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We summarize the week's scientific breakthroughs every Thursday.
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ChemistrySkin is no barrier to BPA, study shows
The new finding suggests handling store receipts could be a significant source of internal exposure to the hormone-mimicking chemical.
By Janet Raloff -
EarthArctic lake yields climate record
A Siberian drilling project goes to great lengths to capture an ancient climate record in a 3.6 million-year-old crater.
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HumansBP gusher left deep sea toxic for a time, study finds
In the early weeks after the damaged BP well began gushing huge quantities of oil and gas, a toxic brew was developing deep below the surface in plumes emanating from the wellhead. Finned fish and marine mammals probably steered well clear of the spewing hydrocarbons. But planktonic young — larval critters and algae that ride the currents — would have been proverbial sitting ducks.
By Janet Raloff -
HumansWhen to welcome ‘invading’ species
As climate changes, some environments are becoming hostile to the flora and fauna that long nurtured them. Species that can migrate have begun to move into regions where temperatures and humidity are more hospitable. And that can prove a conundrum for officials charged with halting the invasion of non-native species, notes Jon Jarvis, a biologist who for the past year has headed the National Park Service.
By Janet Raloff -
PaleontologyIndia yields fossil trove in amber
Insect remains suggest the continent hosted a surprisingly wide variety of creatures 50 million years ago.
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HumansGNP’s glaciers: Going, going . . .
Climate warming will eliminate them within a generation, data indicate.
By Janet Raloff -
AnimalsWolverine: Climate warming threatens comeback
BLOG: New data point to unexpected sociability and filial behavior in carnivore.
By Janet Raloff -
LifeClimate changes, and there goes the neighborhood
The ranges of rattlesnakes and voles are likely to shift drastically with warming, analyses of past changes suggest.
By Susan Milius -
Earth‘Fossil’ mountains entombed by ice
Cold temperatures have kept a buried Antarctic range fresh for hundreds of millions of years.
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LifeNew species a little nipper
A mongoose-like creature from Madagascar is the first new carnivore to be discovered in more than two decades.
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Health & MedicineMice robbed of darkness fatten up
Time of day can affect calories' impact, a study shows.
By Janet Raloff -
EarthOceanographers with flippers
Tracking seal dives off Antarctica reveals seafloor troughs that affect ocean circulation.