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Large ships like the one shown here emit low-frequency sounds that may stress out right whales living near busy commercial shipping lanes. Full Story © New England Aquarium
- Proposed type of solar neutrino spotted The existence of these long-sought particles confirms theories about the fusion reactions that power the sun. Read the full story. | Feb 8th 2012 Found in: Atom & Cosmos
- Numbers warn of looming collapses Mathematical tools help researchers predict when systems are about to change dramatically. Read the full story. | Feb 8th 2012 Found in: Environment, Numbers and Science & Society
- Classic sooty-moth tale bolstered by new results A scientist’s six-year backyard experiment strengthens the scenario for evolutionary changes due to industrial pollution. Read the full story. | Feb 8th 2012 Found in: Environment and Life
- Ocean noise is a whale of a stressor The post-9/11 quiet in Atlantic shipping lanes calmed the biggest marine mammals, hormone measurements suggest. Read the full story. | Feb 8th 2012 Found in: Life
- How a stomach bug may ward off asthma An ulcer- and cancer-causing bacterium may protect against the airway disease by influencing key players in inflammation. Read the full story. | Feb 8th 2012 Found in: Genes & Cells
- Taste of fructose revs up metabolism The pancreas pumps more insulin in response to the sugar, potentially throwing the body’s energy-storage machinery out of whack. Read the full story. | Feb 7th 2012 Found in: Genes & Cells and Molecules
- Chimps lend a hand The finding suggests nonhuman primates recognize their peers’ intentions and desires. Read the full story. | Feb 6th 2012 Found in: Life and Zoology
- Little Ice Age began with a bang Frozen moss suggests climate cooling kicked off fast, possibly with help from volcanic eruptions. Read the full story. | Feb 3rd 2012 Found in: Earth and Environment
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| Wasps airlift annoying ants In a scrap over food, being big and able to fly is an advantage |
A matter of gravity Map of planetary field is sharpest ever |
Brain's mirror system loves the robot Experiment may suggest why we feel sad for Wall-E |
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Super-Earth spotted in life-friendly zone 2.2.12 - Latest exoplanet entry creeps closer to long-sought goal of habitability elsewhere Found in: Atom & Cosmos
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Addicts and siblings share brain features 2.2.12 - Finding suggests genetic component for diminished self-control, other behaviors Found in: Body & Brain
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Some corals like it hot 2.2.12 - Western Australian reefs faring better than eastern counterparts Found in: Environment
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Plants swap chloroplasts via grafts 2.2.12 - Energy-converting cellular organs can pass through garden-variety connections Found in: Genes & Cells and Life
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Muscle massage may speed healing 2.1.12 - Molecular benefits to rubbing overworked areas include reduced inflammation Found in: Body & Brain and Molecules
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Big volcanoes wake up fast 2.1.12 - Crystal chemistry suggests magma changes quickly before a huge eruption Found in: Earth and Earth Science
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FOR KIDS: Mapping the invisible 2.3.12 - Astronomers don’t know what dark matter is, but they have mapped where it’s hiding Found in: Science News For Kids
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FOR KIDS: A Ghost Lake 2.3.12 - Scientists study an ancient lake that once covered much of Utah to learn lessons for the future Found in: Science News For Kids
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FOR KIDS: Lip-reading babies 2.3.12 - Before they start talking, babbling babies ‘read’ mouths Found in: Science News For Kids
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Arsenic-based life finding fails follow-up 2.1.12 - Tests see no evidence that microbe uses element in cellular machinery Found in: Genes & Cells and Science & Society
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Spacecraft captures dust from interstellar wind 2.1.12 - Particles giving clues to composition of space beyond solar system Found in: Astronomy and Atom & Cosmos
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Bird flu leaves tracks in brain 1.31.12 - Virus might create vulnerability to neurological disorders, research in mice suggests Found in: Body & Brain
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