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Science News

Location American Science News for 15 July 2015
Oldest Animal Sperm Lasted 50 Million Years in Antarctica It's time to call Guinness World Records: Researchers on an Antarctic expedition have uncovered sperm cells dating to a whopping 50 million years ago, making these the oldest known animal sperm cells, a new study finds.
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The first high-resolution photos of the dwarf planet's surface are stunning - but they are nothing like we expected
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Why Beached Great White Shark Was Such a Rare Sight

Live Science - 15 Jul 2015 23:13
Why Beached Great White Shark Was Such a Rare Sight A young, great white shark had a near-death experience when the retreating tide left it stranded on a beach in Cape Cod on Monday afternoon (July 13). Beachgoers spotted the giant fish writhing on the sand, and threw wat...
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New Horizons yields stunning Pluto images

The Economist - 15 Jul 2015 23:08
New Horizons yields stunning Pluto images "WE ARE outbound from Pluto." So said Alice Bowman, mission operations manager for New Horizons, an American space probe, when her charge resumed contact with Earth following its passage by the place on July 14th. After ...
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Dying for a Selfie? Why People Risk Their Lives For Self-Photos Why have selfies become so popular, to the point that people are willing to risk their lives to take the perfect snapshot of themselves?
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Pluto-rific

Elisabeth Howell - 15 Jul 2015 22:11
Pluto-rific Around maybe 1990, I remember looking at a picture of the solar system in textbook that in part, explained that Pluto is in such a weird orbit that it comes inside the orbit of Neptune occasionally. There was even debate...
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Depressed? Your Smartphone May Tell

Live Science - 15 Jul 2015 21:20
Depressed? Your Smartphone May Tell The way you use your smartphone may reveal if you are depressed, a new study suggests.
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To vanquish AIDS by 2030, "pay now or pay forever"

New Scientist - 15 Jul 2015 19:45
The next five years are key if we are to stop AIDS. An extra $30 billion is needed above current annual spend but the paybacks will be huge, says the UN
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Amazing Pluto Flyby Images to Be Unveiled Today

Live Science - 15 Jul 2015 19:25
Amazing Pluto Flyby Images to Be Unveiled Today This morning, NASA's New Horizons probe will beam home the first haul of photos collected during Tuesday morning's Pluto flyby. NASA plans to unveil some of the best images during a news conference today at 3 p.m. EDT; w...
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We've just visited the last outpost of our solar system with NASA's New Horizons mission. But don't think we're done - there's still so much more to discover
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The northern giant mouse lemur has the biggest balls of the primate world, compared to body size, and seems to have sex all the time, doing without mating seasons
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From ice to ionised nitrogen and even a heart, NASA's already uncovering "mouth-watering" science about the dwarf planet
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Social media combined with new tech can help to spot unexpected drug reactions years before the official reporting system
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There are many ways to make a hole in the ground, but explosions create craters with a distinct pattern - as found by bursting balloons buried in a sand box
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The sheer volume at sporting events and concerts, and on headphones, can damage our ears in ways standard tests can't detect. How can you safeguard your hearing?
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Compensating for a gene that's often to blame for hereditary deafness could lead to medical treatments for the condition in as little as five years' time
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60 Seconds

New Scientist - 15 Jul 2015 19:00
Early sperm, bird flu in the UK, veg in space, and more
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Cushion plants harbour tiny mountain worlds inside

New Scientist - 15 Jul 2015 19:00
Turtle-shaped cushion plants dominate the otherwise barren rocks high up in the mountains, and within each one is a unique and diverse ecosystem
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An energetic stellar blast may have just broken the record for the brightest yet found
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Despite being predicted in the 1960s, the pentaquark is a particle so elusive even the world's largest physics experiment could only discover it by accident
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Young offenders are less likely to be violent in future if they take a computer course that teaches them to spot fear, anger and sadness in others' faces
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Tiny beating human heart made from scratch

New Scientist - 15 Jul 2015 19:00
By recreating the physical forces that developing cells experience, stem cells have been coaxed into forming microscopic beating hearts
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