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One reason racism persists is that many people imagine they would respond strongly to a racist act but actually respond with indifference, a new study led by York University shows.
Source: York University Posted on: Thursday, Jan 08, 2009, 5:41pm Rating: Not Rated | Views: 47 | Comments: 0
Rapidly warming climate is likely to seriously alter crop yields in the tropics and subtropics by the end of this century and, without adaptation, will leave half the world's population facing serious food shortages, new research shows.
Source: Newswise Posted on: Thursday, Jan 08, 2009, 5:41pm Rating: Not Rated | Views: 45 | Comments: 0
In 1913 Theodore Roosevelt added cartographer to his resume when he and his crew ventured up an unspeakably dangerous and uncharted tributary named the River of Doubt. Now, on a charting expedition of their own, Rockefeller University scientists have completed a journey that has also defied expectation.
Source: Rockefeller University Posted on: Thursday, Jan 08, 2009, 5:41pm Rating: Not Rated | Views: 40 | Comments: 0
That pesky buzz of a nearby mosquito is the sound of love, scientists have known for some time. But a new Cornell study reports that males and females flap their wings and change their tune to create a harmonic duet just before mating.
Source: Cornell University Posted on: Thursday, Jan 08, 2009, 5:41pm Rating: Not Rated | Views: 26 | Comments: 0
As a chemical for industrial processes, butanol is used in everything from brake fluid, to paint thinners, to plastics. According to a University of Illinois researcher, butanol made from plant material could displace butanol made from petroleum, just not at the fuel pump.
Source: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Posted on: Thursday, Jan 08, 2009, 5:40pm Rating: Not Rated | Views: 18 | Comments: 0
Using a simple chemical process, scientists at Cornell and DuPont have invented a method of preparing carbon nanotubes for suspension in a semiconducting “ink,” which can then be printed into such thin, flexible electronics as transistors and photovoltaic materials.
Source: Cornell University Posted on: Thursday, Jan 08, 2009, 5:40pm Rating: Not Rated | Views: 21 | Comments: 0
From the structure of DNA to nautical rope to distant spiral galaxies, helical forms are as abundant as they are useful in nature and manufacturing alike. Researchers at the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) have discovered a way to synthesize and control the formation of nanobristles
Source: Harvard University Posted on: Thursday, Jan 08, 2009, 5:40pm Rating: Not Rated | Views: 17 | Comments: 0
The first people to arrive in America traveled as at least two separate groups to arrive in their new home at about the same time, according to new genetic evidence published online on January 8th in Current Biology, a Cell Press publication.
Source: Cell Press Posted on: Thursday, Jan 08, 2009, 4:48pm Rating: 3/5 | Views: 52 | Comments: 0
Scientists have identified the structure of a key component of the bacteria behind such diseases as whooping cough, peptic stomach ulcers and Legionnaires' disease.
Source: Wellcome Trust Posted on: Thursday, Jan 08, 2009, 4:48pm Rating: Not Rated | Views: 41 | Comments: 0
Masses of immune cells that form as a hallmark of tuberculosis (TB) have long been thought to be the body's way of trying to protect itself by literally walling off the bacteria. But a new study in the January 9th issue of the journal Cell, a Cell Press publication, offers evidence that the TB bacteria actually sends signals that encourage the growth of those organized granuloma structures
Source: Cell Press Posted on: Thursday, Jan 08, 2009, 4:47pm Rating: Not Rated | Views: 43 | Comments: 0
Two previously identified pathways associated with aging in mice are connected, say researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine. The finding reinforces what researchers have recently begun to suspect: that the age-related degeneration of tissues, organs and, yes, even facial skin with which we all struggle is an active, deliberate process rather than a gradual failure of tired cells.
Source: Stanford University Medical Center Posted on: Thursday, Jan 08, 2009, 4:47pm Rating: Not Rated | Views: 34 | Comments: 0
In ant society, workers normally give up reproducing themselves to care for their queen's offspring, who are their brothers and sisters. When workers try to cheat and have their own kids in the queen's presence, their peers swiftly attack and physically restrain them from reproducing.
Source: Cell Press Posted on: Thursday, Jan 08, 2009, 4:47pm Rating: Not Rated | Views: 25 | Comments: 0
The nuclei of ordinary hydrogen atoms contain only a single proton. If a neutron is added, the hydrogen becomes deuterium. In principle, molecules that contain deuterium in place of hydrogen atoms are chemically identical. However, there can be significant differences.
Source: Wiley-Blackwell Posted on: Thursday, Jan 08, 2009, 4:47pm Rating: Not Rated | Views: 21 | Comments: 0
The evolutionary history of diatoms -- abundant oceanic plankton that remove billions of tons of carbon dioxide from the air each year -- needs to be rewritten, according to a new Cornell study. The findings suggest that after a sudden rise in species numbers, diatoms abruptly declined about 33 million years ago -- trends that coincided with severe global cooling.
Source: Cornell University Communications Posted on: Thursday, Jan 08, 2009, 4:47pm Rating: Not Rated | Views: 16 | Comments: 0
A major goal of nanotechnology research is to create a "lab on a chip," in which a tiny biological sample would be carried through microscopic channels for processing. This could make possible portable, fast-acting detectors for disease organisms or food-borne pathogens, rapid DNA sequencing and other tests that now take hours or days.
Source: Cornell University Posted on: Thursday, Jan 08, 2009, 4:47pm Rating: Not Rated | Views: 24 | Comments: 0
New tires allow race cars to take tight turns at high speeds. Hind wings give moths and butterflies similar advantages: They are not necessary for basic flight but help these creatures take tight turns to evade predators.
Source: Cornell University Communications Posted on: Thursday, Jan 08, 2009, 1:09pm Rating: Not Rated | Views: 48 | Comments: 0
Scientists have tricked bone marrow into releasing extra adult stem cells into the bloodstream, a technique that they hope could one day be used to repair heart damage or mend a broken bone, in a new study published today in the journal Cell Stem Cell.
Source: Imperial College London Posted on: Thursday, Jan 08, 2009, 1:09pm Rating: Not Rated | Views: 38 | Comments: 0
New research indicates that the ocean could rise in the next 100 years to a meter higher than the current sea level – which is three times higher than predictions from the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, IPCC.
Source: University of Copenhagen Posted on: Thursday, Jan 08, 2009, 1:09pm Rating: Not Rated | Views: 34 | Comments: 0
Learning To See In Stereo Children born with a crossed eye can develop a condition called amblyopia that leaves them unable to see in stereo as adults. Conventional wisdom holds that vision stops improving around age 7, but now researchers believe adults with this condition can train their brains to gain stereo vision.
Source: NPR Posted on: Thursday, Jan 08, 2009, 1:09pm Rating: Not Rated | Views: 10 | Comments: 0
Mummy thought to be Queen Seshestet found in Egypt Egyptian archaeologists have found the remains of a mummy thought to be that of Queen Seshestet, the mother of a pharaoh who ruled Egypt in the 24th century BC
Source: Reuters Posted on: Thursday, Jan 08, 2009, 1:09pm Rating: Not Rated | Views: 9 | Comments: 0
Coming soon to cellphones: Free, over-the-air TV Millions of consumers by year's end should be able to watch free, over-the-air television on cellphones, PDAs and other portable digital devices as the result of initiatives that will be unveiled Thursday by some of the nation's largest TV station owners and electronics manufacturers.
Source: USA Today Posted on: Thursday, Jan 08, 2009, 1:09pm Rating: Not Rated | Views: 12 | Comments: 0
Salmonella outbreak spreads to 42 states Health officials are investigating a salmonella outbreak that reportedly has sickened nearly 400 people in 42 states, but they don't know how the bacteria has been spreading.
Source: MSNBC Posted on: Thursday, Jan 08, 2009, 11:03am Rating: Not Rated | Views: 17 | Comments: 0
Positive step for drug from engineered goat In a surprise move, it seems likely the first genetically engineered animal approved for commercial use won't be a fast-growing salmon, as was expected, but a goat that produces an anti-clotting drug in its milk.
Source: USA Today Posted on: Thursday, Jan 08, 2009, 11:03am Rating: Not Rated | Views: 11 | Comments: 0
Panda attacks zoo visitor for third time For the third time, Gu Gu the panda has attacked someone who climbed into its space, prompting officials at the Beijing Zoo to consider changes to keep visitors away from 240-pound animal.
Source: MSNBC Posted on: Thursday, Jan 08, 2009, 11:03am Rating: Not Rated | Views: 14 | Comments: 0
National Mall reflects magnificence and neglect The sad decline of the historic promenade shows in trampled lawns and unfiltered pools. With 2 million visitors expected for the inauguration and 25 million yearly, the park service can't keep up.
Source: LA Times Posted on: Thursday, Jan 08, 2009, 9:54am Rating: Not Rated | Views: 13 | Comments: 0
Listen: Frogs Pipe Up After Australian Desert Downpour Morning Edition visits an ephemeral pond in the Australian desert, where a sudden downpour has flushed out 11 species of frogs. In their chorus, they signal to mates and mark territory. The segment is part of "Sounds Wild," a series of short, sound-rich stories from remote parts of the planet that are home to rare animals.
Source: NPR Posted on: Thursday, Jan 08, 2009, 9:54am Rating: Not Rated | Views: 12 | Comments: 0
Did Earth's twin cores spark plate tectonics? It's a classic image from every youngster's science textbook: a cutaway image of Earth's interior. The brown crust is paper-thin; the warm mantle orange, the seething liquid of the outer core yellow, and at the center the core, a ball of solid, red-hot iron. Now a new theory aims to rewrite it all by proposing the seemingly impossible: Earth has not one but two inner cores.
Source: MSNBC Posted on: Wednesday, Jan 07, 2009, 4:20pm Rating: Not Rated | Views: 17 | Comments: 0