All Stories

  1. Earth

    Long dry spell

    Falling reservoir levels in the western United States are just one symptom that the region is suffering through a drought that may be the worst to strike in the past 500 years.

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  2. When Protein Breakdown Breaks Down: Bacterial toxin yields signs of Parkinson’s

    Certain compounds that hinder cells from destroying waste proteins can produce symptoms of Parkinson's disease in rats.

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  3. Materials Science

    Cool Magnet: A little bit of iron gives magnetic refrigeration a boost

    An improved material moves magnetic refrigeration one step closer to commercial reality.

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  4. Mr. Universe Jr.: Child’s gene mutation confirms protein’s role in human-muscle growth

    A boy born with extra-large muscles has mutations in a gene regulating muscle growth.

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  5. Health & Medicine

    Cancer with a Twist: Protein instrumental in breast-cancer metastasis

    A protein called Twist, which orchestrates gene activity in cells, facilitates the spread of some breast cancers.

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  6. Anthropology

    Stone Age Ear for Speech: Ancient finds sound off on roots of language

    Ancestors of Neandertals that lived at least 350,000 years ago heard the same range of sounds that people today do, suggesting that the ability to speak arose early in the Stone Age.

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  7. Physics

    Misbehavin’ Meson: Perplexing particle flouts the rules

    The discovery of what appears to be a new subatomic particle with bizarre properties is challenging theorists' understanding of how matter behaves.

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  8. 19433

    I don’t think anyone should be surprised that squirrels have figured out how to say “nyah, nyah” to rattlesnakes. After all, it’s what they’ve been saying to cats, dogs, and bird-feeder owning humans for years. R. Kelly WagnerAustin, Texas

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  9. Animals

    Hot Bother: Ground squirrels taunt in infrared

    California ground squirrels broadcast an infrared signal when confronting a rattlesnake.

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  10. Humans

    From the June 23, 1934, issue

    Young desert hawks in their nest, properties of newly found element 93, and the effect of high pressure on phosphorus.

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  11. Astronomy

    Tracking Solar Activity

    Part of the Student Observation Network, this NASA Web site offers information and activities related to solar flares and storms. Vividly illustrated online tutorials provide guidelines and background for observing sunspots, recording radio waves, collecting data from magnetometers, and viewing auroras. Learn how to make a sunspot viewer or magnetometer. See live images of the […]

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  12. Humans

    Letters from the June 26, 2004, issue of Science News

    Theory and practice Like physicists, mathematicians have always been divided into theorists and experimentalists (“Math Lab: Computer experiments are transforming mathematics,” SN: 4/24/04, p. 266: Math Lab). And, as with the physicists, the two groups of mathematicians have not gotten along very well. Still, in physics, there has always been an understanding that both groups […]

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