Science News
Can't take the heat? We need a universal measure on temperature
Phys.org - 14 Oct 2015 15:30
Which weighs more: a kilo of cheese or a kilo of Vegemite? Surprisingly, the answer depends on where they come from.
Supplements Send 23,000 People to ER Yearly
Live Science - 14 Oct 2015 23:38
Unlike prescription drugs, diet supplements are not required to undergo safety testing or FDA approval before they are marketed to consumers, researchers say.
Ebola after-effects unclear as nurse becomes critically ill
New Scientist - 14 Oct 2015 23:00
As nurse Pauline Cafferkey lies critically ill nine months after recovering from Ebola, evidence is building that the virus can re-emerge in survivors
Now I lay me down to sleep
The Economist - 14 Oct 2015 21:18
Time for a little lie down ELECTRIC lighting, television, the internet and caffeine all get blamed for reducing the amount of time people sleep compared with the days before such luxuries existed. Such alleged sleep depr...
Baby Duck-Billed Dinos Unearthed in 'Dragon's Tomb' Nest
Live Science - 14 Oct 2015 20:01
A cluster of baby duck-billed dinosaurs was uncovered in a slab of rock from a fossil-rich part of Mongolia known as "Dragon's Tomb."
Humans Exited Africa, and Trekked to China, Fossils Reveal
Live Science - 14 Oct 2015 19:41
Teeth from a cave in China suggest that modern humans lived in Asia tens of thousands of years before they reached Europe, researchers say. The finding sheds light on the dispersal of Homo sapiens out of Africa and acros...
First pocket rockets take tiny satellites for a spin
New Scientist - 14 Oct 2015 19:00
CubeSats built from off-the-shelf parts can transform space exploration, as long as we can steer them. An ionic liquid propulsion system is a big step forward
Pufferfish planets could explain how hot Jupiters get so big
New Scientist - 14 Oct 2015 19:00
Many of the gas giant planets we've seen orbiting other stars are up to twice as large as theory says they should be. A new class of planets could explain why
Global coral bleaching event: What you need to know
New Scientist - 14 Oct 2015 19:00
The world's coral reefs are in the midst of a mass die off - a "white death" spanning the globe. New Scientist looks at why understanding what's happening is essential
Quantum technology set to hit the streets within two years
New Scientist - 14 Oct 2015 19:00
The UK has invested £270 million in quantum technologies - now the researchers racing to bring their tech to the real world have a plan to put it in your hands
Squirrel monkeys teach themselves to eat and drink from a cup
New Scientist - 14 Oct 2015 19:00
Tool use seemed so rare in squirrel monkeys that they were considered incapable of such feats, now they've been seen carrying food and water in containers
Migraines triggered by protein deep in the brain
New Scientist - 14 Oct 2015 19:00
A peptide that over-excites neurons controlling facial feeling is to blame for migraines - so drugs that constrict blood vessels won't work
Flu drugs work and are needed during pandemics
New Scientist - 14 Oct 2015 19:00
Independent panel of UK scientists says evidence supports the use of flu drugs for severely ill people in pandemics, which implies that stockpiles make sense
Bacterial genes that turn mercury lethal mapped across world
New Scientist - 14 Oct 2015 19:00
Some bacteria turn mercury into a neurotoxin called methylmercury that accumulates in the food we eat. Now we know where those bacteria are found
Top exoplanet hunter keeps job despite serial sexual harassment
New Scientist - 14 Oct 2015 19:00
Astronomer Geoff Marcy of the University of California, Berkeley, has been found to have violated his institution's sexual harassment policy during a series of incidents
Even drastic emissions cuts can't save New Orleans and Miami
New Scientist - 14 Oct 2015 19:00
Some 10 million Americans' homes will be submerged by rising seas, even under optimistic scenarios for slashing greenhouse gas emissions
Digital version of piece of rat brain fires like the real thing
New Scientist - 14 Oct 2015 19:00
Including 31,000 neurons and their 37 million synapses, a digital recreation of a chunk of rat brain is already giving clues as to how the real thing works
Elephants almost never get cancer thanks to multiple gene copies
New Scientist - 14 Oct 2015 19:00
Duplications of the p53 gene makes elephant cells more likely to die in response to DNA damage, rather than turn cancerous
China has had a telescope on the moon for the past two years
New Scientist - 14 Oct 2015 19:00
The robotic telescope, mounted on the Chang'e 3 lander, is the first of its kind and provides unique views of the night sky that aren't possible from Earth
60 Seconds
New Scientist - 14 Oct 2015 19:00
Early spring, antibiotics in livestock, Indian pharmacy strike and more
'Gay test' fear mustn't derail work on sexuality's genetic basis
New Scientist - 14 Oct 2015 19:00
Talk of using DNA to determine whether someone is gay misunderstands efforts to explain human variation, says Dean Hamer, who published the first evidence for a genetic predisposition to homosexuality
Genome of ancient Ethiopian tells of back-to-Africa migration
New Scientist - 14 Oct 2015 19:00
Comparing DNA extracted from an ancient Ethiopian skeleton with modern examples shows some of our ancestors migrated back to Africa from Eurasia 3000 years ago