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Scientists show that cheap chemical dyes may one day help with the efficient capture of the sun's energyPublished: Friday, July 11th, 2008Found in: Materials Science, Matter & Energy, Molecules and Technology -
Fossilized feathers of an early bird or dinosaur may retain evidence of pigment, offering a chance to animal colors of the Cretaceous.Published: August 2nd, 2008; Vol.174 #3Found in: Paleobiology and Paleontology -
A limited supply of vaccine shots, if targeted well, could stop the spread of disease.Published: Friday, July 4th, 2008Found in: Body & Brain, Numbers and Science & Society -
Scientists reveal a mathematical principle underlying the arrangement of leaf veins in plant species.Published: Monday, June 30th, 2008Found in: Life and Numbers
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A controversial interpretation of passages from the Odyssey suggests that Homer knew much more about planetary motions than historians thought possible.Published: Thursday, June 26th, 2008Found in: Astronomy and Science & Society
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An experiment may explain the origin of underwater waves that shape the sediment of continental slopes.Published: Tuesday, June 24th, 2008Found in: Earth -
An optical trap lets atoms in but not out, and it can be used to study matter at ultracold temperatures.Published: July 19th, 2008; Vol.174 #2Found in: Physics -
The mathematics of soapy water yields some clues to the origin of the genetic code.Published: Wednesday, June 11th, 2008Found in: Genes & Cells, Numbers and Physics
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Scientists reveal new details on how extendable jaws help fish capture prey.Published: Tuesday, June 10th, 2008Found in: Life and Physics -
Gold comes in many colors. Since ancient times, glass artists and alchemists alike have known how to grind the metal into fine particles that would take on hues such as red or mauve. At scales even smaller, clusters of just a few dozen atoms display even more outlandish behavior. Gold and certain other atoms often tend to aggregate in specific numbers and highly symmetrical geometries, and sometimes these clusters can mimic the chemistry of single atoms of a completely different element. They become, as some researchers say, superatoms. Recently researchers have reported successes i...Published: June 21st, 2008; Vol.173 #19Found in: Biology, Chemistry and Physics -
Light behaves like waves or particles, but it doesn’t know what it will do in advance.Published: Friday, May 23rd, 2008Found in: Matter & Energy -
Home / SN Bookshelf / BOOK REVIEW | Naked in the Woods: Joseph Knowles and the Legacy of Frontier FakeryLast summer, the Discovery Channel temporarily suspended airing its hit survivalist show Man vs. Wild. The producer admitted that the protagonist would get help from staff or spend nights in hotels — all along claiming to rough it alone in the world’s most inhospitable places. Yet, Man vs. Wild was not the first high-profile case of possible “frontier fakery.” In August 1913, Joseph Knowles, a former Boston Post illustrator, one-time trapper, hunting guide and Navy man, went into the Maine woods on a solitary retreat. Starting out with nothing, not even clothes, Knowles thrived for tw...Published: Friday, May 23rd, 2008Found in: Science & Society -
Surfaces that mimic the back of an African beetle can collect water from fog.Published: Wednesday, May 21st, 2008Found in: Chemistry, Molecules and Physics -
Time-lapse snapshots of molecules show that they change shapes less often than theory predicted.Published: June 7th, 2008; Vol.173 #18Found in: Chemistry, Molecules and Physics -
Neutrons can produce 3-D scans of a magnetic field, even inside a solid.Published: Tuesday, May 13th, 2008Found in: Atom & Cosmos and Matter & Energy
