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Science News

Location American Science News for 7 October 2015
Extragalactic Neutrinos in South Pole Experiment Reveal Distant Universe Dozens of particles from halfway across the universe have landed in the IceCube experiment at the South Pole. These messengers could help answer some long-standing cosmic conundrums --
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Here's How the Giraffe Got Its Long Neck (Infographic) An ancestor of the giraffe split into two evolutionary branches, one leading to the okapi with its short neck and the other branch leading to the giraffes.
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Wisdom, ancient and modern

The Economist - 7 Oct 2015 23:36
Wisdom, ancient and modern IT IS easy, in the arrogance of scientific advance, to forget that less than a century and a half ago most medicines were herbal remedies. To this day, some of the best-known, including aspirin, morphine and digitalis, a...
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Bariatric Surgery May Increase Risk of Self-Harm

Live Science - 7 Oct 2015 21:48
Bariatric Surgery May Increase Risk of Self-Harm For some patients, bariatric surgery may increase the risk of harmful behaviors.
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Core Finding: Earth's Frozen Center Formed a Billion Years Ago Earth's inner core formed between 1 billion and 1.5 billion years ago, when it powered the huge rise in Earth's magnetic field, new research suggests.
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Why Some Species Have More Females Than Males

Live Science - 7 Oct 2015 21:34
Why Some Species Have More Females Than Males Scientists have figured out why some species have more females than males and others have more males than females. Turns out, sex chromosomes are the culprits.
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To Preserve the Earth, Rethink Our Relationship with Nature (Op-Ed) The planet faces a booming population, but a stark future can be avoided if nations push for sustainable development.
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Migraines triggered by protein deep in the brain

New Scientist - 7 Oct 2015 20:00
A peptide that over-excites neurons controlling facial feeling is to blame for migraines - so drugs that constrict blood vessels won't work
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What's the Next Network? The Lighting All Around You (Op-Ed) Turn on the lights, access a world of data.
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Robocars Are at Peak Hype: Here's What They'll Actually Be Like Recently, I attended the "Silicon Valley reinvents the wheel" conference by the Western Automotive Journalists which had a variety of talks and demonstrations of new car technology. Now that robocars have...
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A Purdue University researcher has solved a 140-year-old enigma in fluid mechanics: Why does a simple formula describe the seemingly complex physics for the behavior of elliptical particles moving through fluid?
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Tiny green-blooded vocalists croon among the forest vegetation on humid monsoon nights, composing a new melody every time they sing
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One Per Cent

New Scientist - 7 Oct 2015 19:00
tweets betray your income; google not "not evil" any more; noodles make muscle
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Some 66 million years ago, the seismic energy from the Chicxulub impact may have set off dramatic lava flows from the Deccan traps, dooming the dinosaurs
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Rebooted pancreas cells could ease type 1 diabetes

New Scientist - 7 Oct 2015 19:00
"Off-the-shelf" insulin-producing cells could be a simpler and potentially safer way to treat type 1 diabetes than using stem cells
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A group of cyclists in a peloton behave like a collective organism, giving an accidental benefit to even the slowest riders - much like schooling fish
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A disciplinary hearing has begun against a pathologist whose research challenges child-abuse assumptions. She is the second doctor to be accused in five years
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When a country such as Iran is wary of nuclear inspections, an experimental detector could help ensure that its reactors are not making plutonium for weapon
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Engineered phage viruses show promise as targeted assassins - genetic manipulation might make it easier for them to gain regulatory approval
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Researchers building soft robots out of flexible plastic and powered by air have now created a pumping artificial heart
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Storing information on metal could be one way of making sure information on how we live is available for future generations to access
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Earthquake algorithm picks up the brain's vibrations

New Scientist - 7 Oct 2015 19:00
An algorithm used to analyse earthquakes has been adapted to pick up the natural tremors in the brain. The technique could help spot tumours and dementia
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