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Posted April 11, 2013:
- 'Strikingly Similar' Brains of Human and Fly May Aid Mental Health Research
- How Au. Sediba Walked, Chewed and Moved
- How Human Ancestor Walked, Chewed, and Moved
- Self-Medication in Animals Much More Widespread Than Believed
- Walk This Way: New Research Suggests Human Ancestors May Have Used Different Forms of Bipedalism During the Plio-Pleistocene
- Tiny Wireless Device Shines Light on Mouse Brain, Generating Reward
- Reaction Rates of Second Key Atmospheric Component Measured
- Healing by the Clock: In Fruit Flies, Intestinal Stem-Cell Regeneration Fluctuates With the Time of Day
- How Some Leaves Got Fat: It's the Veins
- Genetic Master Controls Expose Cancers' Achilles' Heel
- Chickens With Bigger Gizzards Are More Efficient
- Lady Flies Can Decide Who Will Father Their Young
- Molecular 'Superglue' Based on Flesh-Eating Bacteria
- Archaeologists Shine New Light on Easter Island Statue
- The Rosette Agent: Monitoring a New Threat in Britain's Rivers
- Pollution: Learning the Limits for Marine Species
Posted April 10, 2013:
- Early Warning Signs of Population Collapse
- Scientists Use Nature Against Nature to Develop an Antibiotic With Reduced Resistance
- Goosefish Capture Small Puffins Over Deep Water of Northwest Atlantic
- Scientists Use Islands to Gauge Rainfall's Effect on Landscapes
- Biofilm Helps Salmonella Survive Hostile Conditions
- 'Sustainable Fishing' Certification Too Lenient and Discretionary
- Metabolic Fingerprinting: Using Proteomics to Identify Proteins in Gymnosperm Pollination Drops
- Great White Sharks Scavenging on Dead Whales
- Eating Solid Food Early Sets Marmosets on Path to Obesity
- Research Enables Fishermen to Harvest Lucrative Shellfish on Georges Bank
- War on Bugs: New Research Could Lead to Better Bed Bug Control
- Young Children Have Grammar and Chimpanzees Don't
- Transparent Brain Using Hydrogel Process
- World's Oldest Dinosaur Embryo Bonebed Yields Organic Remains
- Pottery Reveals Ice Age Hunter-Gatherers’ Taste for Fish
- Clinging to Crevices, E. Coli Thrive
- Genome Mapping of Koalas Is Promising Start for Understanding How Koalas Respond to Infectious Diseases
- Chimpanzees Use Botanical Skills to Discover Fruit
- Limiting Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Land Use in Europe
- Ocean Nutrients a Key Component of Future Change, Say Scientists
- Protected Wildlife Areas Are 'Welcome Mats' for UK's Bird Newcomers
- Unusual Anal Fin Offers New Insight Into Evolution
- Snowflakes Falling on Cameras: What Snow Looks Like in Midair
Posted April 9, 2013:
- Moa's Ark: Why the Female Giant Moa Was About Twice the Size of the Male
- Bean Leaves Can Trap Bedbugs, Researchers Find
- Genetics of Life and Death in an Evolutionary Arms-Race
- Surf's Up: Turbulence Tells Sea Urchins to Settle Down
- Measuring Microbes Makes Wetland Health Monitoring More Affordable, Says Researcher
- System Provides Clear Brain Scans of Awake, Unrestrained Mice
- Scientists Seek Sea Urchin's Secret to Surviving Ocean Acidification
- Urban Grass Might Be Greener, but That Doesn't Mean It's 'Greener'
- Research Holds Revelations About an Ancient Society's Water Conservation, Purification
- Striped Like a Badger: New Genus of Bat Identified in South Sudan
- New Chart Shows the Entire Topography of the Antarctic Seafloor in Detail for the First Time
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