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News Headlines |
Dec 26, 2024 |
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Ancient Death Trap Now a Paleontological Treasure Trove
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An ancient death trap is now a paleontological treasure trove. The Natural Trap Cave in north-central Wyoming has been the site of many deaths over the past 100,000 years. A mostly hidden hole in the ground is the only entrance to
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What Kayakers Can Teach Us About Living Well
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Some plunge down waterfalls while others fish from their vessels, but kayakers have one thing in common: They all know a thing or two about leading a healthy lifestyle.
Bobbing around on a kayak offers a lot more than a relaxi
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7-Person Rowing Team Crosses Indian Ocean
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The skipper of a seven-man rowing crew on the cusp of setting an Indian Ocean speed record said Thursday his team is looking forward to getting their feet dry on the island nation of the Seychelles after 57 days on the water.
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Boeing betting on tobacco as new aviation fuel source
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Boeing is getting into the tobacco business. The airplane maker is part of a joint venture to develop aviation fuel from a new, hybrid tobacco plant.
The goal is to cut carbon emissions and reduce the demand for petroleum-based
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‘Terror tunnels’ aren’t alone down below, team finds
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Underground spaces in Israel aren’t limited to Hamas “terror tunnels” in the south — the country is blessed with thousands of caves. Hebrew University researchers announced they have discovered and mapped the deepest cave
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Last cranes released into British wild
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The final set of cranes from an ambitious project to reintroduce the birds to Britain has been released at a secret location in Somerset.
Cranes used to be common throughout the country but were driven to extinction in the 16th
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Hurricane Iselle to hit Hawaii on Thursday
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Hawaiians are bracing for a rare direct tropical cyclone hit as Hurricane Iselle threatens the US island chain.
Hurricane Iselle is 350 miles (535km) east of Hilo and is expected to make landfall on Thursday afternoon.
Hawa
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Galapagos hawks hand down lice like family heirlooms
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AUA-led study provides some of the first evidence for the hypothesis of co-divergence between parasites and hosts acting as a major driver of biodiversity. Say what you will about the parasitic lifestyle, but in the game of evolut
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U.S. Should Lead on Climate Fight Say African Negotiators
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African climate negotiators attending the U.S.-Africa Leaders Summit in Washington this week said leadership from the United States is critical to finalizing a global deal on measures to address climate change in 2015 after years
Reuters
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Next Mars Rover Will Make Oxygen from CO2
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Nasa’s Mars 2020 rover will take a small step towards helping us directly explore the red planet, by studying how to convert its carbon dioxide atmosphere to oxygen. Jack Mustard from Brown University suggests the Mars Oxygen In
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Man Pushes Brussels Sprout Up a Mountain
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A British man spent three days pushing a Brussels sprout up a mountain -- with his nose.
Stuart Kettel, 49, used a special face mask and an extra-large Brussels sprout so that it wouldn’t fall into a crack.
Kettel practi
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As Oysters Die, Climate Policy Goes on the Stump
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Billions of baby oysters in the Pacific inlets here are dying and Gov. Jay Inslee of Washington is busy spreading the bad news.
“It used to be the canary in the coal mine,” Mr. Inslee said in a recent interview. “Now it
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Jupiter Moon Io Unleashes Cataclysmic Eruptions
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One of Jupiter's moons has unleashed a series of huge volcanic eruptions over a hellish 2 week period that were so bright they could be studied in detail by ground based observatories.
Discovery News - Top Stories
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Melt ponds shine in NASA laser altimeter images
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Even from 65,000 feet above Earth, aquamarine melt ponds in the Arctic stand out against the white sea ice and ice sheets. These ponds form every summer, as snow that built up on the ice melts, creating crystal clear pools.
ScienceDaily: Latest Science N
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Giant penguin fossil shows bird was taller than most humans
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A penguin species that lived millions of years ago would have dwarfed today’s biggest living penguins and stood as tall as most humans, according to analysis of fossils by a team of researchers from the La Plata Museum in Argent
Science news, comment and anal
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Asteroid impacts significantly altered ancient Earth
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New research shows that more than four billion years ago, the surface of Earth was heavily reprocessed as a result of giant asteroid impacts. A new model based on existing lunar and terrestrial data sheds light on the role asteroi
ScienceDaily: Latest Science N
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Warriors' Bones Reveal Bizarre Iron Age Rituals
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The bones of dozens of Iron Age warriors found in Denmark were collected and ritually mutilated after spending months on the battlefield, archaeologists say.
At least six months after the soldiers died, their bones were collec
Discovery News - Top Stories
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Sinosphere Blog: Pangolins Are Being Eaten out of Existence
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Consumer demand, which has already pushed the pangolin to the edge of extinction in Asia, is now driving poaching in Africa, threatening the indigenous species there, according to the Pangolin Specialist Group of the International
NYT > World
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Earthquake Plot Thickens in Pacific Northwest
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Nearly forgotten research from decades ago complicates the task of quantifying earthquake hazards in the Pacific Northwest, according to a new report from scientists at the U.S. Geological Survey, the University of Washington, and
USGS Newsroom
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Violent aftermath for the warriors at Alken Enge
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our pelvic bones on a stick and bundles of desecrated bones testify to the ritual violence perpetrated on the corpses of the many warriors who fell in a major battle close to the Danish town of Skanderborg around 2,000 years ago.
ScienceDaily: Latest Science N
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Swimming, climbing robots explore the hostile Arctic
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A TIRELESS scientific expedition is currently encamped across a huge stretch of Arctic pack ice. The daytime temperature is just above freezing. Regardless, the team sends data day and night to a string of labs around the world.
SCUBA News...
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Wading birds declining in the UK
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The magical winter wildlife spectacle of hundreds of thousands of wading birds converging on British estuaries could be under threat as research shows big declines in some of the most familiar species.
Results from the Wetland
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Lead pollution beat explorers to South Pole, persists today
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Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen became the first man to reach the South Pole in December 1911. More than 100 years later, an international team of scientists has proven that air pollution from industrial activities arrived to th
ScienceDaily: Latest Science N
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Genetic mutations linked to salivary gland tumors
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Research conducted at the Florida campus of The Scripps Research Institute has discovered links between a set of genes known to promote tumor growth and mucoepidermoid carcinoma, an oral cancer that affects the salivary glands.
ScienceDaily: Latest Science N
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Bid to Save Tigers Threatened by Poor Data
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Efforts to save the tiger are being undermined by a lack of information about how many of the endangered cats live in the wild, the conservation group WWF said on Tuesday.
Play Video
How a Genetic Mistake Can Save Whi
Discovery News - Top Stories
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Pakistan climbers scale K2 summit
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A team of Pakistani climbers reaches the top of the world's second tallest mountain, the K2, the first since Italians completed the feat 60 years ago.
BBC News | News Front Page | U
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Fort Collins man summits K2 in a climb for Alzheimer's
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Fort Collins adventurer Alan Arnette made it to the summit of the world's second highest mountain, K2, on his 58th birthday Saturday, after a grueling and dangerous climb to draw attention to
Alzheimer's.
Denver Post: News: Breaking
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Dinosaurs fell victim to perfect storm of events, study shows
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Dinosaurs might have survived the asteroid strike that wiped them out if it had taken place slightly earlier or later in history, scientists say.
They found that in the few million years before a 10km-wide asteroid struck what
ScienceDaily: Latest Science N
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