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161 articles from MONDAY 28.5.2012
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MONDAY 28. MAY, 2012
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Researchers may have solved a piece of the puzzle surrounding how fish “smell” harm.
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Eco-immunology seeks both to understand the immune systems of wild animals and to use that knowledge to gain a better understanding of human immune systems.
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Prices for colonoscopy are far higher than they should be, some experts say, in part because of rising charges for anesthesia.
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The aches and uneasiness some passengers experience on long-haul flights may be a result of lower cabin pressure at high altitudes, research shows.
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A new kind of malware more damaging than the notorious Stuxnet worm is likely being deployed by a nation state and is "the most sophisticated cyberweapon yet unleashed," say the cybersecurity firms that uncovered it.
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Like AIDS, the authors of an editorial argue, Chagas disease is stigmatizing, has a long incubation time and is hard or impossible to cure.
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Letters to the editor.
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Letter to the editor.
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Letter to the editor.
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Ticks do not have a significant role in the food chain, but they are agents of disease and as such may help keep the deer population in check.
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The Google Lunar X Prize Foundation has announced that it will recognize the guidelines NASA has established to protect historic sites on the moon.
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Serendipity is an integral part of the scientific enterprise. Just ask the physicists working on an underwater neutrino experiment off the coast of Catania, Italy.
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A new study combining the latest archaeological evidence with state-of-the-art geoscience technologies provides evidence that climate change was a key ingredient in the collapse of the great Indus or Harappan civilization almost 4000 years ago. The study also resolves a long-standing debate over the source and fate of the Sarasvati, the sacred river of Hindu mythology.
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Scientists are developing a new approach to the medical challenge of detecting bone loss by applying a technique that originated in the Earth sciences.
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Bioengineers have developed the first structure to grow small human blood vessels, creating a 3-D test bed that offers a better way to study disease, test drugs and perhaps someday grow human tissues for transplant.
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Hereditary inequality began over 7,000 years ago in the early Neolithic era, with new evidence showing that farmers buried with tools had access to better land than those buried without.
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Cardiomyocytes, the workhorse cells that make up the beating heart, can now be made cheaply and abundantly in the laboratory.
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The US's food supply may be vulnerable to rapid groundwater depletion from irrigated agriculture, according to a new study. The study paints the highest resolution picture yet of how groundwater depletion varies across space and time in California's Central Valley and the High Plains of the central U.S.
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Physicists have developed a method that models biological cell-to-cell adhesion that could also have industrial applications.
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In 1967, NASA considered giving three astronauts a really rare view of Venus by sending them on a flyby around the second planet from the sun.
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Do you smile when you're frustrated? Most people think they don't -- but they actually do, a new study has found. What's more, it turns out that computers programmed with the latest information from this research do a better job of differentiating smiles of delight and frustration than human observers do.
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New research suggests the existing models of Earth’s core may not explain its complexities, with one study suggesting that the outer layer is shedding heat at a faster rate than believed.
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In early human evolution, when faithful females began to choose good providers as mates, pair-bonding replaced promiscuity, laying the foundation for the emergence of the institution of the modern family, a new study finds.
Naposledy aktualizované zdroje
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PhysOrg (dnes, 15:26)
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Yahoo! (dnes, 14:57)
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Guardian Unlimited Science (dnes, 14:00)
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CBC - Technology & Science News (dnes, 01:20)
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ScienceDaily (18. 5, 21:37)
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Sci-Tech Today (18. 5, 16:34)
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National Geographic News (18. 5, 14:09)
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Technology Review Feed - Tech Review Top Stories (18. 5, 06:29)
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EurekAlert (18. 5, 06:00)
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BBC Science/Nature (18. 5, 03:27)
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NYT > Science (18. 5, 02:47)
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ScienceNOW (18. 5, 00:23)
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NASA (17. 5, 02:56)
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Discovery (7. 3, 18:11)
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TIME (27. 7, 08:30)


