iconNational Geographic

Superdirt Made Lost Amazon Cities Possible?
Long seen as myth, an ancient Amazon civilization may have been fueled by a man-made soil. Scientists are racing to recreate the recipe, which they say might fight hunger and global warming.
Earliest Swimming Turtle Fossils Found -- New Species
Newly discovered fossils of the oldest known swimming turtles show the reptiles first took to water some 165 million years ago, researchers say.
Beetle Invasion to Dim New England Fall Colors?
A tree-devouring Asian beetle is encroaching on New Englands forests, beloved for their brilliant autumn colors and maple syrup, experts say.
VIDEO: Spacewalker Loses Tool Bag
A NASA astronaut accidentally lost a tool bag during a spacewalk Tuesday when a grease gun exploded. The kit is one of the largest items ever lost by a spacewalker.
VIDEO: Stem Cell Transplant a Success
Doctors in Spain successfully transplanted a windpipe into a woman using tissue grown from her own stem cells.
Mammoth Genome Decoded -- Clones on the Way?
The first genetic blueprint from an extinct animal could reveal what separates the fuzzy giants from elephants—and may open the door to a resurrection.
New Finds at King Herod's Tomb: 2,000-Year-Old Frescoes
Archaeologists exploring King Herods tomb complex near Jerusalem have uncovered rare Roman paintings and two stone coffins that could have contained the remains of Herods sons.
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iconUniverse Today

Cosmic Rays from Mysterious Source Bombarding Earth
Scientists have discovered an unidentified source of high-energy cosmic rays bombarding Earth from space. They say it must be close to the solar system and it could be made of dark matter. "This is a big discovery," says John Wefel
Where In The Universe #30
It's time once again for the Where In The Universe Challenge. Hard to believe we've done thirty of these already, and our readers are getting really good at this. The goal of the WITU challenge is to test your skills
Lost in Space: Tool Bag Overboard, Spider Missing
A tool bag floated away in space as spacewalking astronauts worked outside the International Space Station Tuesday. Heide Stefanyshyn-Piper had a grease gun explode inside her tool bag, getting the dark gray goop all over a camera, the inside of
Comments for 2012: No Planet X
Because of the huge number of comments on this article, it was slowing down the server. I've created a separate thread here where people can continue their discussions on the story.© Fraser for Universe Today, 2008. |Permalink |259 comments |Add
NASA and Google Successfully Test Deep Space Internet
Communication with spacecraft is vital for NASA, and since the World Wide Web has enabled easy, reliable and quick contact for people around the world, the space agency decided to model a new deep space communication system on the internet.
New Telescope on the Lookout for Near Earth Asteroids, Comets
A prototype telescope with an enhanced ability to find moving objects will soon be operational, and its mission will be to detect asteroids and comets that could someday pose a threat to Earth. The system is called Pan-STARRS (for Panoramic
Black Holes Supply Lifeblood for Galaxies
Obviously, today is the day for news on black holes. While one group of astronomers studied the violent flares of energy sent out by black holes in the near infrared and submillimeter wavelengths, another group used the Chandra X-Ray Observatory
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iconThe New York Times

Observatory: Invasive Plants in Galápagos May Really Be Native
Some plants that were thought to be invasive species in the Galapagos Islands predate humans by thousands of years.
National Briefing | Space and Technology: Tool Bag Is Lost During Spacewalk
Astronauts ventured outside the International Space Station to do repair work, but lost a bag of tools they had taken along.
Regenerating a Mammoth, for $10 Million
A new report suggests that a living mammoth could perhaps be regenerated from DNA extracted from clumps of the animal’s hair.
Dr. Adrian Kantrowitz, Cardiac Pioneer, Dies at 90
Dr. Kantrowitz performed the first human heart transplant in the United States and pioneered the development of devices to prolong the life of patients with heart failure.
The Dead Tell a Tale China Doesn’t Care to Listen To
The Tarim mummies have become protagonists in a political dispute over who should control the Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region.
National Briefing | Science and Health: Study Into Cancer Drug and Clot Risk
The cancer drug Avastin raises the risk of blood clots in the veins by a third when added to chemotherapy, researchers said.
Congo Violence Reaches Endangered Mountain Gorillas
With the recent violence in eastern Congo, there are no trained rangers now to protect the mountain gorillas in the region.
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iconScientific American

Microsoft changes direction, will offer free security software
Microsoft is changing its tune on computer security, two years after its much-heralded foray into the security space turned out to be less than spectacular. Instead of charging customers $50 per year for its Windows Live OneCare subscription security service,
A Cut above: Ultrapowerful Laser Offers Greater Precision Sans Heat Damage
Most lasers rely on continuous waves of energy to generate heat that allows doctors to make cuts during surgery, computers to burn information onto CDs and DVDs, and scanners to read bar codes. But a newer type of laser promises
Red (Planet) Alert: Massive Subsurface Glaciers Discovered on Mars
The more we learn about Mars, it seems, the icier the Red Planet appears to be. The recently departed Phoenix lander dug up water ice and even spotted falling snow from its position in the northern polar plains. And now
As Somali pirates step up attacks, shippers consider technology options for defense
Piracy on the high seas is making a comeback this year, particularly off the coast of the African nation Somalia, where raiders are using increasingly more powerful and sophisticated technologies to attack ships and hold their crew and cargo for
Farmed fish can be organic, too, ag advisors say
What exactly makes a fish organic? Apparently, one that feeds on a non-organic diet.
Candid criminal: undercover psychologists find bad behavior may be contagious
Attention, shoppers: If the cart you selected has a handle greased with Vaseline, you may be an unwitting participant in an undercover experiment.
Wine Made from Tiger Bones
 
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iconSpace.com

Astronaut Plumbers Get to Work on Space Station
Astronaut plumbers will hook up the space stations water recycling system today.
Star Trek's Deflector Shield Envisioned for Mars Mission
A new study found that a portable magnetic shield could be the key to protecting spacefarers during long-duration missions.
Astronaut Laments Lost Spacewalk Tool Bag
Spacewalkers lost a tool bag while working to clean and grease a space station gear.
Cosmic Rays Might Come from Dark Matter
A puzzling surplus of high-energy electrons is bombarding Earth from space.
NASA Shifts Gears: Next Mars Rover to Leave Some Equipment Behind
Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) will leave a $2 million experiment behind.
China Denies Trying to Obtain U.S. Space Technology
China on Tuesday dismissed suggestions that it is seeking to illegally obtain U.S. space technology.
NASA Tests Interplanetary Internet
NASA engineers use deep space network similar to Internet to transmit data.
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iconScienceDaily

Concealed Glaciers Discovered On Mars At Mid-latitudes
Vast Martian glaciers of water ice under protective blankets of rocky debris persist today at much lower latitudes than any ice previously identified on Mars, says new research using ground-penetrating radar on NASAs Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. The discovery is an
Brain Reorganizes To Adjust For Loss Of Vision
A new study shows that when patients with macular degeneration focus on using another part of their retina to compensate for their loss of central vision, their brain seems to compensate by reorganizing its neural connections. Age--related macular degeneration is
'4-D' Microscope Revolutionizes The Way We Look At Nano World
More than a century ago, the development of the earliest motion picture technology made what had been previously thought magical a reality: capturing and recreating the movement and dynamism of the world around us. A breakthrough technology based on new
Misreading Of Damaged DNA May Spur Tumor Formation
Cells can turn on tumor-promoting growth circuits by falsely reporting critical genetic information during the process of transcription: making RNA from DNA. Damage to the DNA making up a gene can lead to a misreading of the gene as it
Pure Insulin-producing Cells Produced In Mice
Researchers have developed an unlimited number of pure insulin-producing cells from mouse embryonic stem cells.
Researchers Make New Electronics -- With A Twist
Scientists have made electronics that can bend. Theyve made electronics that can stretch. And now, theyve reached the ultimate goal -- electronics that can be subjected to any complex deformation, including twisting. Researchers have improved their so-called pop-up technology to
Discovery Of Giant Roaming Deep Sea Protist Provides New Perspective On Animal Evolution
Groove-like tracks on the ocean floor made by giant deep-sea single-celled organisms could lead to new insights into the evolutionary origin of animals, according to biologists.
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iconNew Scientist

Vast stores of water ice surround Martian equator
Underground glaciers around the planets midsection contain the largest deposits of ice outside the polar regions
It's confirmed: Matter is merely vacuum fluctuations
The apparently solid stuff is no more than fluctuations in the quantum vacuum, fiendishly complex calculations confirm
Dictators lay down the law in baboon troupes
Junior baboons follow their leaders blindly, even though they are often denied food as a result
Light opens up a world of sound for the deaf
Infrared light can stimulate neurons in the inner ear as precisely as sound waves, a discovery that could lead to better cochlear implants
Planes, trains or automobiles? Climate villains revealed
A study that takes into account the different nature of all transportation emissions, says cars and trucks have the biggest warming effect on the planet
Gallery: Ape artists raise funds for conservation
See colourful works of art painted by bonobos and orangutans for an exhibition called aiming to raise money to preserve wild apes
Gallery: Apes paint to save their fellows
See colourful works of art painted by bonobos and orangutans for an exhibition called aiming to raise money for great ape conservation
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iconBBC

Richard Black
Fishing suspension for seas most valuable fish
Soviet shuttle
Why did the USSR build a copy of the space shuttle?
Sparrow decline
How do you make a garden friendly to sparrows?
Home from home
International Space Station marks its tenth anniversary
Slow progress on ocean protection
Two year after pledging to protect 10% of the oceans, governments have protected less than 1%, a survey finds.
Bush 'seeks to ease wildlife law'
US environmentalists accuse President Bush of trying to rush through changes to the Endangered Species Act.
Sparrow numbers 'plummet by 68%'
The loss of green spaces in Britain has caused the number of house sparrows to drop sharply in the past 30 years.
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iconCNN

Endeavour docks with space station
Space shuttle Endeavour docked Sunday with the international space station, where the shuttle crew will help install more living space.
India probe crash-lands on moon
A TV-sized probe adorned with a painted Indian flag is set to crash on the moon Friday as part of New Delhis first unmanned lunar mission, Indian space officials said.
Astronomers capture images of new planets
The first-ever pictures of planets outside our solar system were released today in two studies.
Phoenix Lander silent, Mars mission over
A dust storm and the onset of Martian winter have brought the Phoenix Mars Landers mission to an end, NASA announced Monday.
Mission to fix Hubble Telescope postponed
NASAs plans to fly a fifth and final space shuttle mission to service the Hubble Space Telescope have suffered another set-back.
Endeavour set for November launch
Read full story for latest details.
Mars winter may end Phoenix's mission
The Phoenix Mars Lander has entered a state of suspended operation called safe mode due to low power, mission managers said Thursday. And while they hope to recharge batteries and reactivate the spacecraft in the coming days, they say the
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iconDiscovery

Space Station at 10: Much Teamwork, Less Science
A look at what value the International Space Station has offered after 10 years.
Vast Frozen Water Reserves Found on Mars
Underground reservoirs of frozen water on Mars suggest the planet could sustain life.
Single-Celled Giant Upends Early Evolution
The tracks of a single-celled organism forces scientists to rethink early evolution.
Copernicus' Tomb Found After 200-Year Hunt
DNA studies end a centuries-old hunt for the tomb of astronomer Nicolas Copernicus.
King Herod May Have Been Buried Amid Paintings
Archaeologists find lavish paintings in what may be King Herods mausoleum.
Astronauts Vow Only Tool Bag Won't Drift Away
After losing tools earlier this week, astronauts are being extra-cautious.
Did Asteroid Cause Ancient N.Y. Tsunami?
A giant asteroid may have triggered a tsunami that struck New York more than 2,000 years ago.
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iconScience/AAAS

Daschle Poised to Head HHS
Obama selects former senator to help guide health policy
Scientists Untangle Woolly Mammoth Genome
Data give clues to creatures evolution, hardiness
Obama Grabs the Reins
Transition teams begin reviews of science agencies
When a Flood Beats a Trickle
Old-fashioned irrigation saves water
Tumor Secrets Written in Blood
Cancer cells release telltale traces into bloodstream
Prehistoric Family Values
Archaeologists find what may be the oldest examples of a nuclear family
A Cure for AIDS? Not Quite
Case of man healed by stem cell transplant has many caveats
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iconUSATODAY

Could a politician's DNA be abused in a campaign?
Although only a handful of humans have had their entire genome sequenced so far, the price of doing so is dropping, and DNA is pretty easy to obtain, especially from someone say, a politician who shakes a lot of hands
Cold start to winter will warm, forecasters say
Weather forecasters are predicting a colder-than-normal start to winter in the eastern part of the United States.
Woolly mammoth task: Extinct critter's DNA mapped
Scientists for the first time have unraveled much of the genetic code of an extinct animal, the ice ages woolly mammoth, and with it they are thawing Jurassic Park dreams.
Archaeologists say they found witch doctor skeleton
Archaeologists believe a 12,000-year-old skeleton found in a grave containing 50 tortoise shells, a leopard pelvis, a cow tail and part of an eagle wing is the remains of a witch doctor.
Big hop forward: Scientists map kangaroo's DNA
Taking a big hop forward in marsupial research, scientists say they have unraveled the DNA of a small kangaroo named Matilda.
Scientists find new penguin, extinct for 500 years
Researchers studying a rare and endangered species of penguin have uncovered a previously unknown species that disappeared about 500 years ago.
Doctors transplant windpipe with stem cells
Doctors have given a woman a new windpipe with tissue grown from her own stem cells, eliminating the need for anti-rejection drugs.
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iconDigg Science

New project aims to unite science and Hollywood
Scientists may have less to cringe about when they go to the movies, if a new initiative designed to foster cooperation between scientists and the entertainment industry is successful.
Rational or Random? Model Shows How People Send E-Mail
Do people act rationally, responding to the most important emails first? Or do they send emails randomly, without any regard to efficiency? After studying emails sent and received from more than 3000 accounts during a 3 month period, a mathematical
5 Reasons to Be Hopeful About Global Warming
There isnt much time to act ... but were actually starting to take action.
Penguin Species Discovered Too Late
Researchers studying a rare and endangered species of penguin have uncovered a previously unknown species that disappeared about 500 years ago. The research suggests that the first humans in New Zealand hunted the newly found Waitaha penguin to extinction by
Battle of the lobbyists: Detroit vs. Iowa
Ethanol producers want to use a bailout of the auto industry to boost production of cars that can run on higher blends of the corn-based fuel. Detroit opposes these mandates. (As does the National Turkey Federation.)
£350,000 Iron Age neckband discovered by metal detector
For 40 years, Maurice Richardson has been braving all weathers to scour the countryside with his trusty metal detector, dreaming of buried treasure. But he almost ignored an unpromising-sounding beep as he searched for debris from a wartime air crash
Sun + Water = Fuel
Solar goes solo: Artificial photosynthesis could provide a practical way to store energy produced by solar power, freeing people’s homes from the electrical grid. In this scheme, electricity from solar panels powers an electrolyzer, which breaks water into hydrogen and
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iconScience News Online

Brain reorganizes to make room for math
Between childhood and adulthood, neural map of the brain rearranges to conceptualize arithmetic
Standard model gets right answer for proton, neutron masses
Correct calculation strengthens theory of quark-gluon interactions in nuclear particles
Strong calculations for mass of proton, neutron
Interactions of quarks and gluons are basis for calculations that bolster those predicted by standard model of particle physics
Water-ice deposits found beneath Martian hills
Apronlike reserves in mid-latitude regions largest outside Mars poles
Science & the Public: Don't Flush
Toilets are not where we should be disposing of unwanted medicines.
Science & the Public: Antidepressants Aren’t for Fish
Antidepressants can play potentially dangerous mind games with fish.
Treat HIV-positive babies from the start
Babies born infected with HIV should be treated as soon as possible, a large trial shows
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iconNASA

Discovered: Cosmic Rays from a Mysterious, Nearby Object
An international team of researchers has discovered a puzzling surplus of high-energy electrons bombarding Earth from space. The source of these cosmic rays is unknown, but it must be close to the solar system and it could be made of
Hubble Directly Observes a Planet Orbiting Another Star
NASAs Hubble Space Telescope has taken the first visible-light snapshot of a planet circling another star. The planet, called Fomalhaut b, orbits the bright southern star Fomalhaut, located 25 light-years from Earth.
NASA Begins Hunt for New Meteor Showers
NASA astronomers have set up a monitoring station to scan the night sky for unknown or unexpected meteor showers--and theyre finding more than they bargained for.
Solar Cycle Update: The Sun Shows Signs of Life
A surge of new-cycle sunspots in October may signal the beginning of the end of the ongoing solar minimum.
Magnetic Portals Connect Earth to the Sun
Researchers have discovered magnetic portals forming high above Earth that can briefly connect our planet to the Sun. Not only are the portals common, one space physicist contends they form twice as often as anyone had previously imagined.
Halloween Sky Show
The planets are gathering for spooky sunset sky show on Oct. 31st. Read todays story to find out where to look.
The Case of the Missing Gamma-ray Bursts
Gamma-ray bursts are by far the brightest and most powerful explosions in the Universe, second only to the Big Bang itself. So it might seem a bit surprising that a group of them has gone missing.

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