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Science News Reports

'Ghostly' 3D images taken without a camera 18 May 2013, 16.24 Science
'Ghostly' 3D images taken without a camera
A simplified 3D imaging system that does not require a conventional camera has been developed by researchers in the UK. The computational imaging technique uses information from single-pixel detectors to create an image, can
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Bose–Einstein condensate is in the can 18 May 2013, 16.24 Science
Bose–Einstein condensate is in the can
Calculating the properties of a quantum particle in a box is something most physics students have to do as part of their degree course – but actually creating such a simple system in the lab can be an experimental
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Crystal 'Flowers' Bloom in Harvard Nanotech Lab
These false-color SEM images reveal microscopic flower structures created by manipulating a chemical gradient to control crystalline self-assembly. CREDIT: Wim L. Noorduin, Harvard University Imagine peering into a
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Animal Sex: How Ostriches Do It 18 May 2013, 16.23 Science
Animal Sex: How Ostriches Do It
To attract a female, a male ostrich (shown on right wooing a female) will do a little dance in which he crouches down and alternates bringing his black-and-white wings forward, one after the other. CREDIT: Four Oaks |
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World's Smallest Liquid Droplets Created in Atom Smasher
Inside the Large Hadron Collider, protons slammed into lead nuclei (shown here in a 3D view), producing teeny, tiny droplets of liquid, along with other subatomic particles. (Green lines represent the trajectories of
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5 Salary Negotiation Mistakes to Avoid 18 May 2013, 16.23 Science
5 Salary Negotiation Mistakes to Avoid
CREDIT: Salary Image via Shutterstock Job seekers shouldn’t be so quick to accept the first job offer that comes their way, new research shows. A study by The Creative Group revealed that professionals who accept an
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Memorial Day Countdown: Will the Jersey Shore Be Ready?
The Jolly Tar in Bay Head, N.J. CREDIT: David Mielach Sometimes, numbers are the only way to tell the true tale of a disaster incomprehensible in scale and indescribable in words. For the victims of Hurricane Sandy,
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First American Mission To Sample An Asteroid Gets Green Light
OSIRIS-REx will scoop up a couple of ounces of dirt from the asteroid Bennu and bring it back to Earth. By Francie Diep Posted 05.17.2013 at 1:28 pm Illustration of OSIRIS-REx University of Arizona Earth-bound scientists are
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High School Students Devise More Accurate Climate Modeling Method
By studying the way leaves shrink when they fossilize, a team of more than 100 high school students could build more accurate models of climate change. By Clay Dillow Posted 05.17.2013 at 1:01 pm Fossilized leaves can tell us
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A Zombie Worm And Other Amazing Images From This Week
Plus the most beautiful image of Earth, New York City on Venus, and the world's largest (deflated) rubber duck. By Dan Nosowitz and Rose Pastore Posted 05.17.2013 at 4:30 pm Zombie Worm This horrifying worm is an Osedax, also
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Cambrian Fossil With Scissor-Like Claws Is Named For Johnny Depp
Pack it up, science, we're done here. By Clay Dillow Posted 05.17.2013 at 3:02 pm Kooteninchela deppi Imperial College London Academy Awards continue to elude Johnny Depp, but as of today no one can say he hasn’t been
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The Week In Numbers: Fire In Space, The First Cloned Human Embryo, And More
By Rose Pastore Posted 05.17.2013 at 6:00 pm Grains of interstellar dust stretching across a segment of the Orion Nebula ESO/Digitized Sky Survey 2 1,350 light-years: the distance to a “fiery ribbon” stretching across
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8 Of The Year's Most Oddly Gorgeous Science Images
A water slide for worms, the glorious C. instagram, and more By Francie Diep Posted 05.17.2013 at 5:20 pm Maze Dweller A goby fish peeks out of the coral it lives in. Goby fish are good housekeepers--they may remove algae
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News in Brief: Micro-sculptures made easy 18 May 2013, 16.23 Science
News in Brief: Micro-sculptures made easy
Minerals assemble on demand into tiny, complex shapes like flowers By Rachel Ehrenberg Web edition: May 16, 2013 Enlarge FLORAL DISPLAY Red flowerlike structures grew on green spiral stems. Scientists can grow such structures
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News in Brief: 3-D imaging, pixel by pixel 18 May 2013, 16.23 Science
News in Brief: 3-D imaging, pixel by pixel
Easy technique uses inexpensive equipment to make three-dimensional rendering By Andrew Grant Web edition: May 16, 2013 Enlarge Two-dimensional images of a mannequin head come into focus over time (top to bottom). Each
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News in Brief: Analog circuits boost power in living computers
New cell-based computers do division and logarithms the old-fashioned way By Meghan Rosen Web edition: May 17, 2013 Using a molecular dimmer switch that smoothly dials up glowing lights in bacteria, researchers can make
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News in Brief: Highlights from the Biology of Genomes meeting
An enormous tree's enormous genome, genes for strong-swimming sperm and more presented May 7-11 in Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y. An enormous tree's enormous genome, genes for strong-swimming sperm and more presented May 7-11 in Cold
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Invasive frogs may spread deadly amphibian fungus
Imported African species implicated in B. dendrobatidis epidemic Imported African species implicated in B. dendrobatidis epidemic By Susan Milius Web edition: May 16, 2013 More evidence has just dropped into place suggesting
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FOR KIDS: Flagging loose bolts 18 May 2013, 16.23 Science
FOR KIDS: Flagging loose bolts
“Smart alert washer” automatically flags when a nut is coming loose, warning of potential danger “Smart alert washer” automatically flags when a nut is coming loose, warning of potential danger By Sid Perkins Web
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Hofstadter's butterfly spotted in graphene 14 May 2013, 21.45 Science
Hofstadter's butterfly spotted in graphene
Hofstadter's butterfly – a stunning fractal pattern that describes the behaviour of electrons in a magnetic field – has been measured experimentally for the first time. The breakthrough has been made by three research
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Cicadas Continue East Coast March 14 May 2013, 21.43 Science
Cicadas Continue East Coast March
Periodical cicadas — the ones with 13-year or 17-year (shown here) cycles — first made an appearance in scientific literature about 300 years ago. These cicadas are distinct from the ones that make an appearance every
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Serengti Highway Compromise Proposed by Famed Scientist
Wildebeest migration across the Serengeti. CREDIT: WCS. Newark, N.J. — Building an elevated highway across the Serengeti may not sound like the most feasible or wise idea. But that's exactly what Kenyan scientist
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Orphaned Polar Bear Arrives in NY 14 May 2013, 21.43 Science
Orphaned Polar Bear Arrives in NY
Orphaned polar bear cub Kali has been feeding well at his new home at the Alaska Zoo. CREDIT: John Gomes/Alaska Zoo Kali — the orphaned polar bear cub that was rescued in Alaska earlier this year — arrived safely
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Roman Numerals: Conversion, Meaning & Origins
The engraved marker for Entrance LII — 52 — is still visible at the Coliseum in Rome. CREDIT: WarpFlyght/Creative Commons Roman numerals originated, as the name might suggest, in ancient Rome. There are seven
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The Deadly Fungus Frogs Brought To The US 14 May 2013, 21.43 Science
The Deadly Fungus Frogs Brought To The US
African Clawed Frog (Xenopus Laevis) CREDIT: Adam Bewick (ISNS) -- African frogs once imported to laboratories and hospitals around the world may have carried with them a devastating fungal infection thought to be
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High-School Science Experiment Charges Dropped
A group of teens detonates a drano-and-aluminum "bottle bomb" on YouTube. The mixture produces hydrogen gas, which expands until it pops the soda bottle CREDIT: BlackIce700 A Florida student arrested for conducting a
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U.S. Should Lower DUI Blood-Alcohol Threshold To 0.05 Percent, Transportation Safety Board Says
All states now have a 0.08 percent legal limit, but the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board says you're drunk at 0.05 percent blood-alcohol content. By Francie Diep Posted 05.15.2013 at 1:00 pm Hand 'Em Over City of
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NASA's Kepler Spacecraft May Be Finished 14 May 2013, 21.42 Science
NASA's Kepler Spacecraft May Be Finished
A critical failure in Kepler's alignment may spell the end for the storied planet hunter. By Rebecca Boyle Posted 05.15.2013 at 3:39 pm Kepler Space Telescope Kepler is designed to look for Earth-like planets orbiting
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Scientists Create First Cloned Human Embryo 14 May 2013, 21.42 Science
Scientists Create First Cloned Human Embryo
The process that created Dolly the sheep in 1996 has now been proven successful in humans. By Francie Diep Posted 05.15.2013 at 3:27 pm Human Blastocyst A human embryo at the blastocyst stage Open i beta Scientists have made
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FYI: Do I Really Need My Pinky Toe? 14 May 2013, 21.42 Science
FYI: Do I Really Need My Pinky Toe?
And without it, could I do everything a five-toed human does? By Sally Zhang Posted 05.15.2013 at 2:30 pm Toes! Dreamstime Walking, running and skipping with just four toes may be easier than you think. “If you’re born
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Space Tourism's Black Carbon Problem 14 May 2013, 21.42 Science
Space Tourism's Black Carbon Problem
The industry and the F.A.A. say the climate effects of flying civilians into space will be negligible, but some scientists fret about the accumulation of black carbon in the stratosphere. By Andrew Rosenblum Posted 05.15.2013
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Untouched For The Last Billion Years, Water In Canadian Mine Holds Ingredients For Life
Scientists may have discovered the oldest free-flowing source of isolated water ever known. By Clay Dillow Posted 05.15.2013 at 5:00 pm Water found deep in an Ontario mine could have been isolated and untouched for the last
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Muon experiment begins this summer 14 May 2013, 21.42 Science
Muon experiment begins this summer
Scientists from around the world are planning a new experiment that could provide glimpses into new realms of particle physics. Before research begins, they must bring the core of the experiment – a complex
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CERN Computer Centre expands 14 May 2013, 21.42 Science
CERN Computer Centre expands
A significant expansion of the CERN Computer Centre was inaugurated last week. The project, for which construction work began in April 2011, has seen the addition of a new computer room housing 90 new racks of servers,
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Rock snot genomics 14 May 2013, 21.42 Science
Rock snot genomics
The diatom species responsible for thick blooms in mountain streams and ponds – colloquially known as ‘didymo’ or ‘rock snot’ – can coat moist surfaces and promote bacteria by secreting a
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Powering climate models with grid computing 14 May 2013, 21.42 Science
Powering climate models with grid computing
With preparations for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's 5th Assessment Report now entering their final stages, find out how climate models have evolved in the last 40 years and how grid computing is
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Building a neural network in your bedroom 14 May 2013, 21.42 Science
Building a neural network in your bedroom
At TedxCERN, 18-year-old Florida high school student and Google Science Fair Winner, Brittany Wenger, explained how she built a neural network to help tackle breast
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Malaria parasite drives mosquitoes to human scent
In lab tests, insects carrying disease home in on sweat-soaked stockings By Puneet Kollipara Web edition: May 15, 2013 The notoriously crafty parasite that causes malaria may have yet another trick up its sleeve scientists
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Cloning produces human embryonic stem cells 14 May 2013, 21.42 Science
Cloning produces human embryonic stem cells
Fine tuning of technique used in other animals could enable personalized medicine Fine tuning of technique used in other animals could enable personalized medicine By Meghan Rosen Web edition: May 15, 2013 Enlarge CLONING
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Low-energy laser makes leap toward practicality
Semiconductor-based device runs on electricity By Andrew Grant Web edition: May 15, 2013 A low-energy alternative to traditional lasers is finally available in plug-in form, a crucial step toward developing a practical
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Tamed fox shows domestication's effects on the brain
Gene activity changes accompany doglike behavior By Tina Hesman Saey Web edition: May 15, 2013 Enlarge Taming silver foxes (shown) alters their behavior. A new study links those behavior changes to changes in brain
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FOR KIDS: Avoiding ‘hot’ wheels 14 May 2013, 21.42 Science
FOR KIDS: Avoiding ‘hot’ wheels
Teen designs device that could almost double the life of airplane tires By Sid Perkins Web edition: May 15, 2013 Enlarge Tire saver Phillipe Lothaller, a 17-year-old South African, has invented a device that could save
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Kepler mission may be over 14 May 2013, 21.42 Science
Kepler mission may be over
Multiple failures cripple planet-hunting telescope By Andrew Grant Web edition: May 15, 2013 The telescope that has discovered thousands of exotic, quirky worlds — and a few tantalizingly Earthlike ones — orbiting distant
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Atmosphere agitated by breaking waves 13 May 2013, 20.54 Science
Atmosphere agitated by breaking waves
Ocean waves breaking far from shore impart a greater portion of their energy to the air than they do to the surrounding water. That is the claim of scientists in Italy and Australia who are the first to model the dynamics of
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Cosmic flashes could herald birth of black holes
The birth of a black hole may be signalled by a characteristic cosmic flash, according to researchers in the US. It was previously thought that only the most massive of black holes would produce gamma-ray bursts – narrow
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Solar 'sandwich' could cover a variety of surfaces
Ultrathin and flexible solar cells could be one step closer thanks to an international team of researchers that has made photovoltaics from 2D crystals called semiconducting transition-metal dichalcogenides (TMDCs). These
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Quantum dot LED approaches theoretical maximum efficiency
(Phys.org) —Quantum dot LEDs (QLEDs) are a promising technology for creating large-area displays that could have applications for TVs, cell phones, and digital cameras. So far, however, the highest efficiencies of QLEDs
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Chaos could improve performance of wireless communication systems
(Phys.org) —In today's wireless communication systems, the wireless signals are non-chaotic, meaning they have a well-defined period and frequency. Non-chaotic wireless signals are used in many applications, such as
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Niels Bohr: Biography & Atomic Theory 13 May 2013, 20.53 Science
Niels Bohr: Biography & Atomic Theory
Left: Niels Bohr in 1922. Right: A 1963 Danish stamp honored Bohr on the 50th anniversary of his atomic theory. CREDIT: Left: AB Lagrelius & Westphal, via American Institute of Physics. Right: Antonio Abrignani /
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Weird Skin Color Illusion Can Reduce Racism 13 May 2013, 20.53 Science
Weird Skin Color Illusion Can Reduce Racism
A black and white businessman face off. CREDIT: ArTono, Shutterstock Here's a novel way to reduce racism: Convince people their skin is darker than it really is. No need to break out the tanning booth. A new study
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Did Mom or Dad Incubate Dinosaur Eggs? 13 May 2013, 20.53 Science
Did Mom or Dad Incubate Dinosaur Eggs?
About 15 feet tall and 40 feet long, Tyrannosaurus rex, whose name means “king of the tyrant lizards,” is one of the largest known land predators to ever roam the Earth. CREDIT: Photograph © Julius T. Csotonyi
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Image Gallery: Butterfly Metamorphosis in 3D
Painted Lady In a May 2013 paper, researchers at the University of Manchester revealed stunning 3D images of the metamorphosis of the painted lady butterfly, Vanessa cardui. CT Scanning The team used CT scanning to capture
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Caterpillars Morph into Butterflies in Amazing 3D Images
Butterflies undergo metamorphosis from caterpillar to winged creature CREDIT: Tristan Lowe Stunning new pictures of butterfly metamorphosis have been captured using common medical imaging. The images of the tiny
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Photo Glossary: Hawaii's Amazing Volcanic Rocks
Hawaii's Rocks From'A'a to (almost) Z An amazing variety of rocks appear in Hawaii from a single type of molten rock called basalt. Here's a guide to some of the weird and wonderful stones that result from the active lava
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Apex Predator 13 May 2013, 20.53 Science
Apex Predator
Can a crew of scientists and volunteers armed with homemade trackers save sharks from extinction? By Brian Lam Posted 05.14.2013 at 11:00 am Data Driven: Dr. Neil Hammerschlag (wearing a gray T-shirt) tracks sharks using a
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FYI: Why Do We Hate The Sound Of Nails On A Chalkboard?
Screeeeeeeech! By Sari Soffer Posted 05.14.2013 at 10:00 am Luckily no one uses chalkboards any more Wikimedia Commons Most people associate this cringe-worthy noise with words like “piercing” and “shrilling.” But it
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A Cannabinoid That Looks Like THC Could Be Key To Diagnosing PTSD
Researchers have pinpointed a set of biological markers that could help diagnose PTSD--and, eventually, treat it. By Shaunacy Ferro Posted 05.14.2013 at 3:30 pm PTSD Brain Positron emission tomography scans of the brain of a
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Freaky Carnivorous Flower Has Super-Efficient Genome
Plant genetics are so weird. By Francie Diep Posted 05.14.2013 at 3:00 pm Utricularia gibba Bladder A micrograph image of a humped bladderwort bladder with color added. The bladder is 1 millimeter long in real life. Enrique
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Cornstarch Replaces Cyanide In Clean New Gold Extraction Method
Scientists accidentally discover a new way to isolate gold that is much safer than existing processes, which use toxic cyanide. By Rebecca Boyle Posted 05.14.2013 at 2:30 pm Gold In A Flask Wikimedia Commons Gold, precious
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The Tag That Could Save Sharks 13 May 2013, 20.53 Science
The Tag That Could Save Sharks
Shark Tag:  Courtesy A. Driever, Desert Star Systems LLC; Inset: Courtesy Jim Abernethy Shark behavior is one of the great mysteries of the ocean, and mediocre tags are primarily to blame. Scientists can’t understand
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Body's clock linked to depression 13 May 2013, 20.53 Science
Body's clock linked to depression
Gene activity in the brain suggests off-kilter circadian rhythms By Rachel Ehrenberg Web edition: May 14, 2013 The disruption of sleep and other bodily rhythms that often accompanies clinical depression may leave a mark on the
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News in Brief: The secret behind the alligator's toothy smile
Dental stem cells enable the reptile to grow new teeth every year By Meghan Rosen Web edition: May 13, 2013 Enlarge SEE YOU LATER, ALLIGATOR TEETH A band of stem cells in alligators' jaws enables them to replenish each of
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Flame quencher offers less toxic approach to fighting fire
New coating could protect furniture without causing health concerns By Rachel Ehrenberg Web edition: May 13, 2013 Enlarge FLAME FIGHTER Furniture foam without flame retardant protection easily catches fire and melts (top). A
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News in Brief: Cannibalistic spiders may just be choosy guys
Micaria sociabilis may choose to have older female for lunch, not sex By Susan Milius Web edition: May 13, 2013 Enlarge FINE YOUNG CANNIBAL The small spider Micaria sociabilis engages in unusual male-on-female cannibalism.
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FOR KIDS: Here come swarmageddon! 13 May 2013, 20.53 Science
FOR KIDS: Here come swarmageddon!
This spring and summer, trillions of cicadas will emerge in the eastern United States This spring and summer, trillions of cicadas will emerge in the eastern United States By Sid Perkins Web edition: May 12, 2013 Enlarge Noisy
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Flower Photos: The Beautiful Rose 12 May 2013, 02.53 Science
Flower Photos: The Beautiful Rose
A rose is a rose The rose is the most deeply ingrained flower in human history and human culture. It has been immortalized and integrated into music, festivals, poetry and even wars. It has been used as a symbol of passion
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On the Brink: Climate Change Endangers Common Species
Figures A and B show the loss of animals and plants, respectively, by 2080, if nothing is done to reduce emissions. Black areas show a nearly 100% loss of species richness. Figures C and D show reduced losses with
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Getting to the bottom of foamy physics 11 May 2013, 00.52 Science
Getting to the bottom of foamy physics
Researchers in the US have created a new mathematical model to describe the complex evolution of foamy bubbles – something that has proved fiendishly difficult to model thanks to the hugely varying length and time scales
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How to Pull Off a Million Global ATM Heist 11 May 2013, 00.51 Science
How to Pull Off a $45 Million Global ATM Heist
Two men charged in the $45 million ATM heist revealed by U.S. authorities on May 7, 2013, in a self-portrait taken in March CREDIT: U.S. Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of New York Want to pull off your own
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Earth News Reports

WordPress news: May 12 to May 18, 2013 18 May 2013, 16.26 Green Architecture
WordPress news: May 12 to May 18, 2013
WordPress has become a tool used by millions of designers for much more than creating blogs. Each week we take a look at what’s new with WordPress. Plugins Coda Plugins
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10 fonts that are safe to use with CSS 18 May 2013, 16.26 Green Architecture
10 fonts that are safe to use with CSS
With the rise of @font-face and the new possibilities it opens, web designers like to use fancy fonts to make their website more unique. However, this does come with a
Read More 28 Hits 0 Ratings
Voltaic Celebrates Bike to Work Day with Portable Solar-Charging Trailer You Can Rent!
TweetShare on TumblrEmail TweetShare on TumblrEmail Today is National Bike to Work Day, and all across America, people are ditching their cars and trucks for a cleaner, healthier journey via bicycle. Our
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Elio Motors Unveils Three-Wheeled 84 MPG Car That Costs Only $6,800
[WizardRSS: unable to retrieve full-text content]A brand new car that gets 84 MPG and costs less than $7,000 sounds too good to be true, but Elio Motors just unveiled a new three-wheeled vehicle that hits all those marks. The
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The World’s First Flat-Pack Truck Can Be Assembled in Just 12 Hours
[WizardRSS: unable to retrieve full-text content]Flat-pack goods typically make more efficient use of materials and have lower shipping costs, and in recent years companies have designed everything from flat-pack beds and
Read More 35 Hits 0 Ratings
Naval Research Laboratory Flies Their Hydrogen-Powered Ion Tiger UAV for Over 48 Hours
TweetShare on TumblrEmail TweetShare on TumblrEmail A team from the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory (NRL) have broken their own record after flying their hydrogen fuel cell powered-Ion Tiger UAV for an
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Featured design studio: Blast 14 May 2013, 21.42 Green Architecture
Featured design studio: Blast
Blast is a branding and communication studio formed in London in 1996. They create original designs that have been awarded for their
Read More 87 Hits 0 Ratings
Amtrak Unveils New High-Efficiency Electric Trains for Northeast Corridor
TweetShare on TumblrEmail TweetShare on TumblrEmail After three decades of hard work, Amtrak trains in the Northeast Corridor and Pennsylvania get to retire. They will be replaced by 70 high-efficiency
Read More 89 Hits 0 Ratings
Bangladesh to Allow Garment Workers to Unionize, Raise Minimum Wage
Photo by Andrew Biraj for Reuters Bangladesh’s government agreed on Monday to allow the South Asian nation’s 4 million garment workers to form trade unions without seeking permission from factory workers, a milestone
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More Brands, Retailers Commit to Bangladesh Fire and Building Safety
Tweet Share on Tumblr Email Holy domino effect! Following examples set by H&M, Inditex, Primark, and C&A on Monday, a number of North American and European clothing brands have agreed to sign a legally binding,
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Future News Reports

Obama's War Against US Energy Independence:  Give Away Oil Rich Alaskan Islands to Russia!
  By Joe Miller The Obama administration, despite the nation’s economic woes, effectively killed the job-producing Keystone Pipeline last month. The Arab Spring is turning the oil production of Libya and other Arab
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OSBIT Power's MaXccess system completes successful offshore trials 08 April 2012, 02.33 Administrator Energy
OSBIT Power's MaXccess system completes successful offshore trials
OSBIT Power's MaXccess system completes successful offshore trials Visit http://www.osbitpower.com for further information OSBIT Power (OP), Siemens Wind Power and Statoil have successfully completed offshore
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North America's EV charging infrastructure to get a boost 12 January 2012, 02.01 Administrator Energy
North America's EV charging infrastructure to get a boost
        North America’s EV charging infrastructure may soon see significant improvements, thanks to a recent agreement between Eaton Corporation and Coulomb Technologies. Under the deal, Eaton’s Level II and
Read More 928 Hits 0 Ratings
Could The Gravitomagnetic Field Be The Ultimate Energy Source? 28 May 2011, 01.34 Administrator Energy
Could The Gravitomagnetic Field Be The Ultimate Energy Source?
      Have scientists already unknowingly discovered the source for all atomic energy reactions, and could the discovery of the gravitomagnetic field be the ultimate energy source?  What if our understandings on how
Read More 2197 Hits 5 Ratings
Physicists urge caution over apparent speed of light violation 25 September 2011, 16.27 Administrator Energy
Physicists urge caution over apparent speed of light violation
Physicists wary of junking light speed limit yet Physicist Antonio Ereditato poses before presenting the result of an experiment, which found a subatomic particle, the neutrino, seemed to move faster than the speed of
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STEORN ORBO  FREE ENERGY:  What's Next a Self Charging Unit for your Electric Car?
Steorn's Free Energy Orbo -- From Permanent Magnets to Solid State Systems   My associate, Hank Mills composed this for PESN, Saturday, February 12, 2011 6:17 Steorn is a small company based in Dublin, Ireland. For
Read More 2353 Hits 0 Ratings
Cold Fusion, Releases Energy from Hydrogen's Gravitomagnetic Field 16 January 2011, 09.17 Administrator Energy
Cold Fusion, Releases Energy  from Hydrogen's Gravitomagnetic Field
Cold Fusion "In Bologna we did it" By Ilaria VENTURI, La Republica News, Bolona, Italy For the first time in Italy, in front of experts, the process was carried out using nickel and hydrogen. It 's the way to achieve
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Abu Dhabi Media Zone to generate renewable energy through its façade
Eco Factor: Sustainable development to generate renewable solar energy. Bernard Tschumi Architects have re-imagined their master plan for the new Abu Dhabi Media Zone, by incorporating several environmentally-friendly
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Unique microbes found in extreme environment PDF Print E-mail
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ScienceDaily (June 9, 2012) — Researchers who were looking for organisms that eke out a living in some of the most inhospitable soils on Earth have found a hardy few. A new DNA analysis of rocky soils in the martian-like landscape on some volcanoes in South America has revealed a handful of bacteria, fungi, and other rudimentary organisms, called archaea, which seem to have a different way of converting energy than their cousins elsewhere in the world.

"We haven't formally identified or characterized the species," said Ryan Lynch, a microbiologist with the University of Colorado in Boulder who is one of the finders of the organisms, "but these are very different than anything else that has been cultured. Genetically, they're at least 5 percent different than anything else in the [DNA] database of 2.5 million sequences." The database represents a close-to comprehensive collection of microbes, he added, and researchers worldwide add to it as they publish papers about the organisms.

Life gets little encouragement on the incredibly dry slopes of the tallest volcanoes in the Atacama region, where Lynch's co-author, University of Colorado microbiologist Steven Schmidt, collected soil samples. Much of the sparse snow that falls on the terrain sublimates back to the atmosphere soon after it hits the ground, and the soil is so depleted of nutrients that nitrogen levels in the scientists' samples were below detection limits. Ultraviolet radiation in this high-altitude environment can be twice as intense as in a low-elevation desert. And, while the researchers were on site, temperatures dropped to -10 degrees Celsius (14 degrees Fahrenheit) one night, and spiked to 56° C (133° F) the next day.

How the newfound organisms survive under such circumstances remains a mystery. Although Lynch, Schmidt, and their colleagues looked for genes known to be involved in photosynthesis, and peered into the cells using fluorescent techniques to look for chlorophyll, the scientists couldn't find any evidence that the microbes were photosynthetic. Instead, they think the microbes might slowly convert energy by means of chemical reactions that extract energy and carbon from wisps of gases such as carbon monoxide and dimethyl sulfide that blow into the desolate mountain area. The process wouldn't give the bugs a high energy yield, Lynch said, but it could be enough as it adds up over time.

A scientific article about the new findings has been accepted for publication by the Journal of Geophysical Research-Biogeosciences, a journal of the American Geophysical Union.

While normal soil has thousands of microbial species represented in just a gram of soil, and garden soils even more, remarkably few species have made their home in the barren Atacama mountain soil, the new research suggests.

"To find a community dominated by less than 20 [species] -- that's pretty amazing for a soil microbiologist," Schmidt said. He has studied sites in the Peruvian Andes where, four years after a glacier retreats, there are thriving, diverse microbe communities. But on these volcanoes on the Chile-Argentina border, which rise to altitudes of more than 6,000 meters (19,685 feet) above sea level and which have been ice-free for 48,000 years, the bacterial and fungal ecosystems have not undergone succession to more diverse communities.

"It's mostly due to the lack of water, we think," Schmidt said. "Without water, you're not going to develop a complex community."

"Overall, there was a good bit lower diversity [in the Atacama samples] than you would find in most soils, including other mountainous mineral soils," Lynch said. That makes the Atacama microbes very unusual, he added. They probably had to adapt to the extremely harsh environment, or may have evolved in different directions than similar organisms elsewhere due to long-term geographic isolation.

Growth on the mountain might be intermittent, Schmidt suggested, especially if soils only have water for a short time after snowfall. In those situations, there could be microbes that grow when it snows, then fall dormant, perhaps for years, before they grow again. High elevation sites are great places to study simple microbial communities, ecosystems that haven't evolved past the very basics of a few bacteria and fungi, he said. "There are a lot of areas in the world that haven't been studied from a microbial perspective, and this is one of the main ones," he said. "We're interested in discovering new forms of life, and describing what those organisms are doing, how they make a living."

Schmidt's lab, along with others, is studying how microorganisms are dispersed -- that is, how they travel from one site to another. There's evidence that one common method of microbe transport is through the air -- they're caught up in winds, sucked up into clouds, form rain droplets, and then fall back to the ground somewhere else as precipitation. But on mountains like Volcán Llullaillaco and Volcán Socompa, the high ultraviolet radiation and extreme temperatures make the landscape inhospitable to outside microbes.

"This environment is so restrictive, most of those things that are raining down are killed immediately," Schmidt said. "There's a huge environmental filter here that's keeping most of these things from growing."

The next steps for the researchers are laboratory experiments using an incubator that can mimic the extreme temperature fluctuations to better understand how any organism can live in such an unfriendly environment. Studying the microbes and finding out how they can live at such an extreme can help set boundaries for life on Earth, Schmidt said, and tells scientists what life can stand. There's a possibility that some of the extremophiles might utilize completely new forms of metabolism, whereby they convert energy in a novel way.

Schmidt is also working with astrobiologists to model what past conditions were like on Mars. With their rocky terrain, thin atmosphere, and high radiation, the Atacama volcanoes are some of the most similar places on Earth to the Red Planet.

"If we know, on Earth, what the outer limits for life were, and they know what the paleoclimates on Mars were like, we may have a better idea of what could have lived there," he said.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by American Geophysical Union.

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Journal Reference:

  1. Ryan C Lynch, Andrew J King, Mariá E Farías, Preston Sowell, Christian Vitry, Steve K Schmidt. The potential for microbial life in the highest elevation (>6000 m.a.s.l.) mineral soils of the Atacama region. Journal of Geophysical Research, 2012; DOI: 10.1029/2012JG001961

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

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