- :: Atom & Cosmos
- :: Body & Brain
- :: Earth
- :: Environment
- :: Genes & Cells
- :: Humans
- :: Life
- :: Matter & Energy
- :: Molecules
- :: Science & Society
- :: Other Topics
- :: Science News For Kids
http://www.sciencenews.org/view/authored/id/5
Searching Authored by Amy Maxmen 
-
A study of snake embryos suggests that fangs evolved once, then moved around in the head to give today’s snakes a variety of bites.Published: August 16th, 2008; Vol.174 #4Found in: Biology and Life -
Scientists find the role of dopamine varies from one end of a brain region to another.Published: August 2nd, 2008; Vol.174 #3Found in: Behavior and Body & Brain
-
When one of psychiatrist Andrew Miller’s patients asked about receiving the best drug available for treating hepatitis C, Miller said: “No way.” The patient — in his early 20s and accompanied by his mom to the appointment — had no job, few friends and a history of depression. While Miller knows that hepatitis C patients often benefit from the new generation of immune-boosting treatments, he’s keenly aware that those same immune therapies have a strong tendency to bring people down — and, in people predisposed to depression, dangerously down. Certain immune ...Published: July 19th, 2008; Vol.174 #2Found in: Body & Brain and Psychology -
With a lifespan of just five months, the chameleon Furcifer labordi leads a briefer life than any other land-dwelling vertebrate.Published: Tuesday, July 1st, 2008Found in: Biology, Ecology, Environment, Life and Zoology -
Mary Jane’s got more goodness in her buds than Cheech or Chong ever imagined. A compound found to ease swelling, pain and inflammation has now been extracted from marijuana. The compound, structurally different from anti-inflammatory medications now on the market, provides new avenues for drug development to help those who suffer from diseases like rheumatoid arthritis, multiple sclerosis and Crohn’s disease, a new study reports. And unlike THC, the other Cannabis compound with a similar anti-inflammatory outcome, this chemical has nothing to do with feeling high. “We wer...Published: Monday, June 23rd, 2008Found in: Body & Brain
-
Connections between nerve cells may be lost when communication between the cells lapses.Published: Monday, June 23rd, 2008Found in: Body & Brain and Genes & Cells -
Making a face might have helped human ancestors survive.Published: July 19th, 2008; Vol.174 #2Found in: Body & Brain, Humans and Life -
Date palm pit found at Masada sprouts at age 2,000, becoming the oldest known seed to germinate.Published: July 5th, 2008; Vol.174 #1Found in: Archaeology and Botany -
Small tumors can be detected using a new technique that safely, reliably and noninvasively measures tissue chemistry.Published: July 5th, 2008; Vol.174 #1Found in: Biomedicine and Body & Brain -
Genes key to the development of modern animals' body plans show up in primitive-looking comb jellies.Published: Friday, June 6th, 2008Found in: Genes & Cells and Life -
Unsuspected genetic diversity found in asexual animals.Published: Thursday, May 29th, 2008Found in: Life and Zoology -
Home / SN Bookshelf / BOOK REVIEW | Curiosity and Enlightenment: Collectors and Collections from the Sixteenth to the Nineteenth CenturyChock-full of unicorn horns (narwhal teeth), griffin claws (antelope antlers), leopard skins, petrified wood or other gems hand-picked from nature, “cabinets of curiosities” have developed a modern-day reputation as whimsical caboodles of miscellaneous oddities. This book will overturn that impression. A proper collection was “a model of universal nature, made private,” as Francis Bacon, the 17th century philosopher and statesman, is quoted as saying. In providing a grand tour of Western European collections, Arthur MacGregor shows that “purposeful collecting” embodied n...Published: Monday, May 12th, 2008Found in: Science & Society -
With a mix of reptilian, bird and mammalian features, the duck-billed platypus genome looks as strange as the animal.Published: Thursday, May 8th, 2008Found in: Biology, Genes & Cells and Life -
Psychiatrists measuring the degree of similarity between dreams and psychotic ruminations report some strange features common to both.Published: Wednesday, April 30th, 2008Found in: Body & Brain and Psychology
-
Some conservationists recommend creating marine parks in areas most likely to survive climate change. (p. 238)Published: April 12th, 2008; Vol.173 #15Found in: Environment
