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We summarize the week's scientific breakthroughs every Thursday.
- 			 Health & Medicine Health & MedicineGloves may head off ‘garden’ variety pneumoniaCompost feels so good, sifting through a gardener’s fingers. Unfortunately, data are showing, this soil amendment can host a germ responsible for Legionnaire’s disease, a potentially serious form of pneumonia. By Janet Raloff
- 			 Earth EarthGeomagnetic field flip-flops in a flashRocks in Nevada preserve evidence of superfast changes in Earth’s magnetic polarity. 
- 			 Tech TechTar sands ‘fingerprint’ seen in rivers and snowA new study refutes a government claim (one echoed by industry) that the gonzo-scale extraction of tar sands in western Canada — and their processing into crude oil — does not substantially pollute the environment. By Janet Raloff
- 			 Health & Medicine Health & MedicineWheat genome announcement turns out to be small beerThe DNA sequence released by U.K. team still requires assembly. 
- 			 Climate ClimateAcademies recommend that IPCC make changesThe Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, an authoritative scientific organization set up in 1989 to assess climate science, took some heat today from a group that it commissioned to investigate its credibility. The oversight group reported findings procedural weaknesses that preclude IPCC from responding nimbly to events — or from reliably identifying errors in its assessments. By Janet Raloff
- 			 Earth EarthPrimordial bestiary gets an annexA classic Canadian fossil trove extends to thinner deposits, geologists find. 
- 			 Earth Earth‘Bug traps’ in Gulf to use BP oil as baitTo assay how appetizing polluting oil is to native Gulf micobes — and how rapidly they degrade it — researchers plan to set 150 “bug traps” on August 26.. Their bait: the same oil that had been spewed for months by BP’s damaged Deepwater Horizon well. By Janet Raloff
- 			 Chemistry ChemistryDeep-sea plumes: A rush to judgment?A new report suggests a deep-sea plume of oil in the Gulf of Mexico has been gobbled up by microbes. But the scientist who described the incident doesn't "know" that. He can't — yet. By Janet Raloff
- 			 Chemistry ChemistryDeep-sea oil plume goes missingControversy arises over whether bacteria have completely gobbled oil up. By Janet Raloff
- 			 Earth EarthMost BP oil still pollutes the Gulf, scientists concludeBelow the surface, plumes of oil are proving slow to disperse and break down. By Janet Raloff
- 			 Planetary Science Planetary ScienceWorldwide slowdown in plant carbon uptakeA decade of droughts has stifled the increasing growth of terrestrial vegetation. By Sid Perkins
- 			 Earth EarthTsunami triggered by one-two punchGeologists report the first recorded observation of an unusual earthquake sequence.