Thursday, June 20, 2013

Was Prehistoric Rock Art Strategically Placed to Reveal a Cosmological Puzzle?

Recently, the discoveries of prehistoric rock art have become more common. With these discoveries, according to one researcher, comes a single giant one -- all these drawing and ...  > full story
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Drug Shows Surprising Efficacy as Treatment for Chronic Leukemia, Mantle Cell Lymphoma

Clinical studies suggest that the novel, targeted agent ibrutinib shows real potential is a safe, effective, treatment for adults with chronic lymphocytic leukemia and for patients with mantle cell ...  > full story
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Current Global Food Production Trajectory Won't Meet 2050 Needs

Crop yields worldwide are not increasing quickly enough to support estimated global needs in 2050, according to a new study. ...  > full story
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Carbon Nanotube Harpoon Catches Individual Brain-Cell Signals

Neuroscientists may soon be modern-day harpooners, snaring individual brain-cell signals instead of whales with tiny spears made of carbon nanotubes. ...  > full story
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New Technology Reduces, Controls CT Radiation Exposure in Children: CT Scan Radiation Reduced by 37 Percent

Patients at certain hospitals are being exposed to significantly less radiation during CT scans because of new technology that allows doctors to more tightly control radiation doses. The ...  > full story
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Origins of 'The Hoff' Crab Revealed

The history of a new type of crab, nicknamed 'The Hoff' because of its hairy chest, which lives around hydrothermal vents deep beneath the Southern Ocean and Indian Ocean, has been revealed for the first time. ...  > full story
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A Shot in the Arm for Old Antibiotics

Slipping bacteria some silver could give old antibiotics new life, scientists report. This could pave the way for new therapies for drug-resistant and recurrent infections. ...  > full story
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How Neural Stem Cells Create New and Varied Neurons

A new study examining the brains of fruit flies reveals a novel stem cell mechanism that may help explain how neurons form in humans. ...  > full story
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Biological Fitness Trumps Other Traits in Mating Game

When a new species emerges following adaptive changes to its local environment, the process of choosing a mate can help protect the new species' genetic identity and increase the likelihood of its survival. But of the many observable traits in a potential ...  > full story
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Fate of the Heart: Researchers Track Cellular Events Leading to Cardiac Regeneration

Scientists have visually monitored the dynamic cellular events that take place when cardiac regeneration occurs in zebrafish after cardiac ventricular injury. Their findings provide evidence ...  > full story
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Dietary Fructose Causes Liver Damage in Animal Model

The role of dietary fructose in the development of obesity and fatty liver diseases remains controversial, with previous studies indicating that the problems resulted from fructose and a diet too high in calories. However, a new study conducted in ...  > full story
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Simple and Inexpensive Process to Make a Material for CO2 Adsorption

Researchers have developed a novel, simple method to synthesize hierarchically nanoporous frameworks of nanocrystalline metal oxides such as magnesia and ceria by the thermal conversion of well-designed metal-organic ...  > full story
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Top Technology News


New Microfluidic Chip Can Help Identify Unwanted Particles in Water and Food

Researchers have developed a new microfabrication technique to develop three-dimensional microfluidic devices in polymers. The devices can be used in the analysis of cells and could prove useful in counterterrorism measures and in water and food ...  > full story

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Health & Biomedical Sciences


Health & Medicine

Evolution of an Outbreak: Complications from Contaminated Steroid Injections

Magnetic resonance imaging at the site of injection of a contaminated lot of a steroid drug to treat symptoms such as back pain resulted in earlier identification of patients with probable or confirmed fungal spinal or paraspinal infection, allowing ...  > full story

Biological & Earth Sciences


Fossils & Ruins

When It Comes to Mammals, How Big Is Too Big?

Mammals vary enormously in size, from weighing less than a penny to measuring more than three school buses in length. Some groups of mammals have become very large, such as elephants and whales, while others have always been small, like primates. A ...  > full story

Physical & Applied Sciences


Space & Time

The Turbulent, High-Energy Sky Is Keeping NuSTAR Busy

NuSTAR has been busy studying the most energetic phenomena in the universe. Recently, a few high-energy events have sprung up, akin to "things that go bump in the night." When one telescope catches a sudden outpouring of high-energy light in the ...  > full story

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Thirsty Plants Text For Help

Interactive telecommunications researchers designed a soil-moisture sensor device that can allow a house plant to communicate with its owner. The. ...  > full story

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