- :: Atom & Cosmos
- :: Body & Brain
- :: Earth
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- :: Genes & Cells
- :: Humans
- :: Life
- :: Matter & Energy
- :: Molecules
- :: Science & Society
- :: Other Topics
- :: Science News For Kids
http://www.sciencenews.org/view/issue/id/3684
March 22nd, 2003
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Radiation from space may help border guards spot loose nukes stowed in shipping containers. (p. 179)
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Overweight binge eaters are more likely to harbor a genetic mutation that disrupts brain signals governing satiety than are people of normal weight. (p. 179)
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New observations suggest that gamma-ray bursts may be even more energetic than scientists had estimated. (p. 180)
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Insects may have evolved independently from other six-legged land bugs and may be more closely related to crustaceans than to their fellow so-called hexapods. (p. 180)
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The brain cells that keep people awake fire spontaneously and continuously on their own, suggesting that sleep depends on signals from other brain regions that quiet these neurons. (p. 181)
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A chemical used by tapeworms to slow intestinal pulsations may help people absorb drugs more efficiently. (p. 181)
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Researchers surveying tool use by New Caledonian crows propose that the birds may be the first animals besides people shown to ratchet up the sophistication of their technology by sharing design improvements. (p. 182)
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Nicotine ramps up activity throughout the body, making the drug a suspect in many tobacco-related ailments. (p. 184)
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Hybrid-rocket fuelspart solid, part liquidhave been around for a half-century, and they may just now be taking off. (p. 187)
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An astronaut-at-play stumbled upon an unexpected behavior of water in near-zero gravity: The formation of durable filmssome as wide as saucersthat would instantly break here on Earth. (p. 189)
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Scientists have found that variations in a gene explain why people differ in their ability to taste bitterness. (p. 189)
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A new study counters a recent report that diuretics taken for high blood pressure protect against heart problems better than newer, more expensive drugs. (p. 189)
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Nearly 2 decades of satellite observations suggest that an increase in Arctic cloudiness at certain times of the year may partially counteract the effects of global warming in the region. (p. 189)
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In the exotic realm of curved space, the topography of space itself might provide a propulsion assistalbeit a tiny one. (p. 190)
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A tropical ant has perfected the un-antlike behavior of hunting by ambush, but its prey, a sweat bee, has developed some tricks of its own. (p. 190)
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A new study suggests that an ecosystem like todays African savanna could provide sufficient carrion to nourish a scavenger the size of a Tyrannosaurus rex. (p. 190)
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Science News astronomy writer Ron Cowen is a recipient of the third David N. Schramm award for distinguished writing on high-energy astrophysics. (p. 191)
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