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Science News Reports

US Teen Birth Rate Drops 23 May 2013, 18.08 Science
US Teen Birth Rate Drops
CREDIT: Norman Pogson | Dreamstime The teen birth rate in the United States dropped to a historic low in 2011, with rates declining in nearly every state, according to a new report from the Centers for Disease Control
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5.7-Magnitude Earthquake Strikes Northern California
Map of earthquake location yesterday (May 23, 2013) in Northern California. CREDIT: USGS An earthquake of preliminary magnitude 5.7 struck Northern California yesterday (May 23), according to the U.S. Geological
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Tenochtitlán: History of Aztec Capital 23 May 2013, 18.08 Science
Tenochtitlán: History of Aztec Capital
A map of Tenochtitlán shows its location in the middle of Lake Texcoco in the Valley of Mexico. CREDIT: National Museum of Anthropology, Mexico City Tenochtitlán was an Aztec city that flourished between A.D. 1325
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Battle-Bruised King Richard III Buried in Hasty Grave
The remains of King Richard III, showing a curved spine and signs of battle trauma. CREDIT: University of Leicester The body of King Richard III was buried in great haste, a new study finds — perhaps because the
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Cold-Loving Bacteria Offer Clues for Life on Mars
Ellesmere Island, Canada, is home to cold-loving bacteria that live in permafrost. CREDIT: Joel Barker, courtesy of Ohio State University. A microbe discovered in the Canadian high Arctic thrives at the coldest
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Human Heart: Anatomy, Function & Facts 23 May 2013, 18.08 Science
Human Heart: Anatomy, Function & Facts
The human heart is an organ that pumps blood throughout the body via the circulatory system. Human heart anatomy In humans, the heart is roughly the size of a large fist and weighs between 9 and 12 ounces (250 and 350
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Scientists Train People To Not Be Jerks 23 May 2013, 18.07 Science
Scientists Train People To Not Be Jerks
To be excellent to one another, just try out some Buddhist meditation. By Colin Lecher Posted 05.23.2013 at 4:30 pm The Dalai Lama Friends of Tibet/Pankaj Mistry If you're kind of a jerk, but at least concerned about your
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Discovered: Molecule That Triggers Itchiness
At long last, researchers have identified what happens in the nervous system as an itch begins. By Lindsey Kratochwill Posted 05.23.2013 at 2:00 pm What really causes itching, and how it works, is surprisingly little
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8 Ridiculous Nutrition Myths Debunked 23 May 2013, 18.07 Science
8 Ridiculous Nutrition Myths Debunked
From calorie counting to high-protein diets By Kris Gunnars/ Authority Nutrition Posted 05.23.2013 at 1:30 pm Eggsellent Pier/Getty Images There is a lot of incompetence in the area of nutrition and health. Even health
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This 3-D Printed Bioplastic Windpipe Saved A Baby's Life
The infant's 3-D printed trachea will fully absorb into his body in two to three years. By Clay Dillow Posted 05.23.2013 at 6:00 pm The 3-D Printed Trachea Splint Image courtesy of University of Michigan Health
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Bacteria Found Growing In Subzero Arctic Frost, Which Is Good News For Mars Life
Bacteria discovered at –15ºC, the coldest temperature bacteria have ever grown in, could indicate bacteria survive under similar conditions on Mars. By Colin Lecher Posted 05.23.2013 at 5:29 pm Ellesmere Island Wikimedia
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What Salamanders Could Teach Scientists About Growing Human Limbs
Regeneration, salamander-style By Colin Lecher Posted 05.23.2013 at 5:00 pm In an attempt to recreate the plot of multiple recent superhero movies, a team of Australian scientists is looking into the regenerative properties
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Physics of 'green waves' could make city traffic flow more smoothly
(Phys.org) —If you've been lucky enough to catch all the green lights as you drive down a busy street, you may have been benefiting from intentional synchronization called a "green wave." The green wave concept has been
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Bui inspires new fans of distributed computing
“Computational science is becoming more and more important to the students who know they want to continue with research,” says Peter Bui, assistant professor of computer science at the University of Wisconsin -
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Science is a voyage — but we need to travel faster, says Ian Foster
One of the highlights of the recent TedxCERN conference was a talk given by Ian Foster, widely known as one of the founders of grid computing. He also spoke to an audience of CERN IT department staff about Globus Online and
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Popping bubbles mathematically 23 May 2013, 18.06 Science
Popping bubbles mathematically
Researchers at the University of California, Berkeley, US, have mathematically described the stages in the complex formation and disappearance of foamy bubbles. Read about the challenges they faced and the industrial
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The race to understand the human brain 23 May 2013, 18.06 Science
The race to understand the human brain
The Human Brain project made headlines earlier this year as one of two EU flagship projects that won 1 billion euros' worth of funding over the next decade. Nages Sieslack interviews project leader Henry Markram ahead of his
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A molecular window on itch 23 May 2013, 18.05 Science
A molecular window on itch
Researchers discover chemical puppet master behind the need to scratch By Puneet Kollipara Web edition: May 23, 2013 Long a mystery, the sensation of itch has yielded a clue. The neurons that detect itch rely on a newly
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Gone perhaps, but Kepler won't soon be forgotten
Astronomers look forward to building on planet-hunting telescope's discoveries By Andrew Grant Web edition: May 23, 2013 When scientists at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics scheduled a conference called
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Less is more for smart perception 23 May 2013, 18.05 Science
Less is more for smart perception
Brains of high-IQ people automatically ignore the least relevant sights By Bruce Bower Web edition: May 23, 2013 People with high IQs see the world in their own way. Their brains seamlessly separate the visual wheat from the
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FOR KIDS: Building with moon rocks 23 May 2013, 18.05 Science
FOR KIDS: Building with moon rocks
FOR KIDS: Building with moon rocks Working on the moon with lunar soil and grit could prove easier, more efficient and less costly than using earthly materials By Sid Perkins Web edition: May 22, 2013 Working on the moon
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How roaches developed disgust at first bite 23 May 2013, 18.05 Science
How roaches developed disgust at first bite
A change in taste cells makes glucose-baited traps repellent By Susan Milius Web edition: May 23, 2013 Enlarge BITTERSWEET German cockroaches have fought back against bait traps that pair sugar with poison. Over time, the
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Tests show that deadly flu could spread among people
New influenza virus transmits through air between ferrets, raising concerns that it could do the same in humans New influenza virus transmits through air between ferrets, raising concerns that it could do the same in humans By
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Magnetic dipoles line up 22 May 2013, 02.44 Administrator Science
Magnetic dipoles line up
  The interaction of nanoscale magnetic dipoles has been observed for the first time by researchers in Germany. Unexpectedly, the dipoles were seen to form chains, rather than the zigzag pattern expected from simple
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Heinrich Rohrer: 1933–2013 22 May 2013, 02.44 Science
Heinrich Rohrer: 1933–2013
The Swiss condensed-matter physicist Heinrich Rohrer who shared the 1986 Nobel Prize for Physics died last week at the age of 79. Rohrer won the Nobel prize for inventing the scanning tunnelling microscope (STM) at IBM's
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Who Invented Velcro? 22 May 2013, 02.43 Science
Who Invented Velcro?
Velcro uses tiny hooks and loops to bind the two strips. Velcro is a combination of the words 'velvet' and 'crochet.' CREDIT: Stocksnapper | Shutterstock Velcro, the “zipperless zipper,” exists on a variety of
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Lake Ontario Facts 22 May 2013, 02.43 Science
Lake Ontario Facts
A ferry from Kingston, on Lake Ontario's eastern end, to Wolfe Island. CREDIT: SF photo | Shutterstock Lake Ontario is the smallest of all the Great Lakes in surface area (7,340 square miles / 18,960 square
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Deadly Moore Tornado Tops the Scale at EF-5 22 May 2013, 02.43 Science
Deadly Moore Tornado Tops the Scale at EF-5
A family searches through debris in Moore, Okla., on May 20, 2013; 15 people reported stayed safe in the sheler shown here as the deadly tornado passed through. CREDIT: KFOR Screengrab Complete and utter destruction
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Study: Stress Isn't Hot 22 May 2013, 02.43 Science
Study: Stress Isn't Hot
CREDIT: Busy day photo via Shutterstock Stress makes its mark on the female face, according to a new study that finds men judge women with high levels of a stress hormone less attractive. The finding is a gender
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Like Father Like Son: Mice Follow Dad's Example
Mice fathers take a cue from their own dads when it comes to parenting. CREDIT: Emilia Stasiak | Shutterstock When it comes to parenting, mice follow their fathers' examples. Male mice with neglectful dads grow up to
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Can Any Buildings Survive Tornados? 22 May 2013, 02.43 Science
Can Any Buildings Survive Tornados?
Oklahoma National Guard Soldiers and Airmen respond to a devastating tornado that ripped through Moore, Okla., May 20, 2013. CREDIT: Sgt. 1st Class Kendall James, National Guard (Flickr How do you protect yourself
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Reconstructing The Oklahoma Tornado From Start To Finish, In Videos
This is what real destruction looks like. By Clay Dillow Posted 05.21.2013 at 12:00 pm The EF-4 Moore, Okla., Tornado, May 20, 2013 The devastation wrought by the mile-wide, EF-4 tornado that ripped through Moore, Okla., and
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Scientists Reveal The Cause Of The Irish Potato Famine
One of the most deadly pathogens in human history has been pinpointed. By Dan Nosowitz Posted 05.21.2013 at 2:00 pm Irish Lumper Potato The Irish lumper, the breed of potato that was hit by the Irish Potato Famine pathogen,
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U.S. Has Depleted Two Lake Eries' Worth Of Groundwater Since 1900
Aquifer water levels are rapidly falling across most of the U.S., according to a new study. By Francie Diep Posted 05.21.2013 at 3:30 pm Aquifers in the Continental US This map of major aquifers in the U.S. highlights the
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Why Are Tornadoes So Hard To Predict? 22 May 2013, 02.43 Science
Why Are Tornadoes So Hard To Predict?
People in the path of a tornado typically get only 10 minutes of warning. Why? By Francie Diep Posted 05.21.2013 at 2:30 pm Tornado damage at Woodward, Iowa, on November 12, 2005 U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric
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Climate Change Will Increase Heat-Related Deaths In NYC, Study Says
Summer in the city could get a whole lot more miserable in the coming decades, according to a new report. By Shaunacy Ferro Posted 05.21.2013 at 4:00 pm New York City Heat Aurelien Guichard via Wikimedia Commons Warming
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FOR KIDS: Major twister hits Oklahoma 22 May 2013, 02.42 Science
FOR KIDS: Major twister hits Oklahoma
Its speed, which largely determines the damage it causes, will never be known. Its speed, which largely determines the damage it causes, will never be known. By Janet Raloff Web edition: May 21, 2013 Enlarge Killer tornado's
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Dog sniffs out grammar 22 May 2013, 02.42 Science
Dog sniffs out grammar
A border collie takes command of sentence rules By Bruce Bower Web edition: May 21, 2013 Enlarge COMMAND PERFORMANCE A border collie named Chaser participates in an experiment testing her ability to understand commands given
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Flipping spins spread like wildfire 20 May 2013, 16.14 Science
Flipping spins spread like wildfire
New research into how local heating sets off a chain reaction of magnetic domain reversal could provide important insights into how wildfires spread. That is the conclusion of scientists in the US and Spain, who have
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The 7 Weirdest Things Made By 3D Printing 20 May 2013, 16.14 Science
The 7 Weirdest Things Made By 3D Printing
A Japanese clinic offers a 3D model of unborn fetuses to proud parents. CREDIT: DigInfo News The cost of 3D printing has long kept the technology in a select few hands, but all that is changing as 3D printing blossoms
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Extinct 'Scissorhands' Critter Named for Johnny Depp
This 505-million-year old extinct arthropod was named Kootenichela deppi for actor Johnny Depp. CREDIT: Imperial College London Celebrity names will be preserved for posterity in film reels, heaps of tabloid magazines
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Anesthetic Drug May Treat Depression 20 May 2013, 16.14 Science
Anesthetic Drug May Treat Depression
There are many reasons humans cry. CREDIT: Dreamstime. SAN FRANCISCO — A drug long-used as an anesthetic is showing increasing evidence that it also eases symptoms of depression, new research suggests. In a small
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Oklahoma Tornado - 'This Is War Zone Terrible' | Video
Share A huge tornado flattened an area near Oklahoma City on Monday, leaving a wake of tangled wreckage, as a dangerous storm system threatened as many as 10 states. Deborah Lutterbeck reports. Credit: Produced by
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Co-Sleeping with Baby Raises SIDS Risk 20 May 2013, 16.14 Science
Co-Sleeping with Baby Raises SIDS Risk
CREDIT: Alexander Raths | Dreamstime Babies who sleep in bed with a parent are more likely to die of sudden infant death syndrome compared with babies sleeping separately, even when parents follow other
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Location Data Reveals Our Changing Planet 20 May 2013, 16.14 Science
Location Data Reveals Our Changing Planet
Antarctic Peninsula in spring. CREDIT: NASA. Nancy Colleton, president of the Arlington, Virginia-based Institute for Global Environmental Strategies, contributed this article to LiveScience's Expert Voices: Op-Ed
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Huge Tornado Flattens Towns Near Oklahoma City [Updated]
Preliminary reports from the National Weather Service classify the mile-wide tornado as an EF-4, with winds greater than 200 mph. By Rose Pastore Posted 05.20.2013 at 6:30 pm Oklahoma City tornado on May 20, 2013 KOCO via
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Number Of Published Cancer Studies That Can't Be Reproduced Is Shockingly High
Half of cancer scientists have failed to reproduce the findings of other researchers, according to an anonymous survey. By Francie Diep Posted 05.20.2013 at 4:00 pm Battling Cancer With A Vaccine Medi-Mation In an anonymous
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IMDB's Greatest Movies Ever, Beautifully Organized By Genre [Infographic]
Sorry, animated movies. Drama is top dog. By Colin Lecher Posted 05.20.2013 at 3:30 pm You probably have your own choice for Greatest Movie Of All Time. But what do the masses say? The Internet Movie Database (IMDB) has a
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Giant Carnivorous Plant Found In Silicon Valley
The precise method by which Yahoo! digests and dissolves its prey. By Dan Nosowitz Posted 05.20.2013 at 2:30 pm Darlingtonia californica, subspecies Yahoonica Wikimedia Commons Yahoo! is a carnivorous plant whose
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Candy Totally Won't Make You Fat, Says Study Funded By Big Candy
It's cool to eat as much candy as you want, you guys, no problem, just live off the stuff. By Colin Lecher Posted 05.20.2013 at 2:00 pm Candy Sticks Steve Snodgrass Good news, guys! Candy isn't going to make you fat or kill
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How Science Got The 'Crack Baby' Epidemic So Wrong
A New York Times mini-documentary examines the flawed science behind the 1980s 'crack baby' scare. By Clay Dillow Posted 05.20.2013 at 1:30 pm The New York Times has a fascinating documentary on the crack cocaine epidemic
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Viruses and mucus team up to ward off bacteria
Phages may play unforeseen role in immune protection By Tina Hesman Saey Web edition: May 20, 2013 The last thing most people would want in their bodies is mucus laden with viruses. But a new study suggests that viruses called
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'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
Read More 11 Hits 0 Ratings

Earth News Reports

Chuck, a flexible bookshelf 23 May 2013, 18.07 Green Architecture
Chuck, a flexible bookshelf
A creative shelf that adapts to the books you put in it, created by
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Packaging from the past: 10 awesome vintage packages 23 May 2013, 18.07 Green Architecture
Packaging from the past: 10 awesome vintage packages
Nowadays packages you’ll find in your local supermarkets are commonly filled with information, legal or not. Why not take a look back and see how packages were more minimalist in
Read More 52 Hits 0 Ratings
Featured designer: Loic Bard 23 May 2013, 18.07 Green Architecture
Featured designer: Loic Bard
Montreal based designer Loïc Bard creates gorgeous furniture to make your interior much more design friendly. He’s got some design awards and press mentions for his great
Read More 48 Hits 0 Ratings
Chevy Announces 2014 Spark EV Pricing Starts at ,495 23 May 2013, 18.07 Transportation
Chevy Announces 2014 Spark EV Pricing Starts at $27,495
TweetShare on TumblrEmail TweetShare on TumblrEmail Electric Vehicle buyers in the US looking for a good deal now have three models to choose from, as General Motors just announced that pricing for the
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Moto Electra Looks to Set Record by Crossing US in an Electric Motorcycle in Just 3 Days
TweetShare on TumblrEmail TweetShare on TumblrEmail It’s hard to imagine a time when driving cross-country was a challenge, a time when gas stations were infrequent and roads were unreliably paved. But
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Tesla Repays its Entire $465 Million Federal Loan Nine Years Early
TweetShare on TumblrEmail TweetShare on TumblrEmail Tesla Motors just announced that it has repaid the entire $465 million loan that it received from the Department of Energy a full nine years early. The
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Gap, Walmart’s Concerns About Bangladesh Accord Liability Are “Irrational”
RECOMMENDED FOR YOU: More Brands, Retailers Commit to Bangladesh Fire and Building Safety Gap, Walmart’s Concerns About Bangladesh Accord Liability Are “Irrational” by Jasmin Malik Chua , 05/22/13   filed under:
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Myrrhia’s Fine Knitwear is Loomed in California From Organic Cotton
RECOMMENDED FOR YOU: Ada Zanditon Goes From Dusk to Dawn With Bat-Inspired Autumn ’10 Line Myrrhia’s Fine Knitwear is Loomed in California From Organic Cotton by Morgana Matus , 05/23/13   filed under: Features,
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Two-Thirds of a Running Shoe’s Carbon Footprint Comes From Manufacturing
RECOMMENDED FOR YOU: Puma Introduces “Re-Suede” Vegan Sneaker Made With Recycled Materials Two-Thirds of a Running Shoe’s Carbon Footprint Comes From Manufacturing by Jasmin Malik Chua , 05/23/13   filed under:
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Patagonia Creates $20M Venture Fund to Support Like-Minded Companies
RECOMMENDED FOR YOU: Patagonia Launches eBay Storefront to Buy, Sell Pre-Owned Gear Patagonia Creates $20M Venture Fund to Support Like-Minded Companies by Jasmin Malik Chua , 05/21/13   filed under: Eco-Fashion Brands,
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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
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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
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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
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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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Plants previously thought to be 'stable' found to be responding to climate change PDF Print E-mail
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ScienceDaily (June 1, 2012) — Many wild plant species thought to be "stable" in the face of climate change are actually responding to global warming, say researchers at UC Santa Barbara's National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis (NCEAS). Their findings, in a study titled, "Divergent responses to spring and winter warming drive community level flowering trends," are published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

According to the study, a number of wild plant species previously thought to be unresponsive to the trend of warmer and earlier springs, because they did not bloom earlier, are actually responding to climate temperature change in a manner that is not as easily seen as in plants that exhibit earlier flowering in response to an advanced spring.

"For a large subset of species that were not shifting their flowering earlier, the lack of response was not due to any insensitivity to climate change," said Benjamin Cook, who led the research by a working group at NCEAS. Rather, he said, these plants were actually responding to the trend of warmer winters by delaying flowering, and then to the advanced spring by speeding up flowering.

"The two effects for the most part canceled each other out, leading to very little overall change in the timing of flowering for these species," said Cook, a climate modeler at the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies and Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory.

Using two data sets covering 490 species of temperate plants in the United Kingdom and Washington, D.C., the scientists, who include Elizabeth Wolkovich of the University of British Columbia, and Camille Parmesan of the Marine Institute at Plymouth University, found that for about 10 to 18 percent of the wild plant species studied, a chilling requirement, known as vernalization, played a crucial role. Many of these plant species require a drop in temperature in the fall and winter seasons that serves as a cue to become dormant until the spring flowering season arrives. With the phenomenon of warmer winters, the plants were found to have delayed their blooming cycles, an effect that compensates for the advanced flowering brought on by an earlier spring.

"We didn't necessarily go into the analysis with any preconceived ideas," said Cook. "We were, however, surprised at how sensitive these divergent species were to the warming in fall/winter and spring, despite the lack of any trend over time."

The study not only shows that some species thought to be insensitive to climate change are actually responding to the phenomenon, but also demonstrates the need to include fall/winter temperature cues in the ongoing study of plant responses to climate change.

"This work is most relevant for conservationists and managers interested in understanding how climate change will affect their species and ecosystems of interest," said Cook. "Being able to explain why some species are responding or not responding is critical for developing accurate predictions from which conservation policies and protocols can be developed."

For the scientists, future research includes gathering and analyzing more long-term data sets to find just how many of these "divergent responders" exist in other ecosystems, and how these species will respond as winters continue to get warmer and springs come sooner.

"Right now, these species appear to have not changed much over time," said Wolkovich, who co-authored the study as a postdoctoral fellow at UC San Diego, "but all of our understanding of basic plant physiology suggests they will shift their flowering dramatically in the future."

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by UC Santa Barbara.

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Journal Reference:

  1. B. I. Cook, E. M. Wolkovich, C. Parmesan. Divergent responses to spring and winter warming drive community level flowering trends. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2012; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1118364109

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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