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6,101 articles from National Geographic News
- title
- National Geographic News
- tags
- description
- National Geographic News
- last updated
- May 25, 2012 (00:48)
- homepage
- http://news.nationalgeographic.com
- feed url
- http://news.nationalgeographic.com/index.rss
- date added
- September 8, 2007 (17:03)
- meta
- alexa, technorati, rojo
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FRIDAY 26. FEBRUARY, 2010
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As the Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics draw to a close, future athletes will likely have to work harder than ever to beat any world records set during the games, says a recent study that found the results from many events are now close to the limits of human performance.
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THURSDAY 25. FEBRUARY, 2010
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A new study turns to chaos theory to explain why some Hollywood films are so engaging -- and why your attention wanders during others.
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A newfound species of fossil crocodile that reached 19 feet long attacked early humans in Africa more than a million years ago, a new study says.
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The drowning of a Florida SeaWorld animal trainer by "Shamu"—the stage name assigned to multiple SeaWorld captive killer whales—is not typical behavior for the whales, scientists say.
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How Bloom Energy's mini, green power plant works—and why its press conference today had some experts seeing red, or just plain underwhelmed.
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WEDNESDAY 24. FEBRUARY, 2010
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The hot Jupiter known as WASP-12b is so puffed up by its star that it's losing mass, according to a new study that suggests the missing matter is forming a ring around the star.
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Four 105-million-year-old dinosaur skulls with surprisingly tiny teeth may give scientists a head start on understanding the biggest animals ever to walk the Earth, a new study says.
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Set to be unveiled today, Bloom Energy's top-secret Bloom Box fuel cell system could bring cheap, green energy to U.S. homes. Experts explain how it could all work—or not.
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Groundwater--the water stored underground in rocks and soil--accounts for more than 30 percent of Earth's freshwater, but it's hard to measure what you can't see. As groundwater's dwindling supply approaches crisis levels in some regions, scientists are using NASA satellites to track where it's disappearing the fastest.
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TUESDAY 23. FEBRUARY, 2010
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Unusual ten-foot waves hammered the Hispaniola coast shortly after the January 12 Haiti earthquake, killing three and destroying several homes, scientists have announced.
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MONDAY 22. FEBRUARY, 2010
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The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) atom smasher is to buzz back to life this week. Potential discoveries include the "God particle" and new dimensions.
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During sleep, information locked in the brain's short-term storage migrates into a longer-term "database," according to a new study that backs up the benefits of midday power naps.
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SUNDAY 21. FEBRUARY, 2010
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Hearing people talk at cocktail parties may be easier if you've been musically trained, according to new research that shows music fine-tunes certain language abilities in the brain.
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FRIDAY 19. FEBRUARY, 2010
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Two neighboring Russian volcanoes exploded in unison last week. A geologist explains the science behind the picture.
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Bottlenose dolphins have a condition like human type 2 diabetes, but the animals can turn it off and on. The discovery suggests human medicine might someday do the same.
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THURSDAY 18. FEBRUARY, 2010
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WEDNESDAY 17. FEBRUARY, 2010
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A new laser system can kill mosquitoes without harming other insects, as shown in slow-motion video. It's all part of the effort to combat malaria. Video.
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Prehistoric axes found on a Greek island show that seafaring existed in the Mediterranean long before the arrival of Homo sapiens in Europe.
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BBC Science/Nature (dnes, 13:03)
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TIME (dnes, 08:25)
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EurekAlert (dnes, 06:00)
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ScienceDaily (dnes, 03:53)
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National Geographic News (dnes, 00:48)
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Sci-Tech Today (24. 5, 23:45)
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Discovery (24. 5, 22:06)
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NASA (24. 5, 21:35)
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