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Location American Science News for 25 June 2015
The Tim Hunt furore is a stark reminder that inequality in the lab needs addressing. And not just for the important reason of social justice
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The Story Behind the First 3D Printed Wrench in Space

Singularity Hub - 25 Jun 2015 18:00
The Story Behind the First 3D Printed Wrench in Space You may recall that late last year, a breakthrough in manufacturing occurred a few hundred miles above the Earth. After having sent a 3D printer to the International Space Station and printed...
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The challenge of building a better atomic clock and why it matters Prior to the mid-18th century, it was tough to be a sailor. If your voyage required east-west travel, you couldn't set out to a specific destination and have any real hope of finding it efficiently.
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Icy Earthquakes: Warming Planet Shakes Up Glaciers

Live Science - 25 Jun 2015 23:51
Icy Earthquakes: Warming Planet Shakes Up Glaciers When large chunks of ice break off of a glacier and plop with a giant splash into the chilly water, the result can be lots of thunderous shaking.
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Fading Florida Panthers Need New Paths to Safety

Live Science - 25 Jun 2015 23:29
Fading Florida Panthers Need New Paths to Safety Florida panthers are getting a lifeline in newly protected territory, but will it be enough?
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F-35 Fighter Jet Nails Olympic-Worthy 'Ski Jump' Takeoff When a fighter jet takes off from a runway the same way that a skier launches gracefully off a jump, the result can be surprisingly beautiful.
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Breast Milk Studies May Lead to Better Probiotics, Baby Formula Breast milk influences the community of bacteria that colonize the gut, but scientists are only now discovering exactly what it does.
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Males compete for sex, females choose - ever since Darwin, we've assumed that's how nature works. Time for a rethink? (full text available to subscribers)
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Engineers break power and distance barriers for fiber optic communication Electrical engineers have broken key barriers that limit the distance information can travel in fiber optic cables and still be accurately deciphered by a receiver. Photonics researchers at the University of California, ...
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'Crypto' Parasite Outbreaks Increasing in Pools Across US A diarrhea-causing parasite often transmitted through water is causing an increasing number of outbreaks in the United States linked with pools
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Smartphone-Sized Genetic Sequencer Transcribes Entire Bacterial Genome Scientists first transcribed the genome--or complete genetic code--of a free living organism in 1995. Sequencing the bacterium H. Influenzae took a little over a year, cost about $1 million, and...
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Texas Just Banned Shark Finning, Will Other States Follow? One by one, states are deciding sharks are more important than soup.
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Bizarre Cometlike Alien Planet Is First of Its Kind

Live Science - 25 Jun 2015 18:26
Bizarre Cometlike Alien Planet Is First of Its Kind A Neptune-size planet with a giant plume of gas streaming behind it like a comet's tail has been discovered by astronomers, and is the first such planet ever discovered.
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Climb Yosemite's El Capitan with Google Street View

Live Science - 25 Jun 2015 18:01
Climb Yosemite's El Capitan with Google Street View Now, even the most die-hard couch potatoes can summit one of the world's most imposing rock faces, El Capitan in Yosemite National Park, using Google Street View.
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Wakey wakey! Yawning elephants snapped in the act

New Scientist - 25 Jun 2015 17:01
Chimps do it. Hippos do it. Now sleepy elephants have been caught having an early morning yawn
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Climate change

The Economist - 25 Jun 2015 16:48
Climate change In May India was struck by a deadly heatwave. Temperatures as high as 47°C caused 2,200 deaths. This week a heatwave in Pakistan claimed the lives of hundreds more. As the chart shows, the number of extreme weather- and...
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Blood earth

The Economist - 25 Jun 2015 16:48
Blood earth Your friendly, neighbourhood muckspreaders A HOLLOW tree, you might reasonably suspect, is a dying tree. But often that is not the case, especially in the tropics. Lots of trees in tropical forests remain alive long afte...
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Coiled and ready to strike

The Economist - 25 Jun 2015 16:48
Coiled and ready to strike DRONES may one day transform the way parcels are delivered, crops monitored and suspects apprehended. Those who talk up these possibilities, though, often neglect to mention the drawbacks of such robot aircraft--one of w...
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Horsey, horsey, don't you stop

The Economist - 25 Jun 2015 16:48
RECEIVED wisdom, among both scientists and breeders, is that a modern, thoroughbred racehorse runs about as fast as it is possible for anything horse-shaped to run. Examinations of historical records, conducted over the ...
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A landmark legal ruling ordering the Dutch government to cut emissions could be the first of many – and they might do what global treaties have so far failed to
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Join Our Team! Singularity Hub is Now Hiring a Senior Editor/Writer Here's your bio: You've spent your life working on projects and jobs that allow both creativity and critical thinking. Sometimes you're hyperanalytical to the mild irritation of friends; other times, you're the most expr...
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Surreal Storm Rages Against Starry Backdrop in Winning Weather Photo Tornadoes, fog and every type of weather in between take center stage in the new NOAA Weather in Focus photography contest.
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