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Computer science makes history, gleaning new findings from centuries' worth of transcripts from a Victorian-era courthouse.
(p. 20)
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It's a zoo in there: Scientists turn up startling diversity among neurons.
(p. 22)
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Scientists rethink what the first stars were like and how they formed.
(p. 26)
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Mitochondrial genetic analysis suggests a bit o’ hybridizing long ago with brown bears on the Emerald Isle.
(p. 5)
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While clues to combating the infectious cancer that's threatening the species remain elusive, the completion of two genetic blueprints reveals a low but stable genetic diversity.
(p. 8)
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A gene controls the clearance of a protein that accumulates in the brains of people with the condition.
(p. 9)
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For the first time scientists have repaired a damaged gene in a living mouse.
(p. 9)
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Potatoes and sugary soft drinks add pounds, a long-term analysis shows; fruit, yogurt and nuts help shed them.
(p. 10)
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The left and right hemispheres have equal and independent capacity, monkey study finds.
(p. 10)
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An ointment that slows the transport of venom from the bite site to the vital organs could keep victims alive long enough to reach medical care.
(p. 11)
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Superbright object appeared surprisingly soon after the Big Bang, challenging some theories about how black holes arose.
(p. 12)
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Images from the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter show fine details of the lunar surface.
(p. 12)
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In sediments under California’s Salton Sea, geologists find evidence for a natural disaster one-two punch.
(p. 13)
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Children who don’t grasp arithmetic at all, unlike below-average students, have little feel for estimating quantities.
(p. 14)
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A mammoth engraved on a fossil may date from at least 13,000 year ago.
(p. 14)
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Studies show that exposures in the womb or during adolescence can erase masculine habits or reverse sexes' behavior.
(p. 16)
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Despite its invasive success, the lionfish can't withstand grouper appetites.
(p. 16)
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A new study shows how pollutants helped balance out the effects of greenhouse gases from 1998 to 2008.
(p. 17)
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Airplanes knock rain from the sky, plus a quick-melting glacier and BPA's diabetes link in this week's news.
(p. 17)
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Researchers have developed a sensor that, when flexed, generates enough charge to send wireless signals.
(p. 18)
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Electrifying ink, superelastic alloys, knotty molecules and more in this week's news.
(p. 18)
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(p. 4)
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Review by Erika Engelhaupt
(p. 30)
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Review by Daniel Strain
(p. 30)
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(p. 31)
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Experts had forecast that astronauts would walk on Mars by 1970, but such a feat is still 20-plus years out.
(p. 32)