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Gulf Spill Cleanup Chemicals May Cause New Environmental Concerns

Scientific American Online - Tue, 2010-05-04 15:55

The chemicals BP is now relying on to break up the steady flow of leaking oil from deep below the Gulf of Mexico could create a new set of environmental problems.

Even if the materials, called dispersants, are effective, BP has already bought up more than a third of the world’s supply. If the leak from 5,000 feet beneath the surface continues for weeks, or months, that stockpile could run out.

[More]
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BP Suffers Multiple Lapses in Years Leading to Oil Spills

Scientific American Online - Tue, 2010-05-04 15:30

BP, the global oil giant responsible for the fast-spreading spill in the Gulf of Mexico that will soon make landfall, is no stranger to major accidents.

In fact, the company has found itself at the center of several of the nation's worst oil and gas–related disasters in the last five years.

[More]
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Party leaders make final tour of Britain for votes

Reuters - Tue, 2010-05-04 14:06
LONDON (Reuters) - Britain's party leaders campaigned around the clock Tuesday in a final push for votes, two days before a parliamentary election that opinion polls suggest could redraw the political map.


Categories: Science News

Men Suppress Food Cravings Better Than Women

Scientific American Online - Tue, 2010-05-04 14:00

Worldwide, women suffer higher rates of eating disorders and obesity than men do--and a recent study may help explain why. [More]

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China to press North's Kim on economy, nuclear talks

Reuters - Tue, 2010-05-04 13:24
DALIAN, China (Reuters) - North Korean leader Kim Jong-il headed to Beijing by train on Tuesday to talk to Chinese leaders about economic reforms and a return to nuclear disarmament negotiations, but any bold move is unlikely.


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Revolutionary Rail: High-Speed Rail Plan Will Bring Fast Trains to the U.S. (preview)

Scientific American Online - Tue, 2010-05-04 13:00

America is an absurdly backward country when it comes to passenger trains. As anyone who has visited Europe, Japan or Shanghai knows, trains that travel at nearly 200 miles per hour have become integral to the economies of many countries. With its celebrated Tokaido Shinkansen bullet trains, Central Japan Railway has for the past five decades carried billions of passengers between Tokyo and Osaka in half the time it would take to fly. A new Madrid-to-Barcelona express train runs at an average speed of 150 miles per hour; since its inception two years ago, airline traffic between the two cities has dropped by 40 percent. In contrast, Amtrak’s showcase Acela train connecting Boston to Washington, D.C., averages just 70 mph. That figure is so low because many sections of the Acela’s tracks cannot safely support high speeds, even though the train itself is capable of sprints above 150 mph. Think of it as a Ferrari sputtering down a rutted country lane.

There has been a recent push to change all this. Earlier this year the Department of Transportation announced the recipients of $8 billion in stimulus funding designed to spread high-speed rail across the U.S. The 2010 federal budget requests an additional $1 billion in rail construction funds in each of the next five years. And in 2008 California voters approved a $9-billion bond measure to initiate an ambitious high-speed rail network that would connect Los Angeles to San Francisco and, eventually, Sacramento and San Diego.

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Doing Science in the Past

Scientific American Online - Tue, 2010-05-04 13:00

History is not often thought of as a science, but it can be if it uses the “comparative method.” Jared Diamond, professor of geography at the University of California, Los Angeles, and James A. Robinson, professor of government at Harvard University, employ the method effectively in the new book they have co-edited, Natural Experiments of History (Harvard University Press, 2010). In a timely study comparing Haiti with the Dominican Republic, for example, Diamond demonstrates that although both countries inhabit the same island, Hispaniola, because of geopolitical differences one ended up dirt poor while the other flourished.

Christopher Columbus’s brother Bartolomeo colonized Hispaniola in 1496 for Spain, establishing the capital at Santo Domingo on the eastern side of the island. Two centuries later, during tensions between France and Spain, the Treaty of Ryswick in 1697 granted France dominion over the western half of the island. Because France was richer than Spain at this time and slavery was an integral part of its economy, it turned western Hispaniola into a center of slave trade with staggering differences in population: about 500,000 slaves in the western side of the island as compared with only 15,000 to 30,000 slaves in the eastern side.

[More]
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Thai protest leaders object to election timing

Reuters - Tue, 2010-05-04 12:47
BANGKOK (Reuters) - Anti-government protesters in Thailand objected on Tuesday to proposed November elections, casting in doubt a government peace overture to end a two-month crisis that has paralyzed the economy.


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Jewish settlers blamed for West Bank mosque fire

Reuters - Tue, 2010-05-04 12:30
LIBBAN AL-SHARQIA, West Bank (Reuters) - Palestinians accused Jewish settlers of setting fire to a mosque in the occupied West Bank Tuesday, an incident that raised tensions as a U.S. envoy began a mission to get peace talks going.


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Somali pirates hijack Yemeni cargo ship

Reuters - Tue, 2010-05-04 12:19
ADEN, Yemen (Reuters) - Somali pirates have seized a cargo vessel off the coast of Yemen, and are believed to be holding the crew of nine Yemeni sailors, Yemen's Defense Ministry website said Tuesday.


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Euro market meltdown resumes despite Greek deal

Reuters - Tue, 2010-05-04 10:20
ATHENS/LONDON (Reuters) - A renewed selling frenzy gripped euro zone financial markets on Tuesday as concern mounted that a record EU/IMF bailout for Greece would not stop a debt crisis spreading in the single currency area.


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Iran says plans new war games, photographed U.S. ship

Reuters - Tue, 2010-05-04 09:57
TEHRAN (Reuters) - Iran announced new naval war games on Tuesday and revealed that one of its military aircraft had photographed a U.S. aircraft carrier, a day after Washington said Tehran was challenging its sea power in the Middle East.


Categories: Science News

Centrifuge made from a salad spinner for developing countries

Science A GoGo - Tue, 2010-05-04 08:10
Two Rice University undergraduates have turned a simple salad spinner into a rudimentary centrifuge that medical clinics in developing countries can use to separate blood without electricity...
Categories: Science News

Voter unrest sparks rash of primary challenges

Reuters - Tue, 2010-05-04 05:04
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A rising tide of voter anger has produced serious primary challenges in both parties this year, with Republicans facing a political revolt that could sweep away powerful U.S. incumbents like Senator John McCain.


Categories: Science News

Japan PM faces island rebuff over U.S. base move

Reuters - Tue, 2010-05-04 04:45
OKINAWA, Japan (Reuters) - Angry residents of Okinawa rejected on Tuesday a plan by Japan's prime minister to keep at least part of a controversial U.S. base on the island, in what could prove a new blow to support ahead of an election.


Categories: Science News

Senate reaches pact on "too big to fail"

Reuters - Tue, 2010-05-04 04:37
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Key lawmakers reached agreement on Tuesday on dismantling large financial firms that get into trouble, as momentum accelerated in the Senate toward passage of a landmark Wall Street reform bill.


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Better weather aids fight against oil slick

Reuters - Tue, 2010-05-04 02:03
VENICE, Louisiana (Reuters) - A flotilla of nearly 200 boats tackled a massive oil slick in the Gulf of Mexico on Tuesday, taking advantage of calm weather to intensify the fight to reduce the spill and limit its impact on the U.S. shoreline.


Categories: Science News

Mosquitoes inherit DEET resistance

Scientific American Online - Tue, 2010-05-04 02:02

By Janelle Weaver

The indifference of some mosquitoes to a common insect repellent is due to an easily inherited genetic trait that can be rapidly evolved by later generations, a new study suggests.

By selective breeding, James Logan and colleagues at Rothamsted Research in Harpenden, UK, created strains of Aedes aegyptimosquitoes in which half of the females do not respond to DEET (N,N-diethyl-meta-toluamide) -- a powerful insect repellent. [More]

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Ash closes Irish, UK airports

Reuters - Tue, 2010-05-04 00:54
DUBLIN (Reuters) - Airports in Ireland and parts of Britain were closed again for hours on Tuesday because of the cloud of volcanic ash drifting south from Iceland that wreaked havoc on European air travel last month.


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