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Science News

Location American Science News for 22 July 2015
Branch Impales Cyclist's Neck After Mishap...and He Survives! A mountain biker in New Mexico was lucky not to sustain a serious injury after he fell off his bike and had a wooden branch penetrate his neck, his doctors say.
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A new theory says dark matter acts remarkably similar to subatomic particles known to science since the 1930s. We owe a lot to dark matter - it is the thing keeping galaxies, stars, our solar system, and our bodies intac...
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1,500-Year-Old Quran Manuscript Could Be Oldest Known Copy A 1,500-year-old parchment could be one of the oldest known copies of the Quran, possibly dating back to a time that overlapped with the life of the Prophet Muhammad.
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Promising results from a flurry of drug trials were announced today. Here's what you need to know about how these new drugs work
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A modified rice that borrows a gene from barley reduces its production emissions by starving paddy field microbes of the sugar they use to produce methane
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Bacteria have plenty of things to send out into world beyond their own boundaries: coordinating signals to other members of their species, poisons for their enemies, and devious instructions to manipulate host cells they...
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Super-Superbugs: Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria May Be Deadlier Antibiotic-resistant bacteria may be tougher superbugs than previously thought: Not only are these bacteria harder to treat, they appear to be "fitter" in general.
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New Eyedrops Could Shrink Cataracts Without Surgery

Live Science - 22 Jul 2015 19:21
New Eyedrops Could Shrink Cataracts Without Surgery Eyedrops can shrink cataracts in dogs, which may prove a first step toward a drug that can treat or even prevent cataracts in human eyes, researchers say.
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'Hair Ice' Fungus Grows On Dead Wood | Time-Lapse Video The fungus Exidiopsis effusa has been determined to cause this odd phenomena that occurs on "rotten branches of certain trees."
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Long-sought discovery fills in missing details of cell 'switchboard' A biomedical breakthrough published today in the journal Nature reveals never-before-seen details of the human body's cellular switchboard that regulates sensory and hormonal responses. The work is based on an X-ray lase...
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The UK's Royal College of Obstetricians & Gynaecologists has issued a leaflet for women thinking of choosing a C-section - but some have accused it of bias
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What is it about a scream that makes your blood run cold? Scientists have found the feature that makes them unlike any other human sound
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The reason some people get catchy tunes stuck in their head more than others might be just because their brains are shaped differently
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Roaches with electronic implants and managed by drones can be tasked to locate trapped people in the aftermath of an earthquake
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The weirdness of quantum teleportation offers a solution for getting information out of a black hole, should you have dropped something in there
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As well as repairing retinal cells, gene therapy reawakens visual pathways in the brain, enabling people with type of heritable blindness to see again
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A drug that breaks up different types of brain plaque shows promising results in animals and could prevent Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease
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Side-mounted electric panels cut fuel costs by reducing drag - and they look pretty cool too
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A modified rice that borrows a gene from barley reduces its production emissions by starving paddy field microbes of the sugar they use to produce methane
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There's no mistaking Jamaican Gray anole lizard glowing brightly in the dark forest understory. The glow helps it communicate with other lizards
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More people are wearing on-body cameras that film everything someone does. How will this alter your behaviour?
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Head lice are harmless and body lice spread disease, yet they have the same genes - the difference is all in the way they splice them together
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