National Geographic
- VIDEO: First 3-D Fly-Through of a Supernova Remnant
- Medical imaging tools used to peer inside living people have been adapted to create the first virtual fly-though of the remains of a dead star.
- VIDEO: Bees Key to Better Missiles?
- Scientists are studying bees aggressive behavior and ocular and navigational skills in hopes of improving missile technology.
- 2009 Science Preview: Atom Smasher, Super Spaceflights
- Among the surprises scientists have in store for the coming year: Sunken treasures, a new evolution debate, earlier Earths, and a host of revelations about the universe.
- PHOTO IN THE NEWS: Pterosaurs Took Flight on All Fours
- Using Schwarzenegger strength, the ancient flying reptiles could make a leaping launch from flat ground in less than a second, a new study says.
- PHOTOS: Vast New Marine Refuge Home to Huge Crab, Coral
- See natural treasures to be protected in three new marine monuments announced by U.S. President Bush—worlds largest land crab, giant coral, and more.
- THE ROUNDUP: Science and Nature News Around the Web
- Darwin missed a species; stethoscope hears sound of silence; nixing mosquitoes naturally.
- PHOTO IN THE NEWS: Milky Way's Turbulent Core in Hi-Res
- The first infrared panorama of the Milky Ways center has revealed a previously unknown population of massive stars scattered across the turbulent zone around our galaxys core.

Universe Today
- Cosmic Radio Noise Booms Six Times Louder Than Expected
- Loud sounds tend to startle us. But imagine being surprised by a sound six times louder than you expect. A balloon-borne instrument called ARCADE, (Absolute Radiometer for Cosmology, Astrophysics, and Diffuse Emission) was supposed to be used to search for
- Which Comes First: Galaxy or Black Hole?
- Do galaxies form first and then a black hole springs up in the center, or possibly, do galaxies form around an already existing black hole? That's the cosmic chicken-and-the-egg problem astronomers have been trying to figure out. The answer? "It
- WR 104 Won't Kill Us After All
- Early last year, concern was growing for a Wolf-Rayet star named WR 104 that appeared to be aiming right at Earth (see Looking Down the Barrel of A Gamma Ray Burst). A Wolf-Rayet star is a highly unstable star coming
- Atmospheres of Super Earths
- We stand on the edge of the next phase of planetary discovery. Hundreds of massive, Jupiter-like planets have been discovered, but now astronomers are turning up smaller, more familiar planets. Planets the mass of Earth are out of reach today,
- Invading Stars Faster Than Speeding Bullet
- A team of astronomers looking for pre-planetary nebulae using the Hubble Space Telescope instead came across some renegade stars screaming through space. These runaway stars are moving along at 50 km/s (112,000 miles an hour), and have traveled an estimated
- Could Quark Stars Explain Magnetars Strong Magnetic Field?
- Magnetars are the violent, exotic cousins of the well known neutron star. They emit excessive amounts of gamma-rays, X-rays and possess a powerful magnetic field. Neutron stars also have very strong magnetic fields (although weak when compared with magnetars), conserving
- This Week's Where In The Universe Challenge
- This week's Where In The Universe Challenge has a new twist. This image was actually submitted by one of our readers, Wienie van der Oord from Israel. Its quite an interesting image, don't you agree?! I'll not give any hints

The New York Times
- Theory Ties Radio Signal to Universe’s First Stars
- A mysterious radio static that seems to pervade the universe has astronomers theorizing as to its source.
- Dot Earth: On Whale Wars and Bison Burgers
- Whale wars heat up but hide bigger questions.
- Japan Seeks Australia’s Help to Thwart Anti-Whalers
- Japan said Tuesday that it would formally ask Australia to keep anti-whaling activists and their ship, the Steve Irwin, from refueling at Australian ports.
- Dot Earth: China’s Power Slowdown
- China’s recent explosive growth in generation of electricity has reversed, and emissions of carbon dioxide are presumably dropping, too.
- At the Stove, a Dash of Science, a Pinch of Folklore
- Shirley O. Corriher, a biochemist turned folksy food scientist, helps answer some kitchen curiosities.
- Vital Signs: Early Weight Problems Often Undiagnosed
- Researchers said that especially with young patients who were overweight but not yet obese, doctors might be missing a good chance to intervene.
- Vital Signs: Gasping Misunderstood in Heart Attacks
- A new study reports that the heart attack victims who gasp are more likely to survive — especially if they are given chest compressions right away.

Scientific American
- Are fat bums a sign of good health?
- Hey, ladies, been spending hours fretting over your beefy bottoms? Perturbed about your pear-shaped bodes no matter how many lunges you do daily? Dont be. Turns out that having a little extra cushioning around your derriere and hips -- think
- "Love hormone" may also help us recognize faces
- Oxytocin, a hormone associated with trust and social bonding, also helps people recognize familiar human faces, according to a new study. Researchers say the findings, published today in The Journal of Neuroscience, could shed light on the causes of mysterious
- Air Algae: U.S. Biofuel Flight Relies on Weeds and Pond Scum
- Continental jet 516--a two-engine Boeing 737-800--completed a two hour test flight out of Houston today with one engine powered by a 50-50 blend of regular petroleum-based jet fuel and a synthetic alternative made from jatropha and algae.
- Splitting rockets: What would a military/NASA collaboration really mean?
- Earlier this week, we told you that the incoming Obama administration was reportedly mulling increased cooperation between NASA and the Department of Defense (DoD) to bolster the manned U.S. space program. The media noted the cooperation might include NASAs adopting
- A perk for coffee lovers: java may lower oral cancer risk
- Raise high the coffee bean! Good news, coffee-drinkers: a new study shows your beverage of choice may lower your chances of getting oral, esophageal and pharyngeal (back-of-the-throat) cancer.
- Jesse Anttila-Hughes: A Model Student Sustains a Developing Career
- His finalist year: 1998His finalist project: Building a model of how nerve cells function in people with an autoimmune disorder
- Did the universe mature at an early age?
- LONG BEACH, CALIF.--You might think that the universe 11.5 billion years ago was in a more primitive state than it is today. Barely two billion years had passed since the big bang, our Milky Way galaxy was still taking shape,

Space.com
- Mystery Roar from Faraway Space Detected
- The roar is from the distant cosmos. Nobody knows what causes it.
- Explosion That Injured 7 Spurs NASA Probe
- NASA is studying a tank explosion that injured 7 at its Florida spaceport.
- NASA Chief to Step Down
- NASA chief Michael Griffin expects to step down this month.
- Perfect Space Storm Could be Catastrophic on Earth, Study Concludes
- A new study outlines grim possibilities on Earth for a worst-case scenario solar storm.
- Runaway Stars Go Ballistic
- New Hubble images reveal 14 young, runaway stars.
- Earth Life Headed for Mars Moon
- A Russian mission is set to carry Earth organisms to a Martian moon.
- Mars Trip Proposed for Space Shuttles
- A Connecticut-based inventor has proposed sending two space shuttles to Mars.

ScienceDaily
- Majority Of Teens Discuss Risky Behaviors On MySpace, Studies Conclude
- Fifty-four percent of adolescents frequently discuss high-risk activities including sexual behavior, substance abuse or violence using MySpace, the popular social networking Web site.
- Why Smokers Struggle To Quit: New Findings
- Just seeing someone smoke can trigger smokers to abandon their nascent efforts to kick the habit, according to new research.
- Cellular Task Force To Safeguard Genome Stability
- The maintenance of genome stability is crucial for protecting an organism against the onset of cancer and the study of the mechanisms controlling genome stability represents one of the most promising frontiers in cancer research.
- Asian Grasslands May Hold Global Promise To Restore Grasslands In Arid Areas
- Grazinglands in the Asian steppes and the rangelands in the western United States share similar climates, vegetation, land-use practices and problems. So an Agricultural Research Service (ARS) scientist joined a search in Asia to find and preserve native forage plants--and
- Modified Lignin Has Potential Benefits For Ethanol, Paper And Feed
- Cellulose is a key component of plant cell walls that can be converted into ethanol and other products. New findings could help make that conversion process easier.
- Treating Gum Disease Linked To Lower Medical Costs For Patients With Diabetes
- A new report suggests that treating gum disease in patients who have diabetes with procedures such as cleanings and periodontal scaling is linked to 10 to 12 percent lower medical costs per month.
- Modulation Of Gene Expression By Protein Coding Regions Demonstrated
- Scientists have discovered how the expression of one of the Hox master control genes is regulated in a specific segment of the developing brain. The findings provide important insight into how and where the brain develops some of its unique

New Scientist
- Black holes grew up before galaxies
- A study of four distant quasars suggests that supermassive black holes may have matured long before the galaxies that surround them
- Runaway stars carve eerie cosmic sculptures
- Hubble has found 14 stars that are shooting through interstellar gas, creating bow shocks that resemble the waves at the bow of a boat
- Cool your brain, save your mind
- Techniques that rapidly chill the brain could prevent damage and even aid resuscitation after a heart attack
- Should nuclear fuels be taken out of national hands?
- To discourage proliferation, calls are growing to establish a system where nuclear materials are managed under international auspices
- Danger ahead as the Sun goes quiet
- The Sun is about to go into a period of low sunspot activity and could let more harmful cosmic rays enter the solar system
- A good night out began at home in ancient Greece
- Some ancient Greek houses had a secret double life – they were also used as drinking taverns and brothels, suggests an archaeological analysis
- Ten extinct beasts that could walk the Earth again
- Theres no hope for the dinosaurs, but other long-dead creatures really could be brought back to life. looks at the most likely candidates

BBC
- Poetry or science?
- Is romantic love just a chemical cocktail?
- Black holes 'preceded galaxies'
- Astronomers solve a cosmic chicken-and-egg question: what came first - black holes or galaxies?
- 'Spookfish' has mirrors for eyes
- A deep-sea fish caught in the Pacific has eyes which use mirrors instead of lenses, scientists discover.
- First 3D image of exploding star
- Astronomers reconstruct the first three-dimensional image of an exploding star, 11,000 light years away.
- Concern for California's pelicans
- Wildlife experts in US state of California are concerned about a mysterious illness affecting pelicans from San Diego to San Francisco.
- Brains wanted
- Tom Feilden on the shortage of brains donated to science
- Appeal for research brain donors
- More people need to donate their brains to medical research if cures for diseases like dementia are to be found, scientists say.

CNN
- Mars Science Lab launch delayed two years
- NASAs launch of the Mars Science Laboratory -- hampered by technical difficulties and cost overruns -- has been delayed until the fall of 2011, NASA officials said at a news conference Thursday in Washington.
- Mars Science Lab launch delayed two years
- NASAs launch of the Mars Science Laboratory -- hampered by technical difficulties and cost overruns -- has been delayed until the fall of 2011, NASA officials said at a news conference Thursday in Washington.
- Shuttle lands at California air base
- NASA officials Sunday waved off the first opportunity for space shuttle Endeavour to return to Earth, citing poor weather conditions.
- Inspiration for 'Contact' still listening
- From a remote valley in Northern California, Jill Tarter is listening to the universe.
- Shuttle lands at California air base
- NASA officials Sunday waved off the first opportunity for space shuttle Endeavour to return to Earth, citing poor weather conditions.

Discovery
- Space Is Closer Than You Think
- The fuzzy border between Earths atmosphere and space gets a new map.
- Grand Canyon, Loch Ness Vie for 'Wonder' Status
- Two hundred spectacular sites compete for the new 7 Wonders of Nature.
- Continental to Make Algae Biofuel Test Flight
- A Continental jet takes off from Houston with a special fuel blend -- half algae.
- Deadly Spider Thriving in Australia's Humid Summer
- The funnel-web spider, whose bite can kill within 76 minutes, is thriving this season.
- Stonehenge Acoustics Ideal for Trance-Like Tunes
- Was Stonehenge the it venue for Neolithic-era ravers?
- Brown Pelicans Turning Up Injured and Confused
- Brown pelicans are turning up on California shores bruised and confused.
- Electric Cars Get a Makeover
- Electric car makers polish the image of what could be a hard sell in the current recession.

Science/AAAS
- The Pit in a Galaxy's Peach
- Astronomers argue that galaxies grow around black holes, like a ripening fruit
- When a Building Is Like a Pond
- Polarized light pollution causes some animals to mistake humanmade objects for water
- Haven't I Seen You Before?
- Brain hormone helps us recognize a familiar face
- Tougher Than a Black Hole
- Dense clouds shrug off cosmic monsters violent tug
- Bush Creates World's Largest Set of Marine Sanctuaries
- Waters around 11 Pacific islands will be off-limits to commercial fishing
- How Twisters Get Their Spin
- Simulations show tornadoes must have large water droplets to form
- The Top 10 ScienceNOWs of 2008
- A selection of our favorite and most read stories

USATODAY
- Study: Black holes seem to form before galaxies
- When galaxies initially formed, they werent the first in the cosmic neighborhood. The supermassive black holes, which reside at the center of galaxies, probably moved in first, a new astronomy study suggests.
- Bush to make Pacific's Mariana Trench a national monument
- President Bush will establish the largest marine reserve ever created today when he designates three remote Pacific Ocean regions as national monuments.
- Milky Way is bigger than thought, study says
- Take that, Andromeda! For decades, astronomers thought when it came to the major galaxies in Earths cosmic neighborhood, our Milky Way was a weak sister to the larger Andromeda. Not anymore.
- Mars rover mission reaches 5th anniversary
- Five years after the NASA rover Spirit landed on Mars, the six-wheel robotic geologist and its twin Opportunity are still on the job.
- Will brain waves help pilot future space ships?
- NASAs plans to ship people to the moon and some day Mars are very much up in the air these days, with debate over Barack Obamas plans for the space agency a hot water cooler topic in the aerospace industry.
- Study links mammoth extinction, comets
- A swarm of comets that smacked North America 12,900 years ago wiped out the wooly mammoth and early Native American cultures, according to a new soil study.
- Shhh! Gadget racket threatens pulsar research
- Of all the threats to scientific research Wesley Sizemore has stymied over the years, satellites and cellphone towers dont stick in his memory quite like the possessive old hound and its treasured heating pad.

Digg Science
- Amazing solar-powered fridge invented by British student
- Its the kind of brilliant yet simple invention that would have the tycoons of the Dragons Den salivating with excitement.
- Black holes lead galaxy growth, new research shows
- Peek into early universe sheds light on cosmic chicken-and-egg problem Astronomers may have solved a cosmic chicken-and-egg problem -- the question of which formed first in the early Universe -- galaxies or the supermassive black holes seen at their cores.
- How Flying Reptiles Rose
- How did a giant flying reptile get off the ground? Its not a simple question: A computerized analysis of pterosaur fossils and modern-day bird bones shows that the biggest pterosaurs couldnt simply lift off into the air like a bird,
- Scientists Discover Why People Better With Faces Than Names
- The reason why some people are better with faces than names has been identified by scientists and it appears to be due to their higher levels of a special socialising hormone called Oxytocin.
- Jay Leno's Wind Turbine (Video)
- This video is from Ed Begley and from Jay Leno about a new wind turbine called the MagWind from Enviro-Energies that they will be installing soon. As many of you have asked about vertical axis wind turbines, I thought youd
- Broken 'Big Bang' collider to be restarted in June
- Broken Big Bang collider to be restarted in June
- Milky Way and Andromeda will collide sooner than expected
- The Milky Way and the Andromeda galaxies are on a collision course and will hit one another earlier than scientists had previously predicted.

Science News Online
- Record low for human blood oxygen levels
- Challenges in thin air of Everest could inform patient care
- In the young universe, black holes may have formed first
- Findings pose a possible answer to long-standing question of when the black holes at galactic centers formed.
- Early C-sections pose risks
- Women choosing elective cesarean section births would do well to wait the whole nine months, a new study shows.
- In early universe, black holes formed first
- Findings pose a possible answer to long-standing question of when the black holes at galactic centers formed.
- Early asteroids unexpectedly crusty
- Mineralogy of two meteorites chronicles formation of crust on an ancient asteroid
- FOR KIDS: Longer lives for wild elephants
- A surprising new study shows that female elephants in the wild might live up to three times longer than those born in zoos
- FOR KIDS: Body clocks
- Scientists are finding that when you sleep is just as important as how much you sleep

NASA
- Sixteen Tons of Moondust
- Sledgehammer-toting scientists are "bustin rocks" to make the finest possible simulated lunar regolith (a.k.a. fake moondust) in support of NASAs return to the Moon.
- NASA's Gift to Mr. Claus
- True story: NASA technology saves Claus from a disaster at sea! Christmas (and the sport of fishing) may never be the same.
- Saturn's Crazy Christmas Tilt
- The planet Saturn is doing something rare and beautiful this holiday season. Find out what in todays story from Science@NASA.
- Giant Breach in Earth's Magnetic Field Discovered
- NASAs five THEMIS spacecraft have discovered a breach in Earths magnetic field ten times larger than anything previously thought to exist. The size of the opening and the strange way it forms could overturn long-held ideas of space physics.
- Solar Flare Surprise
- Solar flares are supposed to obliterate everything in their vicinity, yet one of the most powerful flares of the past 30 years has done just the opposite, emitting a beam of pure and unbroken hydrogen atoms. Researchers think this strange
- The Incredible Journey of the JWST
- From humble beginnings in a Utah beryllium mine to the most advanced laboratories in the world, the mirrors of NASAs next great observatory are taking an incredible journey to space.
- Biggest Full Moon of the Year
- This Fridays full Moon is the biggest full Moon of the year. It is a perigee Moon as much as 14% bigger and 30% brighter than lesser full Moons weve seen earlier in 2008.
