Earth
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We summarize the week's scientific breakthroughs every Thursday.
- 			 Earth EarthEU moves against flame retardantsThe European Union has provisionally voted to ban the use and importation of nearly all members of a family of flame retardants known as polybrominated diphenyl ethers. By Charlotte Schubert and Janet Raloff
- 			 Earth EarthWhere’s the smoke from the N.Y. fires?Analyses of smoke from the destroyed World Trade Center towers indicated little risk that the fires would cause significant health effects for cleanup crews and city residents. By Janet Raloff
- 			 Earth EarthDust, the ThermostatAnalyses suggest that dust has profound, complex, and far-reaching effects on the planet's climate. By Sid Perkins
- 			 Earth EarthQuantum physics explains core anomalyScientists have used the principles of quantum physics to answer the long-standing puzzle of why seismic waves travel at different speeds in different directions across Earth's inner core. By Sid Perkins
- 			 Earth EarthHimalayas may be due for big temblorsScientists say that a narrow region that rims the southern edge of the Tibetan Plateau could be the spawning grounds for large earthquakes that could threaten millions in southern Asia in the decades to come. By Sid Perkins
- 			 Earth EarthDusty workplace may cause change of heartOccupational exposure to fine dust can trigger adverse changes in the hearts of even strong, healthy workers. By Janet Raloff
- 			 Earth EarthBt Corn Risk to Monarchs Is ‘Negligible’A much-anticipated report states that the most commonly planted forms of genetically engineered Bt corn pose only a "negligible" risk to monarch butterfly populations. By Susan Milius
- 			 Earth EarthScientists spy sixth undersea-vent ecologyA new group of hydrothermal vents found in the Indian Ocean are populated by communities of organisms that differ significantly from other such groups of vent systems. By Sid Perkins
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- 			 Earth EarthAntarctic sediments muddy climate debateOcean-floor sediments drilled from Antarctic regions recently covered by ice shelves suggest that those shelves were much younger than scientists had previously thought. By Sid Perkins
- 			 Earth EarthAircraft spies on health of coral reefsMarine ecologists report the development of a new remote-sensing system that can assess the health of coral reefs from planes. By Janet Raloff
- 			 Earth EarthL.A. moves, but not in the way expectedResearchers monitoring small ground motions along faults in Southern California ended up detecting an altogether different phenomenon: the rise and fall of the ground as local governments pump billions of gallons of water into and out of the region's aquifers. By Sid Perkins