Sunday, September 30, 2007

Storm Melissa weakened , Meteorite hit Peru, Big Radio From the Stars

nature.com

Alien birds may be last hope for Hawaiian plants

Invasive birds are now the main reason that some native forests thrive.
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Bacteria may be wiring up the soil

Microbes charge debate over nano networks.
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California universities maintain tobacco habit


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Chemists poke holes in ozone theory

Reaction data of crucial chloride compounds called into question.
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Copycat consolidation

As more blockbuster drugs come off patent, generic drugmakers face a changing landscape. Meredith Wadman looks at their strategies for survival.
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Correction


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Do flu vaccines work for the elderly?

Review suggests study is needed on influenza jabs and how they are used.
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Dropping a line from space

Tether offers down-to-Earth approach to payload delivery.
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Enter the dragon

Once a poor village, Shenzhen is now one of the wealthiest cities in China. David Cyranoski learns its plans for the future.
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Europe plots course for funding navigation system

Money raised to salvage Galileo.
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FDA poised for broader powers over drugs on sale


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Genome abuse

Citizens are right to resist government pressure to expand population DNA databases.
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HIV vaccine failure prompts Merck to halt trial


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Kelp forests widespread in tropical waters

Cold-loving seaweed not limited to chilly waters after all.
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Mammoth hair offers new style of research

Study reveals valuable store of ancient DNA in museum samples.
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Meteorite proves to be a hit in Peru


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Mixing the oceans proposed to reduce global warming

Could nutrients from the deep help remove carbon dioxide from the air?
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Passing the test

What role should the federal government have in pre-college science education? David Goldston looks at why the US Congress is acting now to help define that.
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Pressure for environmental disclosure increases

Companies urged to measure their carbon costs.
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Prospects


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Prospects power up for nuclear energy


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Sidelines


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South African scheme lures in top talent

Government adds 51 research chairs to its universities.
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Space experiments should be done on the cheap

We rarely learn anything Earth-shaking from space labs, says Philip Ball - which is why inexpensive missions like Foton-M3 are the way to go.
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Spaceflight boosts bacterial deadliness

Microgravity increases virulence of Salmonella in space.
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Stone tool reveals lengthy Polynesian voyage

Adzes form the first hard evidence of two-way travel between Hawaii and Tahiti.
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The long and winding road

German scientists must persevere in the stem-cell debate, despite the occasional setback.
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The theatre: Bringing the past to life

Can a stage spectacular based on a TV documentary bring science to life and please the punters too? Brendan Maher joins a palaeontologist to watch the dinosaurs walk.
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Tiny RNAs, big problems

Spread of breast cancer to other body parts is linked to microRNA.
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Toxic alert

A method of knocking out genes in mice needs more discrimination than many have recognized.
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UN climate talks

Some 80 heads of state gathered in New York City on Monday to discuss climate change. News@nature.com checks on their progress.
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New York Times

Ethanol?s Boom Stalling as Glut Depresses Price

An oversupply of ethanol is suddenly plaguing farmers, in part because distribution of the fuel has not kept pace with new distilleries.
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Re-engineering Engineering

In an era when software matters more than steel, Olin College wants to produce technologists with soul.
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sciencedaily.com

Autism Symptoms Can Improve Into Adulthood, Study Shows

Hallmarks of autism are characteristic behaviors -- repetitive motions, problems interacting with others, impaired communication abilities -- that occur in widely different combinations and degrees of severity among those who have the condition. A new study shows that symptoms can improve with age.
[see more details in sciencedaily.com]

Children Of Lesbian Couples Are Doing Well, Study Finds

A study of families in the Netherlands indicates that children raised by lesbian couples "do not differ in well being or child adjustment compared with their counterparts in heterosexual-parent families." Among the most interesting findings, lesbian biological mothers were significantly more satisfied with their partners as a co-parent than were heterosexual mothers.
[see more details in sciencedaily.com]

Climate Change May Increase Heat-related Deaths By 2050s, Says Study

Overall increases in heat-related premature mortality are likely by the 2050s, according to a recent study. In metropolitan New York, researchers estimate a 47 percent to 95 percent increase in summer heat-related deaths when compared to the 1990s.
[see more details in sciencedaily.com]

Engineered Eggshells To Help Make Hydrogen Fuel

Engineers have found a way to turn discarded chicken eggshells into an alternative energy resource. The patented process uses eggshells to soak up carbon dioxide from a reaction that produces hydrogen fuel. It also includes a unique method for peeling the collagen-containing membrane from the inside of the shells, so that the collagen can be used commercially.
[see more details in sciencedaily.com]

Experimental Drug Boosts Survival In Recurrent Ovarian Cancer

An experimental drug has shown promise in extending the survival period for women with recurrent ovarian cancer whose treatment options have dwindled. Early testing data showed that pertuzumab added weeks to the lives of Stage 3 ovarian cancer patients whose disease had returned after treatment with existing chemotherapy.
[see more details in sciencedaily.com]

FDA Targets Companies Marketing Cough Supressants With Often-abused Hydrocodone

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has announced its intention to take enforcement action against companies marketing unapproved prescription drug products containing hydrocodone, a narcotic widely used to treat pain and suppress coughs. The action does not affect other hydrocodone formulations, which have FDA approval. Hydrocodone is one of the strongest medications available to treat pain or to suppress cough. The drug has also been an extremely popular drug of abuse and can lead to serious illness, injury, or death, if improperly used. Hydrocodone overdose can result in breathing problems or cardiac arrest, and its use may impair motor skills and judgment.
[see more details in sciencedaily.com]

Fish Diet Linked To Evolution, Ten Million Year Old Chipped Teeth Show

Chips from 10 million years ago have revealed new insights into fish diets and their influence on fish evolution, according to a new article in Science. The chips were found, along with scratches, on the teeth of fossil stickleback fish and reveal for the first time how changes in the way an animal feeds control its evolution over thousands of years. This kind of study has previously not been possible because although fossils preserve direct evidence of evolutionary change over thousands and millions of years, working out exactly what a long-dead fossil animal was eating when it was alive, and establishing a link between feeding and evolution, is very difficult.
[see more details in sciencedaily.com]

One Of The Mechanisms That Prevents Spread Of Colon Cancer Discovered

The first step in the development of colon cancer is the formation of benign tumors, called adenomas, in the intestine. Over time, these tumors may progress to produce colon cancer if they undergo a series of mutations and genetic alterations. Researchers have discovered a new mechanism by which the benign tumor cells receive instructions to grow in confined compartments, and no to invade other areas of the tissue.
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Program Provides Blueprint For Recruiting Minorities To Science And Engineering

Strategies for recruiting under-represented minority students to science and engineering fields and supporting their successful completion of science degrees have been documented.
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Scientists Call For 80 Percent Drop In U.S. Emissions By 2050 To Avoid Dangerous Warming

By 2050, the United States must cut its emissions by at least 80 percent below those created in the year 2000 if the world is to avoid potentially dangerous impacts of human-induced climate change, according to a new report. To avoid the most severe effects of climate change, the world must stabilize the concentration of heat trapping gases in the atmosphere at no more than 450 parts per million, according to researchers.
[see more details in sciencedaily.com]

Tiny Animals Exposed To Outer Space

For the first time ever, animals are being exposed to the natural space environment, with both vacuum conditions and cosmic radiation. One of the aims of sending the tiny tardigrades into space is to find out whether they can cope with the rugged conditions in space, which has previously been predicted but never tested.
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sciencemag.org

[NEWS] ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY: Tougher Ozone Accord Also Addresses Global Warming

Negotiators meeting last week to strengthen the Montreal Protocol made significant progress in combating global warming by recognizing the fact that most of the ozone-depleting chemicals affected by the treaty are also potent greenhouse gases and that restricting them pays double dividends.

Author: Eli Kintisch
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[NEWS FOCUS] BIOSAFETY BREACHES: Accidents Spur a Closer Look at Risks at Biodefense Labs

Failure to report a Brucella infection and other problems at a Texas university have microbiologists searching for ways to ensure safety and public trust.

Author: Jocelyn Kaiser
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[NEWS FOCUS] COSMOLOGY: A Singular Conundrum: How Odd Is Our Universe?

Subtleties in the big bang afterglow could hint that the universe is arranged around an "axis of evil." Or they may be the products of random chance. With only one universe to study, researchers may be hard pressed to say one way or the other.

Author: Adrian Cho
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[NEWS FOCUS] ECOLOGY: Setting the Forest Alight

KODINSK, RUSSIA--To validate satellite data for carbon-emissions modeling, researchers this summer torched a jack-pine forest in Canada and tried to ignite a stand of larch in Siberia.

Author: Paul Webster
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[NEWS FOCUS] EDUCATION RESEARCH: U.S. Says No to Next Global Test of Advanced Math, Science Students

After U.S. high school students did poorly on the Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study in 1995, the government has decided not to participate in another version to be given next year.

Author: Jeffrey Mervis
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[NEWS] NEUROSCIENCE: Uncovering the Magic in Magnetic Brain Stimulation

A detailed look at the effects of transcranial magnetic stimulation, reported on page of this issue of Science, shows that TMS can boost or dampen the firing of neurons depending on ongoing brain activity.

Author: Greg Miller
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sciencenow

A Not-So-Innovative Office of Innovation

The Commerce Department launches a miniversion of the much-reviled Technology Administration
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Big Radio From the Stars

A gigantic but fleeting one-time radio source blares from deep space
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FDA Oversight of Trials Found Lacking

Report blames agency for not adequately protecting patients
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In the Deep, a Tropical Surprise

Kelp forests may exist throughout the tropics, new study finds
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Once More Into the Fray

Meerkats sprint toward danger and learn in the process
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Satellite Images Reveal Burmese Atrocities

Pictures of burned villages and military camps conflict with government accounts
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Small Molecules, Big Problem

Minute RNAs unleash breast cancer cells
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Solving the Antidepressant Paradox

Variations in two genes help explain why people who take the drugs become more suicidal
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Space Germs Could Yield Earthly Cures

Taking bacteria on a shuttle ride reveals some of their best-kept secrets
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yahoo news

3 quakes strike in Pacific Ocean (AP)

AP - Three strong earthquakes struck Sunday near New Zealand and the U.S. territory of Guam in remote parts of the Pacific Ocean, monitoring agencies said.
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Asia could win next 'Space Race', US scientists fear (AFP)

AFP - Fifty years after the launch of Sputnik left the United States scrambling to play catch-up in the first Space Race, US scientists fear history may be repeating itself as Asia emerges as the rising force in space exploration.



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Magnitude 7.4 quake hits near New Zealand (Reuters)

Reuters - A strong earthquake with a magnitude of 7.4 hit some 500 km (300 miles) southwest of New Zealand on Sunday, but there were no reports of damage and authorities discounted the risk of a major tsunami.
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Melissa weakens in Atlantic (AP)

AP - Tropical Storm Melissa weakened into a depression Sunday, while the remnants of Tropical Storm Karen limped along in the eastern Atlantic, forecasters said.



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Stormy Midwest, Northwest (weather.com)

weather.com -
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Western storms, eastern warmth (weather.com)

weather.com -
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