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Science, Medicine and Technology

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Daily Mail

One of the golden rules of the natural world – birds live in trees, fish live in water. The trouble is, no one bothered to tell the mangrove killifish. Scientists have discovered it spends several months of every year out of the water living inside

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Honolulu Advertiser

The University of Hawaii has imported several potential bioterrorism agents, including three encephalitis-causing viruses. These include Japanese B, Eastern equine and Venezuelan equine encephalitis, according to state records recently released

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Deputy Dog (images)

Looking at photos like these scares and fascinates me in equal doses. The sheer scale of these holes reminds you of just how tiny you are.

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splodetv.com

On this episode of Brainiacs they test mixing different alkali metals with water. "These next two are the dogs nuts of the periodic table" is the quote of the week, crazy brits. :)

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freeenergytracker.blogspot.com

Steorn's perpetual motion claims are extraordinary. They've raised millions from investors, and 2007 is the year that this will all change the world or Steorn will fall apart. Which will it be? Find out here first.

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LiveScience

The same sweet-detecting proteins in your tongue also reside in the gut where they can likewise "taste" sugars. "Cells of the gut taste glucose through the same mechanisms used by taste cells of the tongue," said

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LiveScience

A new concept for a time machine could possibly enable distant future generations to travel into the past, research now suggests. Unlike past ideas for time machines, this new concept does not require exotic, theoretical forms of matter. Still, th

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LiveScience

The genetic potential to create fingers and toes apparently existed ages before animals even crawled onto land, dating back to the distant common ancestors of sharks and humans, research now reveals.

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AFP

Physicists can create "incredible levitation effects" by manipulating so-called Casimir force, which normally causes objects to stick together by quantum force. The phenomenon could be used to improve the performances of everyday devices ra

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AP

Why did humans evolve to walk upright? Perhaps because it's just plain easier. Make that "energetically less costly," in science-speak, and you have the conclusion of researchers who are proposing a likely reason for our modern gait.

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Utne Reader

Science in the US is in trouble. "The numbers indicate that the American scientist population is not healthy," writes Marc Zimmer for Inside Higher Ed, "especially not in comparison to scientists in other countries." Only 13 per

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World Science

Biologists report that they have found a mutation implicated in at least four types of cancer. The finding may add a key piece of information to medicine's arsenal of cancer-fighting strategies, the researchers say. Like many others involved in

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LiveScience

Researchers at Harvard and McGill University (in Montreal) are working on an amnesia drug that blocks or deletes bad memories. The technique seems to allow psychiatrists to disrupt the biochemical pathways that allow a memory to be recalled.

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Science Daily

US medical researchers have developed a new method of screening for drug-resistant forms of the human immunodeficiency virus. An increasing number of drug-resistant strains of HIV are threatening the effectiveness of current treatments and existing

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AFP

In a breakthrough that could potentially lead to a cure for HIV infection, scientist have discoverd a way to remove the virus from infected cells, a study released Thursday said. The scientists engineered an enzyme which attacks the DNA of the HIV v

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LiveScience.com

Cheap, skinny aluminum foil lamps may soon illuminate our lives instead of big, bulky light bulbs. Researchers at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign made the low-cost lamps by treating aluminum foil bought at the grocery store with an

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Canadian Press

Doctors at Vancouver's St. Paul's Hospital came across something highly illogical when they tried to put an arterial line into a patient about to undergo surgery: his blood was dark green.

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LiveScience.com

Like dogs, sharks rely on a keen sense of smell to track down food. But new research shows noses aren’t the only way that sharks detect smells: Their entire bodies, in fact, function as giant noses capable of even picking up the “shape” of a smell.

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