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Gunmen attack NATO trucks near Pakistan capital
BP shares plunge as U.S. threatens new penalties
Texas panhandle gas pipeline blast kills 2
Arkansas Democrat Blanche Lincoln survives anti-incumbent wave
Mexico says U.S. border agent killed teenager
Delisted and in danger: Gulf oil spill threatens brown pelicans months after they are dropped from endangered species list
Images of oil-caked brown pelicans ( Pelecanus occidentalis ) have hit the front pages of countless U.S. newspapers and other media in the past week, driving home the still-growing impact of the Gulf of Mexico oil spill. So far, dozens of pelicans have been transported to rescue centers for treatment. The number is only expected to rise as the oil spill spreads and covers Louisiana's Queen Bess Island Pelican Rookery and other important breeding sites.
It is quite a blow for a species that was on the endangered species list until just six months ago . It had taken brown pelicans nearly 50 years to recover from the devastating effects of DDT and other pesticides that nearly wiped them out. In fact, the species was nonextant in Louisiana and had to be reintroduced to the area from a colony in Florida. Queen Bess Island, one of the primary breeding sites responsible for the resurgence of the birds, had to be stabilized after oil companies nearly destroyed the local wetlands so they could lay pipes.
[More]Three hurt in Texas panhandle gas pipeline blast
Watch power: Israeli raid on Turkish boat and BP oil spill show upside of ubiquitous surveillance
In a previous post, " Grassroots spying will make world peace possible," I argued that the spread of technologies that allow us to spy on each other might also make us safer. New York Press smacked me for having "elevated the idea of no-privacy to jaw-dropping levels." The writer, Matt Harvey, quotes some pro-privacy guy wondering whether my "pro-intelligence rhetoric" reflects my "clandestine corporate or intelligence connections."
Well, I do own a little Apple stock; I would have owned more but I sold most of it in February after my kids showed me an Internet video of Hitler ranting about the soon-to-be-released iPad ; naturally the stock subsequently soared. Also, I once consulted for the National Counterterrorism Center , an episode that I'll describe if someone asks nicely. But I promise that no insidious motives--unless yearning for peace counts as insidious--lurk beneath my hopes for omnidirectional spying.
[More]New evidence for a neuronal link between insulin-related diseases and schizophrenia
When the body does not properly manage insulin levels, diabetes and other metabolic disorders are familiar outcomes. That hormonal imbalance, however, has also been linked to a higher risk for psychiatric disorders, such as schizophrenia . And a new study has uncovered a potential pathway by which this metabolic hormone can upset the balance of a key neurotransmitter. [More]
Yemen holds three U.S. citizens on terror charges: U.S.
Obama signals tough stance, drilling to resume
New sanctions would be toughest yet on Iran: Clinton
"Volcker rule" at issue as reform bill nears finale
Endangered-porpoise numbers fall to just 250
By Rex Dalton
At the northern end of the Gulf of California, where the Baja peninsula joins the rest of Mexico, the world's most endangered marine mammal is inching closer to extinction.
With adults only 1.5 meters long, the vaquita ( Phocoena sinus ), a rare porpoise found only in these waters, epitomizes the plight of small cetaceans, which bear the brunt of pollution, ship traffic and fishing because they live in rivers and coastal areas. [More]
Engineer set to run NSF
By Eric Hand
As an engineer, Subra Suresh has made a career of studying stress and fatigue: from aluminum alloys in planes and silicon wafers in chips, to the walls of cells infected with malaria. [More]
Flu experts rebut conflict claims
By Declan Butler
"Drug firms 'encouraged world health body to exaggerate swine flu threat'," screamed Britain's Daily Mail newspaper on June 4. [More]
BP says capturing more oil from blown-out well
By Kristen Hays
HOUSTON (Reuters) - British energy giant BP Plc said on Tuesday it had sharply increased the amount of oil it was capturing from its ruptured Gulf of Mexico well, but it is not clear how much crude is still gushing out.
[More]Droning It In: Storm-Chasing Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Makes First Foray into Nascent Twister
Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) are no longer just gizmos in a geek's garage or military tools that fly reconnaissance missions considered too dangerous for humans. They are increasingly being used for scientific study. And this spring, a UAV dedicated to research science made aerial history.
On May 6, a diminutive aircraft called the Tempest was the first official UAV to intercept a supercell thunderstorm , the type of storm that produces tornadoes. The aircraft and its crew of engineers from the University of Colorado at Boulder (C.U.–Boulder) and meteorologists from the University of Nebraska–Lincoln are a critical part of an armada of 100 storm-chasing scientists conducting the largest study of tornadoes in history. The two-year field experiment known as VORTEX 2 , running from May 1 through to June 15 this year, will help scientists better understand when and how tornadoes form. Teams travel across the Midwest in tight formation chasing and surrounding tornadic storms to measure wind speed, temperature, humidity and pressure using mobile radar trucks, anemometers, disdrometers and balloon launchers.
[More]