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Location American Science News for 18 April 2016
Experimentally verifying a prediction can be ground-breaking and extremely important, like the recent detection of gravitational waves. But finding something that disagrees with a generally accepted prediction? That can ...
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Searching for the Vikings: 3 Sites Possibly Found in Canada If the discoveries are confirmed, they would add to the single known Viking settlement in the New World, located at L'Anse aux Meadows on the northern tip of Newfoundland.
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Cosmic Ray Tech May Unlock Pyramids' Secrets

Live Science - 19 Apr 2016 00:56
Cosmic Ray Tech May Unlock Pyramids' Secrets A new generation of muon telescopes has been built to detect the presence of secret structures within Egypt's pyramids.
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A new study involved the assessment of performance in participants being placed on 28-hour days to shift the sleep-wake cycle out of phase with the brain (circadian) clock. Performance was more affected in women than in ...
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Thanks, actin, for the memories

Science Daily - 19 Apr 2016 00:10
Thanks, actin, for the memories New research suggests a complex dance between actin filaments and aggregating proteins is key to the molecular machinery that forms and stores long-term memories.
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Investigators have found that circulating tumor cell clusters -- which are more efficient in spreading cancer throughout the body than are single CTCs -- can pass through capillary-sized blood vessels. Their findings con...
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Nanoparticle acts like Trojan horse to halt asthma

Science Daily - 19 Apr 2016 00:10
Nanoparticle acts like Trojan horse to halt asthma In a new approach to treating asthma and allergies, a biodegradable nanoparticle acts like a Trojan horse, hiding an allergen in a friendly shell, to convince the immune system not to attack it, according to new research...
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New HPV vaccine could curb cervical cancers and health costs if adopted widely A new vaccine for human papillomavirus would significantly reduce both cervical cancer incidence and healthcare costs if states coordinated policies to improve coverage, a new study shows.
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What screens are made of: New twists (and bends) in LCD research Liquid crystals, discovered more than 125 years ago, are at work behind the screens of TV and computer monitors, clocks, watches and most other electronics displays, and scientists are still discovering new twists--and b...
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Dartmouth College and Griffith University researchers have devised a new way to "sense" and control external noise in quantum computing.
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Endangered Titicaca Frogs Are Real Awkward When They Eat | Video Feeding time for the endangered Lake Titicaca frogs in the collections of the Denver Zoo. The frogs leap to snap at red wiggler worms but sometimes miscalculate and chomp down on a buddy's leg.
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Your Genes May Influence When You Lose Your Virginity The age at which people first have sex is largely influenced by social factors, but genes play a role too.
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A new way to get electricity from magnetism

e! Science News - 18 Apr 2016 22:55
By showing that a phenomenon dubbed the "inverse spin Hall effect" works in several organic semiconductors - including carbon-60 buckyballs - University of Utah physicists changed magnetic "spin current" into electric cu...
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The first detailed study of relationship between plasma levels of two amyloid beta peptides, cognitive function and the measures studying the size of brain, which shrinks with Alzheimer's disease.
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Precision prevention of colorectal cancer

Science Daily - 18 Apr 2016 22:55
Experts have debuted their latest progress in precision prevention -- an in-the-works method to predict risk of colorectal cancer that integrates genetic, lifestyle and environmental risk factors.
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New computer program can help uncover hidden genomic alterations that drive cancers Cancer is rarely the result of a single mutation in a single gene. Rather, tumors arise from the complex interplay between any number of mutually exclusive abnormal changes in the genome, the combinations of which can be...
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98 percent cure rate for prostate cancer using stereotactic body radiation therapy, research shows A new study -- the first trial to publish five-year results from SBRT treatment for prostate cancer -- found a 98.6 percent cure rate with SBRT, a noninvasive form of radiation treatment that involves high-dose radiation...
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The use of bleeding avoidance strategies has only a modest effect on the variation in bleeding rates post-angioplasty among hospitals performing this procedure, leaving about 70 percent of the causes for this variation u...
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Ikea's New Chainless Bike Never Rusts

Live Science - 18 Apr 2016 22:45
Ikea's New Chainless Bike Never Rusts Dealing with a rusty bicycle chain can be a messy affair, but a new bike from Ikea solves that problem. The furniture retail giant recently introduced its "Sladda" bike, which uses an oil-free and corrosion-resistant dri...
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The High Altitude Water Cherenkov observatory has released its first map of the high-energy sky, catching pulsars, supernova remnants and blazars switching on and off
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Turn off Per2, turn on healthy aging

Science Daily - 18 Apr 2016 21:11
Due to a loss of functionality in hematopoietic stem cells, immune defects occur during aging. Now, researchers have identified gene Per2, whose deletion leads to a stabilization of the number of immune cells in the bloo...
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What Causes Eerie Volcanic Lightning?

Live Science - 18 Apr 2016 21:07
What Causes Eerie Volcanic Lightning? Lightning flashing in the sky during volcanic eruptions stems both from ash and from ice, scientists find.
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