Earth
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We summarize the week's scientific breakthroughs every Thursday.
- 			 Earth EarthInhaling your food—and its cooking fuelCooking emits easily inhaled pollutants that travel throughout a home and can linger for hours. By Janet Raloff
- 			 Earth EarthTales of the UndammedAlthough destroying dams is often presumed to restore rivers, the results of such action are actually mixed, according to recent studies. 
- 			 Earth EarthNight space images show developmentScientists may have come up with a way to use satellite images taken at night to estimate the rate of population growth in fire-prone areas and thereby better assess fire risk to specific groups of residents. By Sid Perkins
- 			 Earth EarthNew U.N. treaty on toxic exportsThe United Nations enacted a new treaty to ban exportation of any of a list of toxic chemicals without the prior informed consent of an importing nation. By Janet Raloff
- 			 Earth EarthSmoking out a source of painful mensesBreathing in secondhand smoke may contribute to the development of menstrual cramps. By Janet Raloff
- 			 Earth EarthAllergic to computing?The plastic cases of certain computer monitors emit a chemical—triphenyl phosphate—that can cause allergic reactions. By Janet Raloff
- 			 Earth EarthFlaws make it a geologist’s best friendBy analyzing some of a diamond's trapped impurities, researchers were able to measure remnants of the gargantuan pressure that produced the gem. By Sid Perkins
- 			 Earth EarthDiesel fumes suppress immune responseRecurring exposure to soot particles from diesel exhaust fumes reduces the immune system's capacity to fend off infection, tests on rodents indicate. By Ben Harder
- 			 Earth EarthPompeii debris yields calamity cluesThe magnetic characteristics of rocks and debris excavated from Pompeii reveal the changing temperatures of the volcanic ash cloud that smothered the Italian city in A.D. 79. By Sid Perkins
- 			 Earth EarthDeep Pacific waters warmed in recent yearsOceanographic data gathered across the North Pacific in 1985 and again in 1999 indicate that the deepest waters there have been heating up. By Sid Perkins
- 			 Agriculture AgricultureFishy Alpha MalesAs a way to protect wild fish stocks, raising genetically engineered fish may be futile should some of these modified fish escape into the environment. 
- 			 Earth EarthLowering the Boom? Impact crater may predate extinction of the dinosaursAnalyses of sediments from the Yucatán in Mexico suggest that an extraterrestrial impact there more than 65 million years ago actually happened about 300,000 years before mass extinctions of dinosaurs occurred. By Sid Perkins