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Location American Science News for 19 August 2015
Giant 'Battle Bot' Could Get Makeover Ahead of Epic Duel Finally, there's a crowdfunding campaign for people who want to watch giant robots fight to the death.
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Photos: Massive 'Battle Bot' Gears Up for Robot Duel

Live Science - 19 Aug 2015 23:46
Photos: Massive 'Battle Bot' Gears Up for Robot Duel Megabots, Inc., a Boston-based company, is building a huge, human-operated "battle bot" for an upcoming robot duel.
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New GMO Controversy: Are the Herbicides Dangerous?

Live Science - 19 Aug 2015 23:28
New GMO Controversy: Are the Herbicides Dangerous? Although genetically modified organisms (GMOs) themselves don't appear to have ill effects on human health, some researchers argue that the herbicides used on these crops are an overlooked health threat.
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Einstein in the Wild: Have You Seen Him?

Scientific American - 19 Aug 2015 20:45
Einstein in the Wild: Have You Seen Him? Send us photos in honor of the 100th anniversary of general relativity --
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Vomit Machine Proves Viruses Can Go Flying

Live Science - 19 Aug 2015 20:18
Vomit Machine Proves Viruses Can Go Flying Vomiting creates a fine spray of airborne virus particles, a vomit device proves.
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'Vomit Machine' Built to Study Dreaded Norovirus | Video Researchers at North Carolina State University have developed a "vomiting device" to study the transmission of norovirus -- the dreaded stomach bug that causes diarrhea, nausea, vomiting and stomach pain.
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Atmospheric CO2 can be turned into carbon nanofibres for high-tech uses a method that may also hold promise for profitable carbon capture
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NASA scours retired space shuttles for spare parts

New Scientist - 19 Aug 2015 20:00
Two of the four NASA space shuttles on display in US museums have had their water tanks removed for possible use in a storage system for the ISS
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One theory behind the blasts in the port of Tianjin is that the warehouse where it originated was storing chemicals that caught fire on contact with water
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Print your own satellite in orbiting space factory

New Scientist - 19 Aug 2015 19:00
Satellites that are manufactured and assembled in orbit could let you launch your own armchair science project or just experience the effect of seeing Earth from above
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The European Space Agency's comet team are celebrating perihelion, the day when comet 67P swings around the sun, taking Rosetta for a ride
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They have 40 eyes, change sex as they grow and flash constantly. Now we're starting to figure out why these flamboyant molluscs put on their light show
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By 2050 a once in a century crop failure event is expected to happen once every 10 years, sending shock waves through the world's food systems
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GPs in the UK are being told to push back against people who demand antibiotics, in a move to cut prescriptions by a quarter
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Some planets orbit their stars right around the star's equator, while others go at wonky angles - and it's all down to the star's size
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Five scientific and technology breakthroughs that needed both luck and inspiration
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Two of the four NASA space shuttles on display in US museums have had their water storage tanks removed to help form part of a storage system for the ISS
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The possible discovery of a boson at the Large Hadron Collider suggests a restoration of symmetry between two simple things: left and right
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A whistled form of Turkish used to communicate across mountain valleys shows that it's not just the left side of the brain that processes language
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Central Asia's glaciers, which supply water to one of the planet's largest irrigated areas, are melting fast, highlighting a worrying global trend in ice loss
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A device called MediPen is said to contain hemp oil imbued with 20 per cent cannabidiol - the compound thought to be responsible for weed's health benefits
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Grim find of 26 mutilated bodies in Germany is earliest evidence of mass torture, challenging the view of rural harmony among early Europeans
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