Search Results for: Bears

Open the calendar Use the arrow keys to select a date

Can’t find what you’re looking for? Visit our FAQ page.

6,907 results

6,907 results for: Bears

  1. Funding Research: No Tale

    By
  2. Science on the Air

    By
  3. Front Matter

    By
  4. Front Matter

    By
  5. Front Matter

    By
  6. Volume Information

    By
  7. Volume Information

    By
  8. Quantum Physics

    Higgs and his particle prove elusive

    Peter Higgs and colleagues receive particle theory prize; scientists still hunting the proposed boson

    By
  9. Earth

    Frogs: Weed killer creates real Mr. Moms

    Several months back, a Berkeley undergraduate began witnessing distinctly odd behavior in frogs she was caring for in the lab. At about 18-months old, some frisky guys began regularly mounting tank mates, as if to copulate. Except that their chosen partner was invariably male. He had to be. Because genetically, every animal in the tank was male.

    By
  10. Agriculture

    Frogs: Clues to how weed killer may feminize males

    Atrazine, a widely used agricultural herbicide, not only can alter hormone levels in the developing frogs, but also perturb their physical development — and lead to an excess number of females, researchers report. Their new findings may help explain observations reported by a number of other research groups that at least in frogs, fairly low concentrations of atrazine can induce a feminization — or demasculinization.

    By
  11. Chemistry

    The skinny on indoor ozone

    Indoor concentrations of ozone tend to be far lower than those outside, largely because much gets destroyed as molecules of the respiratory irritant collide with surfaces and undergo transformative chemical reactions. New research identifies a hitherto ignored surface that apparently plays a major role in quashing indoor ozone: It’s human skin. And while removing ozone from indoor air should be good, what takes its place may not be, data indicate.

    By
  12. Humans

    Water, water everywhere

    Sid Perkins uncovers the amazing amount of “hidden water” in many consumer products.

    By