Data compilation by region, type of hazards shows deaths from more frequent events accumulate into significant numbers. Lightning strikes also high on the list.
Published:
2008-12-16 19:19:29
Found in: Earth Science, Environment and Science & Society
Newly identified fruit fly gene provides evidence for “cheating genes” that may cause species schisms
Published:
2008-12-11 13:49:27
Found in: Biology, Body & Brain and Life
Large genomic studies show body rhythms, melatonin may influence sugar levels in the blood. (p. 5)
Found in: Biomedicine and Body & Brain
Molecules are
hot. They zip, spin and vibrate with frenetic motion. They jiggle and twist on
the inside and bounce on the outside, imparting structure and physical
properties to nearly everything that exists. But by achieving temperatures
colder than any in the natural world, physicists can almost stop these speed
demons cold.
Like surgeons who slow a beating heart by packing ice around
a patient’s chest, physicists have recently coaxed molecules into ultracold
states in which motion is nearly gone. Researchers are left with intriguing,
exquisitely controllable new specimens to po... (p. 22)
Scientists describe the shape of a protein required for conception. These new molecular details will lead to an improved understanding of how sperm and egg unite. (p. 15)
Found in: Body & Brain
A surprising new connection between the gut and bones may lead to new forms of treatment for human bone diseases such as osteoporosis.
Published:
2008-11-26 11:20:05
Found in: Body & Brain
Nearby lizards more likely to get the message if its preceded by push-ups
Published:
2008-11-24 17:19:42
Found in: Behavior and Life
A brain imaging study reveals that some people are as giddy as teenagers in love, even after two decades of marriage. (p. 17)
Found in: Body & Brain
Day three of the Society for Neuroscience annual meeting offered news about Down syndrome and sleep cycles.
Published:
2008-11-17 15:47:56
Found in: Behavior, Genes & Cells and Humans
A study of consensus decision making shows that sticklebacks make wider choices in groups of three or more. (p. 12)
Found in: Biology and Life