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5,119 results for: seek
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Health & MedicineNFL heart profile good, with a caveat
Football players have higher blood pressure on average, new study finds.
By Nathan Seppa -
PhysicsRaindrops go it alone
A new study using a high-speed camera finds the shattering of solitary drips can produce a variety of sizes.
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Health & MedicineTwin towers fallout lingers
People who were near the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001, have high asthma and post-trauma stress rates years later.
By Nathan Seppa -
TechNobel Prize in physics awarded for work with light
Charles K. Kao wins for discoveries enabling fiber-optic communication, and Willard S. Boyle and George E. Smith win for inventing the charge-coupled device
By Sid Perkins -
19299
This article could leave the impression that the evolutionary significant unit (ESU) is the de facto concept employed for all listing decisions under the Endangered Species Act. In fact, the ESU has not been used in the vast majority of recent listing decisions under the act. Nor should it be. The act allows the National […]
By Science News -
AnimalsSexual conflict pushes species making
A novel comparison of 25 pairs of insect lineages finds that sexual conflict plays more of a role in making new species than scientists had realized.
By Susan Milius -
HumansPostdocs warrant more status and support
A new study finds a pressing need to improve the pay and status of postdoctoral scholars.
By Janet Raloff -
AnimalsSnapping shrimp whip up a riot of bubbles
High-speed video and fancy math demonstrate that snapping shrimp make so much noise by popping bubbles.
By Susan Milius -
Health & MedicineAIDS Vaccine Tests Well in Monkeys
An experimental AIDS vaccine bolstered with two immune proteins protects rhesus monkeys from the disease even when they are exposed to a combination of simian and human immunodeficiency virus.
By Nathan Seppa -
ArchaeologyEarly farmers crop up in Jordan
An ancient site discovered in southern Jordan dating back more than 9,000 years may help to illuminate the origins of farming in the Middle East.
By Bruce Bower -
Health & MedicineFirms vie to treat genetic disease
Successful treatment of Fabry's disease—a rare, fatal genetic condition—prompts a law suit.
By John Travis -
EarthNew accord targets long-lived pollutants
Negotiators drafted an agreement to ban or phase out some of the world's most persistent and toxic pollutants.
By Janet Raloff