possibly Found in Ethiopia

Live Science - 4 Mar 2015 20:04
Earliest Human Species Possibly Found in Ethiopia A human with a mix of primitive and more modern traits who lived 2.8 million years ago in what is now Ethiopia may be a newfound species and the earliest human ever discovered. The finding reveals humans arose 500,000 ye...
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A skull fragment 2.8 million years old may mean our ancestors were around 400,000 years earlier than thought
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Genetically engineered microorganisms could replace flowers as sources of ingredients for perfumes - and even recreate scents from plants long extinct
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Modified yeast perfume: What the future smells like

New Scientist - 4 Mar 2015 20:00
Genetically engineered microorganisms could replace flowers as sources of ingredients for perfumes - and even recreate scents from plants long extinct
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Today on New Scientist

New Scientist - 4 Mar 2015 19:45
All the latest on newscientist.com: Facebook's intelligence test, cheap wonder metals and why the US is being urged to eat less meat
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Resistance is futile for this remotely controlled cockroach. A battery-powered microcontroller plugged into its nervous system can control its movements
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Sunken Japanese WWII Battleship Located in the Philippines More than 70 years after it sank during World War II, the legendary Japanese battleship Musashi has been discovered off the coast of the Philippines by Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen.
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Pennies reveal new insights on the nature of randomness

e! Science News - 4 Mar 2015 19:22
The concept of randomness appears across scientific disciplines, from materials science to molecular biology. Now, theoretical chemists at Princeton have challenged traditional interpretations of randomness by computatio...
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Online Icicle Atlas offers jackpot of scientific data Anyone who might be dreading the end of winter or cannot wait until it arrives again can now enjoy the beauty and mystery of icicles all year long with the Icicle Atlas.
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Europe blazes trail against climate change

New Scientist - 4 Mar 2015 18:34
Come flood, drought or heatwave, Europe is getting ready a whole host of projects designed to climate-proof the continent
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What's Wrong With Online Education--and How to Fix It

Singularity Hub - 4 Mar 2015 18:00
What's Wrong With Online Education--and How to Fix It There are many things right with online education--like the plethora of free and easily accessible content developed by Udacity, Coursera and others. In particular, online education excels at teaching while using...
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Drill into Mars for clues to Earth's climate

New Scientist - 4 Mar 2015 18:00
Earth's Little Ice Age may have been caused by a fall in solar activity - digging holes on Mars could help us find out
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Fireworks at Chile's Villarrica Volcano Light Up Night Sky A small early morning eruption at Chile's Villarrica volcano lit the night sky with a spectacular display glowing ash and sputtering lava.
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Pennies reveal new insights on the nature of randomness The concept of randomness appears across scientific disciplines, from materials science to molecular biology. Now, theoretical chemists at Princeton have challenged traditional interpretations of randomness by computatio...
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