Science News
Whiplash: Symptoms & Treatment
Live Science - 27 Apr 2016 08:57
Whiplash is a neck injury that is common in car crashes, but it can also be caused during other types of accidents. In the United States, over 2 million people suffer from whiplash each year.
How the Next Wonders of the World Will Be Built in Space
Singularity Hub - 27 Apr 2016 19:00
On April 12th, 1961 Yuri Gagarin launched into space on a Vostok rocket from the Baikonur Cosmodrome, becoming the first person ever to leave the planet. Here's the crazy thing: today's astronauts travel to space on a ne...
Earth Gets Greener as Globe Gets Hotter
Live Science - 28 Apr 2016 01:46
Carbon dioxide emissions are fueling more verdant landscapes around the globe, but the potentially temporary greening doesn't mean global warming is good.
'Mindfulness' May Keep Depression from Coming Back
Live Science - 28 Apr 2016 01:13
Can mindfulness keep depression symptoms at bay?
Ancient Hyenas Ate Human Relatives Half a Million Years Ago
Live Science - 27 Apr 2016 23:52
Tooth marks on the leg bone of a hominin, an ancient human relative, suggest that the poor soul had a gristly end, a new study finds.
Costly, Deadly, Complicated: These 7 Surgeries Take the Biggest Toll
Live Science - 27 Apr 2016 23:26
Why does someone need an emergency surgery?
Sperm-binding beads could work as fertility aid or contraceptive
New Scientist - 27 Apr 2016 22:00
Microbeads coated in a human egg protein work as a contraceptive in mice and could also be used to select the best sperm for IVF
Record ivory burning shows world is failing Africa's elephants
New Scientist - 27 Apr 2016 22:00
As Kenya prepares to symbolically destroy a huge stockpile of poached ivory, it is time for a radical rethink of how to save elephants, says Paola Cavalieri
Antibiotics apocalypse: Tales from fighters on the front line
New Scientist - 27 Apr 2016 22:00
Our hospitals could one day be brought to their knees by antibiotic-resistant superbugs - doctors and scientists are seeing the first glimpse of such a world
Map of the brain's word filing system could help us read minds
New Scientist - 27 Apr 2016 21:00
Brain scans show how words linked to specific concepts are stored in themed areas, giving us a way to peek at people's thoughts
How Minecraft is helping children with autism make new friends
New Scientist - 27 Apr 2016 21:00
Playing video games online can be antisocial - but the Autcraft community is helping children with autism learn social skills and build relationships
App watches you take your pills and knows when you're faking
New Scientist - 27 Apr 2016 21:00
A smartphone app monitors drug trial participants to ensure they take their medication correctly, and can also check that people finish courses of antibiotics
Chemists use DNA to build the world's tiniest thermometer
e! Science News - 27 Apr 2016 20:57
Researchers at University of Montreal have created a programmable DNA thermometer that is 20,000x smaller than a human hair. This scientific advance reported this week in the journal Nano Letters may significantly aid ou...
Nimble-fingered robot hands could help clean up nuclear waste
New Scientist - 27 Apr 2016 20:17
Robotic hands and arms that exactly mimic the precise movements of a human, instead of being controlled by a joystick, could help us work in dangerous environments
One minus 1 does not always equal 0 in chemistry
e! Science News - 27 Apr 2016 19:24
In the world of chemistry, one minus one almost always equals zero.
Milky Way's nearest galaxies may be new to the neighbourhood
New Scientist - 27 Apr 2016 19:21
The Large and Small Magellanic Clouds have their stars all out of order, suggesting they only recently showed up on the Milky Way's doorstep
Acting Sorry: Why Johnny Depp Owed Australia an Apology
Live Science - 27 Apr 2016 18:10
Johnny Depp's latest most-watched (and highly critiqued) performance is just a little more personal than his typical thespian challenges. Here's why he and his wife were in such hot water in Australia.
'Lost' Medieval Music Performed for First Time in 1,000 Years
Live Science - 27 Apr 2016 23:46
After a 20-year reconstruction effort, a researcher and a performer of medieval music have brought "lost" songs from the Middle Ages back to life.
The story of Dolly is about us as much as cloning
New Scientist - 27 Apr 2016 22:00
Twenty years after the first cloned animal, scientific progress remains messy, human, and often optimistic
Noah's ark island is saving vulnerable species in Australia
New Scientist - 27 Apr 2016 20:36
Endangered species shipped to Wedge island are thriving there and seemingly engineering an ecosystem that benefits island's native species, too
Researchers create a first frequency comb of time-bin entangled qubits
Phys.org - 27 Apr 2016 20:15
Quantum mechanics, with its counter-intuitive rules for describing the behavior of tiny particles like photons and atoms, holds great promise for profound advances in the security and speed of how we communicate and comp...
Unlucky 7? Emergency Surgery Usually Means These Operations
Live Science - 27 Apr 2016 19:09
Need to go under the knife, stat? You're probably having one of these procedures.