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Location American Science News for 3 November 2015
Laws to open supervised injecting centres are due to be approved by the end of the month, with decriminalisation of drugs like cannabis also expected
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Losing sense of smell could be linked to poor health

New Scientist - 3 Nov 2015 19:49
Lacking an immune system means it's a struggle to recognise certain smells - if you're a mouse. And it could be to stop you sniffing out dangers
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66-Million-Year-Old Giant Raptor Fossils Found in South Dakota Sixty-six million years ago, a giant raptor with feathered arms chased prey around the ancient South Dakotan landscape, a new study finds.
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Anti-Vaccination Websites Use 'Distorted' Science, Researchers Find Many websites that promote unscientific views about vaccinations use pseudoscience and misinformation to spread the idea that vaccines are dangerous, according to a new study.
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Giant Wyoming Crack Explained: A Landslide Brought It Down A gaping crack the length of six football fields that opened up in a matter of one to two weeks in northern Wyoming is likely the product of a landslide, geologists said.
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Two by Two

Physics Buzz - 3 Nov 2015 21:16
For close to a decade now, two of the hottest buzzwords in technology have been "Quantum Computing"--the promise of storing a information by manipulating the spin of a single electron, and the associated prospect of harn...
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Photos: Ancient Citadel Unearthed in Jerusalem

Live Science - 3 Nov 2015 20:05
Photos: Ancient Citadel Unearthed in Jerusalem Archaeologists and historians have debated the fortress' location for a century.
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Acra at Last? Site of Ancient Jewish Revolt Unearthed Archaeologists in Jerusalem may have just solved one of the city's greatest geographical mysteries.
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Raging forest fires are releasing carbon that has been buried in peat for thousands of years, inching the world closer to breaching warming targets
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Physiology Pioneer's Nobel Prize Sells for Nearly $800,000

Scientific American - 3 Nov 2015 19:00
Physiology Pioneer's Nobel Prize Sells for Nearly $800,000 British biophysicist Alan Lloyd Hodgkin won the shiny gold medal in 1963 for discovering how the nerve cells of a giant squid generate an electrical pulse when stimulated --
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Forming glass shapes: Lowering the 'softening temperature' via electric field On a serendipitous occasion, while attending a conference and listening to Rishi Raj, a professor of mechanical engineering at the University of Colorado Boulder, speak about the remarkable effect of moderate electrical ...
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Rare Earthquake Trio Shakes Phoenix: What Happened?

Live Science - 3 Nov 2015 18:15
Rare Earthquake Trio Shakes Phoenix: What Happened? The stretching of the Earth's crust in a seismically transitional region likely caused the three quakes that struck Phoenix, Arizona, Sunday night. Such temblors are relatively uncommon in the state.
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Last week the space agency held its first meeting about where to land humans on Mars, but such a mission still has decades of technological hurdles to overcome
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How Tech Can Make Entrepreneurship Safe for the Poor

Singularity Hub - 3 Nov 2015 18:00
How Tech Can Make Entrepreneurship Safe for the Poor What is the future of learning? That will depend on where you live and how old you are. In high-income countries for school-aged youth, it might come in the form...
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New Caledonian crows usually only hang out with close relatives, except when they come across big meals requiring cutlery
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With humans as the secret engine that powers Facebook's virtual assistant M, it's time to stop worrying about robot overlords in favour of their human underlings
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Nothing is more frustrating that watching that circle spinning in the centre of your screen, while you wait for your computer to load a programme or access the data you need. Now a team from the Universities of Sheffield...
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The complexity of modeling

Phys.org - 3 Nov 2015 17:10
The complexity of modeling In recent years, advances in materials synthesis techniques have enabled scientists to produce increasingly complex functional materials with enhanced or novel macroscopic properties. For example, ultra-small core-shell ...
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'Bubble piano' plays bubbles in sync with Beethoven symphony (Phys.org)--Calling it an "Ode to Bubbles," MIT researchers have produced bubbling in sync with Beethoven's Symphony No. 9: Ode to Joy on a surface resembling a piano keyboard. The performance demonstrates the researcher...
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Minuscule, flexible compound lenses visualize vast fields of view Drawing inspiration from an insect's intricate eye, University of Wisconsin-Madison engineers have created miniature lenses with vast range of vision.
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The particle physics of you

Symmetry Magazine - 3 Nov 2015 16:00
The particle physics of you Not only are we made of fundamental particles, we also produce them and are constantly bombarded by them throughout the day. Fourteen billion years ago, when the hot, dense speck that was our universe quickly expanded, a...
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The Promise of Optical Atomic Clocks: Watch Live Wednesday [Video] Nobel laureate David Wineland will discuss efforts to build the universe’s most accurate timekeeper --
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