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Read articles, including Science News stories written for ages 9-14, on the SNK website.
December 9th, 2000
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  • New, high-resolution images unveiled this week not only offer supporting evidence that parts of ancient Mars resembled a land of lakes but also point out prime locations to look for fossils if life ever existed on the Red Planet. (p. 372)
  • A team of researchers is developing highly sensitive acoustic sensors using ordered arrays of carbon nanotubes, which act much like the rodlike stereocilia of the inner ear. (p. 372)
  • Two brain areas long considered crucial for perceiving and speaking words also spring into action in deaf people who are using sign language or watching others do so. (p. 373)
  • Seismic waves generated by an extraterrestrial object crashing into Mexico 65 million years ago appear to have sent sediment from shallow waters sliding off the continental shelf. (p. 373)
  • Two fossil specimens of a primitive, starling-size bird that lived about 125 million years ago have tail feathers that may hold the clues to how feathers originated. (p. 374)
  • Microscopic polymer tubes can tangle themselves into a new and possibly useful structure—tiny "yarn balls" that flatten out and partly unravel in an electric field. (p. 374)
  • Some fragrances used in home-care products can play a role in generating potentially harmful air pollution. (p. 375)
  • The drug rituximab, when added to chemotherapy, boosts survival rates in people with diffuse B-cell lymphoma, a kind of cancer. (p. 375)
  • A genetically crippled strain of yeast can vaccinate mice against deadly normal strains. (p. 375)
  • Chemistry and materials science step up to preserve history, old and new. (p. 378)
  • Status at birth can foreshadow illnesses decades later. (p. 382)
  • Astronomers have glimpsed a rare, long-lived neutron-star explosion that may represent the burning of carbon just beneath the surface of this superdense star. (p. 376)
  • With the discovery of two additional moons, the ringed planet now has a retinue of 24 known satellites orbiting it. (p. 376)
  • Brain regions implicated in vision may also contribute to the images in the "mind's eye." (p. 376)
  • A brain-damaged man yields clues to the neural organization responsible for experiencing disgust. (p. 376)
  • A study finds that 20 of 21 people who reported having a penicillin allergy when filling out paperwork during a hospital visit in fact don't have one, suggesting that the prevalence of this allergy is overstated. (p. 381)
  • Silencing of the gene that encodes the cancer-suppressing protein APC is common in people with esophageal cancer, suggesting that physicians might use this genetic abnormality as a marker for the disease. (p. 381)
  • When laboratory vortices are mixed to create the equivalent of a tornado in a hurricane, the "hurricane" may gobble up spots of calm from the outside world. (p. 381)
  • Arrays of microscopic tips may offer a way to pack digital data more tightly and transfer it more quickly than is possible with magnetic hard disks. (p. 381)
  • Despite tantalizing, last-minute hints of a long-sought, mass-giving particle called the Higgs boson, dismantling of the Large Electron-Positron collider has begun. (p. 381)
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