Midtown Blogger/Manhattan Valley Follies

Putting my experiences of Life In NYC in a more personal perspective, and checking in with international/national, tech and some other news

Sunday, January 25, 2015

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      22 Jan 2015 Vol. 347 #6220 

      • Comet close-up reveals a world of surprisesDiverse landscape of 67P suggests an unexpectedly complicated origin. 
      • Surveys reveal state of Afghan populationFrom fertility to mortality, new data will help guide aid efforts. 
      • Japan's nuclear renaissance dogged by waste challengeNuclear reprocessing is years late; repository is in limbo. 
      • Malaria may accelerate aging in birdsInfection erodes telomeres and life spans—hinting that there are no benign parasites. 
      • Probing the protonA newly upgraded accelerator explores the seething maelstrom at the heart of matter. 
      • Using science to fight animal researchAnimal rights activist Justin Goodman is using science's own tools to combat animal research. 
      MORE FROM THIS ISSUE
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23 JAN 2015LATEST NEWS

Top stories: Rosetta’s comet results, a new drug that stops cancer spreading, and the Doomsday Clock

This week’s top science news
23 JAN 2015SCIENCESHOTS

Misfit marmots save the day

Least popular marmots are the first to call out predators
23 JAN 2015LATEST NEWS

Rosetta reveals a world of surprises on comet 67P

Diverse landscape of 67P suggests an unexpectedly complicated origin
23 JAN 2015SCIENCESHOTS

Wavy facial hair helps seals find food

Harbor seal’s undulating whiskers act as sensor array for detecting fish
22 JAN 2015LATEST NEWS

Nanoparticle drug stops cancer’s spread in mice

Drug targeted to cancer cells stops them from making molecules they need to metastasize
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LATEST NEWS

  • 23 Jan 2015 Climate

    Tonal languages arose in humid climates

  • 23 Jan 2015 Scientific Community

    Top stories: Rosetta’s comet results, a new drug that stops cancer spreading, and the Doomsday Clock

  • 23 Jan 2015 Brain & Behavior

    Misfit marmots save the day

  • 23 Jan 2015 Scientific Community

    Podcast: Sewage alchemy, x-raying ancient scrolls, and more

  • 23 Jan 2015 Plants & Animals

    Wavy facial hair helps seals find food

  • 23 Jan 2015 Funding

    Cut hardware to save ocean science, says National Academies panel

  • 23 Jan 2015

    Rosetta reveals a world of surprises on comet 67P

  • 22 Jan 2015 Climate

    Boston belching gigantic gobs of greenhouse gas

  • 22 Jan 2015 People & Events

    Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists moves Doomsday Clock 2 minutes closer to midnight

  • 22 Jan 2015 Europe

    University of Oxford named United Kingdom's global health front-runner

  • 22 Jan 2015 People & Events

    New York corruption case puts spotlight on cancer researcher

MORE LATEST NEWS

SCIENCE SHOTS

Tonal languages arose in humid climates

Misfit marmots save the day

Wavy facial hair helps seals find food

Video: Jellyfish go against the flow

Video: How to escape a hawk attack

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MORE SCIENCESHOTS

SIFTER

Our favorite stories from around the web
  • Scientists unscramble egg proteins

  • Mysterious teeth are not quite modern, not quite Neandertal

  • Rats poisoned, Galápagos tortoises rebound

  • Squid flicker and flash to hide and communicate

  • New drug keeps irradiated mice alive

MORE FROM SIFTER

FROM THE MAGAZINE

2015-01-22 09:56 Vol. 347 #6 220
  • Feature

    Using science to fight animal research

  • In Depth

    Comet close-up reveals a world of surprises

  • In Depth

    Surveys reveal state of Afghan population

  • In Depth

    Japan's nuclear renaissance dogged by waste challenge

  • In Depth

    Malaria may accelerate aging in birds

  • Feature

    Probing the proton

MORE FROM THE MAGAZINE

POPULAR

  • Trending
  •  
  • Most Commented
  • By 98 to 1, U.S. Senate passes amendment saying climate change is real, not a hoax
  • Ten new Rosetta images that reveal comet 67P in all its glory
  • Texas Hold ’em poker solved by computer 
  • Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists moves Doomsday Clock 2 minutes closer to midnight
  • Nanoparticle drug stops cancer’s spread in mice
rosetta 2014

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SCIENCEINSIDER

Breaking news and analysis from the world of science policy
  • Cut hardware to save ocean science, says National Academies panel

  • Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists moves Doomsday Clock 2 minutes closer to midnight

  • University of Oxford named United Kingdom's global health front-runner

  • New York corruption case puts spotlight on cancer researcher

  • Wrap-up: U.S. Senate agrees climate change is real—but not necessarily that humans are causing it

MORE FROM SCIENCEINSIDER

VIDEOS

Squid flicker and flash to hide and communicate

Video: Jellyfish go against the flow

Video: How to escape a hawk attack

Watch: Water bounces like rubber off superhydrophobic metal

Watch: Slow-mo video shows how rain gets its smell

Video: Gelatinous sac gives deep-sea fish a swimmer’s body

Too small to catch prey, larval fish starve

Video: A chainsaw spiked with shark teeth

Previous Video
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CATEGORIES

  • Archaeology

    • How human ancestors got a grip
    • Physicists read scrolls scorched by ancient volcano
    • Throwing a lifeline to a one-time Arab science power
  • Biology

    • Nanoparticle drug stops cancer’s spread in mice
    • Video: Jellyfish go against the flow
    • Malaria may accelerate aging in birds
  • Brain & Behavior

    • Misfit marmots save the day
    • Eight genes that make us brainiacs
    • Cougars living near humans kill more deer
  • Climate

    • Tonal languages arose in humid climates
    • Boston belching gigantic gobs of greenhouse gas
    • Wrap-up: U.S. Senate agrees climate change is real—but not necessarily that humans are causing it
  • Earth

    • Are earthquakes also earth burps?
    • Magnetic beacons shepherd sea turtles home
    • Salvaging science
  • Education

    • Belief that some fields require 'brilliance' may keep women out
    • Outlier, outlaw, outcast: The improbable scientific career of Tamer Elsayed
    • Congress keeps NASA education programs aloft
  • Environment

    • Tonal languages arose in humid climates
    • Boston belching gigantic gobs of greenhouse gas
    • Are earthquakes also earth burps?
  • Evolution

    • How human ancestors got a grip
    • Malaria may accelerate aging in birds
    • Holy barnacle! Lobsters and cockroaches are cousins
  • Health

    • University of Oxford named United Kingdom's global health front-runner
    • Nanoparticle drug stops cancer’s spread in mice
    • Malaria may accelerate aging in birds
  • Paleontology

    • How human ancestors got a grip
    • First scorpions may have crawled from the seas
    • Ancient fossil may rewrite fish family tree
  • People & Events

    • Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists moves Doomsday Clock 2 minutes closer to midnight
    • New York corruption case puts spotlight on cancer researcher
    • Using science to fight animal research
  • Physics

    • Japan's nuclear renaissance dogged by waste challenge
    • Probing the proton
    • Comet close-up reveals a world of surprises
  • Plants & Animals

    • Misfit marmots save the day
    • Wavy facial hair helps seals find food
    • Slideshow: PETA’s crusade against animal research
  • Space

    • Ten new Rosetta images that reveal comet 67P in all its glory
    • Comet close-up reveals a world of surprises
    • New exoplanet hunter opens its eyes to search for super-Earths
  • Technology

    • Japan's nuclear renaissance dogged by waste challenge
    • 'Genetic firewall' holds engineered microbes captive
    • Temporary tattoo measures blood glucose levels
MORE CATEGORIES
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Lawrence Kreger at 9:02 PM

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