All Stories

  1. The Tuning of Place: Sociable Spaces and Pervasive Digital Media by Richard Coyne

    Smartphones and iPods are changing the way people use public spaces, both real and virtual. THE TUNING OF PLACE: SOCIABLE SPACES AND PERVASIVE DIGITAL MEDIA BY RICHARD COYNE MIT Press, 2010, 330 p., $35.

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  2. The Intimate Ape: Orangutans and the Secret Life of a Vanishing Species by Shawn Thompson

    A journalist travels to Sumatra and Borneo to study the apes and interview scientists. THE INTIMATE APE: ORANGUTANS AND THE SECRET LIFE OF A VANISHING SPECIES BY SHAWN THOMPSON Citadel Press, 2010, 292 p., $14.95.

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  3. Letters

    Making morphine The article “Chemists pin down poppy’s tricks for producing narcotic painkiller” (SN: 4/10/10, p. 5) may presage geopolitical changes in Afghanistan, regardless of whether there are engineered virus attacks or alternative crop programs. A technological advance like this one will eventually be used in the United States and Europe. Even if governments continue […]

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  4. Confronting a third crisis in U.S. science education

    Is science education broken in the United States? And if so, how should the country fix it? A working group of the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology (PCAST) has been investigating these long-standing questions and is expected to issue a report on its policy recommendations this month. Science News Contributing Editor Alexandra […]

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  5. Bees had a bad winter,  too

    Annual survey shows times are still tough.

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  6. Health & Medicine

    Taste of power goes to the head, then muscles

    Just a swish of the carbohydrates in an energy drink can increase muscle performance, a study suggests.

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  7. Earth

    Atrazine paper’s challenge: Who’s responsible for accuracy?

    As a new critique of a review paper on atrazine suggests, some papers may simply overtax a journal’s fact-vetting enterprise. Which would be bad for science. And bad for society.

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  8. Health & Medicine

    Genetic switch makes old mice forgetful

    Reversing a chemical change restored the animals’ memory-making ability.

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  9. Life

    Neandertal genome yields evidence of interbreeding with humans

    After years of looking, geneticists are shocked to find that 1 percent to 4 percent of DNA in people from Europe and Asia is inherited from Neandertals.

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  10. Chemistry

    Decon Green can clean up the most toxic messes, developers claim

    A new decontaminant could be a more benign alternative for cleaning up after chemical and biological accidents.

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  11. Life

    Undereducated immune cells get aggressive with HIV

    Scientists discover a mechanism that makes some people resistant to infection with the AIDS virus.

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  12. Tech

    A Gulf spill news review

    Oil companies have said it's possible the gusher could grow substantially before its capped.

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