Sign In
to Vote &
Create Storyboards.
 

Science News

Location American Science News for 4 July 2018
A start-up called Catalog claims it will be able to store a terabyte of data in a gram-sized DNA pellet, but questions remain over whether the technology is ready
Read More
3
0
(University of Bristol) Swimming bacteria can reduce the viscosity of ordinary liquids like water and make them flow more easily, sometimes down to the point where the viscosity becomes zero: the flow is then frictionles...
Read More
3
0
A young hominin who lived 3.3 million years ago had flexible feet that she could use to climb trees like a chimp, suggesting our ancestors kept this trait for a long time
Read More
0
0
Biologists have created hybrid rhino embryos as a first step towards creating pure northern rhino embryos and are confident they can save the species from the brink
Read More
0
0
A fundamental rule of general relativity has passed it's most extreme test yet, courtesy of the movements of three distant stars
Read More
0
0
Many people see the public's rejection of genetically-modified food as a failure, but I would argue it was successful public engagement, says Lesley Paterson
Read More
0
0
A controversial new study reports cannabis may not be as helpful in treating chronic pain as believed. Researchers say they have found no clear evidence that cannabis can reduce pain severity or pain interference in thos...
Read More
0
0
Game over? SUDAN, the last male northern white rhinoceros on Earth, died in March. He is survived by two females, Najin and her daughter Fatu, who live in a conservancy in Kenya. This pair (pictured) are thus the only re...
Read More
0
0
AI his frequently be biased, but a new technique may be able put fairness right at the heart of training algorithms
Read More
0
0

Laws of Flight: As Drones Take Off, Regulation Lags

Singularity Hub - 4 Jul 2018 17:00
Laws of Flight: As Drones Take Off, Regulation Lags In 2014, a drone got tangled in the power lines outside a South Carolina prison carrying a small payload of marijuana and a cellphone. Police arrested a man in a nearby campsite who'd been running this smuggling operatio...
Read More
0
0
Similar bans in the US have saved thousands of teens from discredited "treatments", even though they have loopholes that allow religious advice
Read More
0
0
Blocking is often used to help Facebook users avoid abuse or harassment, but a bug meant 800,000 people lost this safeguard for a week
Read More
0
0

Higgs search alumni: Where are they now?

Symmetry Magazine - 4 Jul 2018 16:10
Meet four physicists who have found different ways to apply the skills they learned through their studies of the Higgs boson. The discovery of the Higgs boson, considered the missing piece of the Standard Model of partic...
Read More
0
0
The UK's largest wildfire for decades is almost under control, but peat burning below the ground risks spewing historical pollution back into the sky
Read More
0
0
Why This 5.4-Million-Year-Old Planet Is Still a Baby Astronomers just captured a first-of-its-kind image of a newborn alien world -- which has been developing in a nursery of dust and gas for more than 5 million years.
Read More
0
0
Radiokrypton dating plumbs mysteries of water aquifers We tap it, pump it and draw it from below the surface of every imaginable landscape, from desert to well-manicured suburban yard. It is the one essential ingredient required to sustain life. Water.
Read More
0
0
Doctors in Australia and the UK are now prescribing fewer antibiotics thanks to financial incentives and a bit of competition among peers
Read More
0
0
How Scuba Divers Will Rescue Soccer Team Trapped in Thai Cave The boys who survived for 9 days in a flooded cave in Thailand will now have to go through a risky crash course in cave diving in order to make their way out.
Read More
0
0
Ancient Human Ancestors Had to Deal with Climbing Toddlers A new discovery finds that our ancestors' toddlers had a special toe that made them better suited for climbing compared to the adults.
Read More
0
0

Shining new light on the pineal gland

EurekAlert! - 4 Jul 2018 06:00
(University of Freiburg) Biologists from the University of Freiburg identify a gene controlling left-right asymmetry in the brain and sleep-wake cycles.
Read More
0
0
(Osaka University) An international collaboration between Osaka University, Japan, and the University of Castilla, Spain, developed stable single-crystalline porous hydrogen-bonded organic frameworks that are thermally a...
Read More
0
0
(Frontiers) The biomedical industry depends on blood from horseshoe crabs for drug and environmental safety testing -- but this commercial demand, together with capture for bait, climate change and habitat destruction, i...
Read More
0
0

{TITLE}

{PUBLISHER} - {PUBLISHED_DATE}
{TITLE} {CONTENT}
Read More
{VIEWS}
0


Storyboard
Print
{VIEWS}
0
0




Share this Article

Location



Create Storyboard