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Location American Science News for 24 August 2017
Leather grown using biotechnology is about to hit the catwalk LEATHERMAKING is an ancient craft. The oldest leather artefact found so far is a 5,500-year-old shoe from a cave in Armenia, but paintings in Egyptian tombs show that, 7,000 years ago, leather was being turned into all m...
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China's 'Rejuvenation' Bullet Trains Are the World's Fastest China recently debuted the next generation of the world's fastest bullet trains.
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(University of Manchester) A major study led by the University of Manchester has discovered that so called 'lonely' microbes, those living at low population densities, are more likely to mutate causing higher rates of an...
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The science of fluoride flipping

Science Daily - 24 Aug 2017 02:43
The science of fluoride flipping So much of what happens inside cells to preserve health or cause disease is so small or time-sensitive that researchers are just now getting glimpses of the complexities unfolding in us every minute of the day. Now resea...
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Researcher identifies a new way to treat HIV

Science Daily - 24 Aug 2017 02:43
Researcher identifies a new way to treat HIV Medical treatment that targets human proteins rather than ever-mutating viruses may one day help HIV-positive people whose bodies have built a resistance to 'cocktails' currently used to keep them healthy. Now researcher...
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Rumors Swell Over New Kind of Gravitational-Wave Sighting

Scientific American - 25 Aug 2017 01:00
Rumors Swell Over New Kind of Gravitational-Wave Sighting Gossip over colliding neutron stars has astronomers in a tizzy --
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Researchers report for the first time that tumors stressed by cancer immunotherapy release their mitochondrial DNA into nearby immune cells, triggering a host alert system.
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Physicists discover that some plasma instabilities can extinguish themselves Physicist Fatima Ebrahimi at the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) has for the first time used advanced models to accurately simulate key characteristics of the cyclic behavior ...
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The "twistron harvester" generates power at the highest rates for energy harvesting yet, so may finally live up to the technique's century-long promise
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Thousands of escorts advertise on websites like Backpage, not always by choice. Machine learning can now identify ads posted by traffickers, and locate them
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New virtual model reveals details of declining lung function in mice Scientists have developed a new virtual model of mouse lung function that illuminates the relative importance of different factors that contribute to lung changes accompanying chronic inflammation.
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Hunter-gatherers' seasonal gut-microbe diversity loss echoes our permanent one Scientists have examined the seasonal variations in the gut-microbial composition, or microbiota, of the Hadza, one of the world's few remaining traditional hunter-gatherer populations. The findings confirm that the Hadz...
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General patient infections transferred similarly to hospital-acquired infections A new study shows that the networks formed by patterns of patient transfers between hospitals in France are very similar among three patient populations: those diagnosed with hospital-acquired infections (HAIs), those wi...
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General anesthesia and surgery in otherwise healthy infants under the age of one year could be associated with decreases in the amount of white matter in the brain, as well as reductions in the remaining white matter's i...
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Rapid diagnostic test helps distinguish between severe and uncomplicated malaria in Africa Working at a health center in rural Uganda, researchers have demonstrated for the first time the potential of using a low-cost, routinely available rapid diagnostic test to distinguish between severe and uncomplicated ma...
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Scientists have developed an innovative system to identify and characterize the molecular components that control the activities of regulatory DNA sequences in the human genome.
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Finding what fuels the 'runaway train' of autoimmune disease Rogue immune cells trigger an 'override' of the body's tolerance to its tissues, launching the vicious cycle of autoimmune disease, scientists have found. Could blocking these rogue cells help treat autoimmune diseases l...
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Toward an early Alzheimer's test

Science Daily - 24 Aug 2017 22:12
Researchers have demonstrated the promise of an early blood test for Alzheimer's disease. The results suggest that Alzheimer's can be detected even before the onset of symptoms in persons at genetic risk for Alzheimer's ...
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Manganese in underground drinking water is cause for concern Underground drinking water sources in parts of the US and three Asian countries may not be as safe as previously thought due to high levels of manganese, especially at shallow depths, according to a new study. Manganese,...
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The study examined the impact of reforms made to teacher evaluation systems in the wake of a 2009 report that highlighted the failure of US public schools to recognize and act on teacher effectiveness. They found that de...
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Google has announced plans to offer people searching for the word "depression" a validated questionnaire for the condition. But will finding your results be any help?
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Chromosome mechanics guide nuclear assembly

Science Daily - 24 Aug 2017 20:47
Chromosome mechanics guide nuclear assembly A protein that crosslinks the DNA to allow proper nuclear envelope reformation.
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