Science News
Weird wonders lived past the Cambrian
By Nicola Jones
Some of the unusual animals that lived in the sea 500 million years ago thrived tens of millions of years later than previously known, a treasure trove of fossils in Morocco has revealed. [More]
Los Angeles to boycott Arizona over immigration law
U.S. airport security officers targeted in ID theft
How Bad Is the Oil Spill?
The oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico worsens literally by the minute, with the addition of an estimated 3.5 barrels of crude. That's more than 200,000 gallons of oil a day adding to a slick that now covers an area roughly the size of Delaware. And some experts estimate the spill could actually be as much as 10 times worse.
That would make BP's Gulf spill already worse than the infamous 1989 Exxon Valdez disaster , which discharged roughly 11 million gallons of oil off Alaska. But it would take two more years of spillage to catch up to another deep-water catastrophe : a blowout in an exploratory well off the coast of Mexico in 1979.
[More]Facial Expressions of Mice in Pain
We know someone is in pain just by looking at their face. Winced eyes, grimacing smile. We recognize it immediately. But can we see pain in nonhuman faces? [More]
U.S. gave contracts to 7 firms involved in Iran energy
U.S. to press China on indigenous innovation: Locke
Hot science from a volcanic crisis
By Janet Fang
Thirty years ago this week, Mount St. [More]
Getting a Raw Meal: Is an Exclusive Diet of Uncooked Food Good for Personal--and Planetary--Health?
Dear EarthTalk: A friend with many minor health problems recently switched to a diet of only raw plant foods and reports feeling much better. She also insists her new eating habits are better for the environment. Does this make sense or is the strange diet making her crazy? --Phil C., Reno, Nev.
[More]Study shows broad support for Arizona migrant law
IEA: Solar Power Could Produce Nearly One-Quarter of Global Electricity by 2050
Solar panels could produce electricity at the same price as coal- and natural gas-burning power plants by the end of this decade if countries direct resources at this rapidly advancing corner of the energy industry, according to the Paris-based International Energy Agency . [More]
Top Republican challenges Kagan's independence
Cheap Photovoltaics Wins M.I.T. Clean Energy Prize
Time for M.I.T.’s Clean Energy Prize. The annual competition gives teams of university students a chance to compete for $200,000 to kick-start their new clean energy business. [More]
Greeks march against austerity
Behind the Light Switch: What Will a Smart Grid Look Like? [Slide Show]
What most people care about when it comes to the electrical outlet is that the current flows. "The only thing that matters is: when you walk in your house here or California or Colorado and turn on the light switch, does your house light up or doesn't it?" noted Senator Jay Rockefeller of West Virginia during an event to unveil the world's first carbon capture and storage project at a working coal-fired power plant last October. [More]
Squid "jigging" brings elusive cephalopods up from Sea of Cortez
Editor's Note: William Gilly , a professor of cell and developmental biology and marine and organismal biology at Stanford University, is traveling with a group of students on board the Don José in the Sea of Cortez. They will monitor and track Humboldt squid and sperm whales in their watery habitats. This is the group's third blog post. [More]
MIND Reviews: Blindspots: The Many Ways We Cannot See
Blindspots: The Many Ways We Cannot See by Bruno Breitmeyer. Oxford University Press, 2010
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