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We summarize the week's scientific breakthroughs every Thursday.
- 			 Life LifeNew frontiers for coyotes may bring more Lyme diseaseForget the deer. Maybe it's coyotes on the move that can explain the recent increase in Lyme disease. By Susan Milius
- 			 Humans HumansWhat’s in your wallet? Another ‘estrogen’A chemical cousin of bisphenol A, a hormone mimic, has turned up on banknotes from around the world in addition to tainting 14 other types of papery products. Owing to the near ubiquity of BPS in paper, human exposure is likely also “ubiquitous,” conclude the study's authors. Oh, and a second new study shows that BPS behaves like an estrogen. By Janet Raloff
- 			 Earth EarthIcelandic volcanoes slumber today, but not foreverEruptions pepper the North Atlantic island. 
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- 			 Earth Earth13th century volcano mystery may be solvedIndonesian volcano may be the culprit in the biggest eruption of the last seven millennia. 
- 			 Life LifeGrasshoppers’ terror outlives themAfter an existence plagued by predatory spiders, the insects pass into oblivion, leaving a legacy of impoverished soil. By Devin Powell
- 			 Life LifeCalcium offers clues in mass extinctionOcean acidification during Permian period may have caused the Great Dying. By Devin Powell
- 			 Earth EarthAncient volcanoes destroyed ozonePrehistoric eruptions gave off huge amounts of a gas that erodes the UV-blocking atmospheric layer. 
- 			 Life LifeMicrobes flourish under Arctic sea iceOceanographic expedition surprised to find photosynthetic microorganisms thriving under frozen surface. By Devin Powell
- 			 Tech TechCourt ‘shares’ researchers’ e-mails, intellectual property“A situation has arisen involving scientists at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) that should concern all those who value the principles of academic freedom and responsibility,” warns top WHOI officials. They were responding to a court order requiring that two WHOI scientists turn over 3,500 emails and other documents to BP. Included in the information was intellectual property that outsiders could exploit. By Janet Raloff