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Tuesday, January 6, 2009
"eppur si muove"

Features and Background


Do cities make your brain hurt? ... [more]
Superman's TurboNote: Get TurboNote+ desktop sticky notes
There is a role for the use of antibiotics as a preventative ... [more]
Future astronauts could sit back and let their brain waves drive the spaceship ... [more]
Insomnia costs a lot, in more ways than one ... [more]
Is human placenta a wonder drug, or are intravenous infusions of it just another health fad? ... [more]
Could a recent series of earthquakes around Yellowstone be the warning signs of a coming apocalypse? ... [more]
One fifth of the world's population cannot see the Milky Way because street lamps and building lights are too bright, and those bright city lights kill not just stars ... [more]
How we have mapped the world ... [more]
In case you missed the top science stories for 2008, here's a selection: [more], [more], [more] ... [more]
Emerging technologies to keep an eye on ... [more]
Space -- the top pictures and the top stories in cosmology ... [more]

There was more to archaeology in 2008 than Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull ... [more]
If you thought the levee breach in New Orleans was bad, what would happen to the Netherlands if their dykes disintegrate? ... [more]
The concept of turning back or slowing the processes of aging no longer exists simply in the realm of movies such as The Curious Case of Benjamin Button ... [more]
How did life get from early single-celled organisms to the enormity of the blue whale? ... [more]
The focus of airport security is shifting from analyzing the content of carry-ons to analyzing the content of passengers' intentions and emotions ... [more]
We’ve fought our way through blinding snow, numbing cold, and biting wind to reach this spot, the realm of polar explorers and wild reindeer, and the feeling is magic ... [more]
Supersonics getting ready to take flight again ... [more]
Genetic engineering moves from labs to homes ... [more]
Weird dinosaur crest may have been a communication device ... [more]
Is recycling worth it? ... [more]
Put this in your teen's stocking: car keys that will stop them using their cellphone while driving ... [more]
Making decisions about crime and punishment is a complicated business, as much for the brain as for the person involved ... [more]
Did magnetic chaos wipe out the dinosaurs? ... [more]
A new form of teen self-harm raises concerns ... [more]
Encouraging your kids to believe in Santa won't hurt them, even if it does make you feel you're lying to them ... [more]
Brushing three times a day keeps pneumonia away ... [more]
Nostalgia is being recognised as a fundamental human strength ... [more]
Floating flexible homes could provide the answer to flood- and hurricane-prone habitation ... [more]
Dolphins are tool users too ... [more]
Taking fertility drugs may increase women’s risk of cancer ... [more]
New coral reefs discovered off Florida ... [more]
Wet window panes held the key to understanding why water doesn't soak evenly into the ground ... [more]
Nanosensors can detect small amounts of cancer-causing toxins or trace the effectiveness of cancer drugs inside living cells ... [more]
Arthritis is a tricky problem to diagnose and treat, and even trickier when it strikes children ... [more]
Ancient armoured amphibian had the world's oddest bite ... [more]
Older antelopes get bolder ... [more]
Bacteria can detoxify deadly sea water ... [more]
Orangutan gives a little whistle ... [more]
It's not just stray random encounters with passing stars that push out-lying comets in towards us ... [more]
Ancient temple yields clues to the development of agriculture ... [more]
World War II wrecks could be reaching a tipping point for turning into toxic hazards ... [more]
Smaller males get more action than their bigger counterparts because they mature faster and are quicker on their feet ... [more]
Water vapour and carbon dioxide found in atmosphere of far-away planet ... [more]
Pedallers of the world, unite! You have nothing to lose but your chains ... [more]
Biologically, chronologically, allegorically and delusionally, touch is the mother of all sensory systems ... [more]
Have researchers been wasting time figuring out a mathematical formula to explain why people procrastinate? ... [more]

[Search Archive]



Books and Media


The museum of Philadelphia's College of Physicians are bringing their 100-year-old medical oddities to life in the 21st century ... [more]
A moral vocation in science has never prevented it from mingling with wealth and power ... [more]
What did 2008 bring to our bedside reading table? [more] ... [more]

Life at large and under the microscope ... [more]
Geography is destiny ... [more]
The Age of Wonder is a gripping account of the scientific research that inspired a sense of wonder in poets and experimenters alike ... [more]
Collisions and pile-ups can take on galactic proportions ... [more]
What's on the bookshelf of an environmental toxicologist? ... [more]
What makes places look frightening? ... [more]
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Take a look at a magnetically bound tube of hot gas, 12,000 miles long and a hundred miles wide, moving at 30,000 miles per hour ... [more]
Does a virtual world really offer an escape from oneself? ... [more]
Why don't we know more about Lord Kelvin? ... [more]
Here's a book that makes the unspeakable irresistable ... [more]
The whole process of deciding what messages we'd send to other worlds forces us to examine what some of our highest values are ... [more]
The greatest nature essay ever ... [more]
There's a mismatch between our modern lives and our ancient brains ... [more]
The End of Food may make you freeze in the supermarket aisles ... [more]
Bablylonian clay tablets speak to us of mortgages and temple maintenance, pleas to the gods and to doctors ... [more]
The latest PBS enviromental series, covering transport, uses vivid visuals to transform bland public television into kinetic viewing ... [more]
Is oppression and cruelty a distinctive mark of being human? ... [more]
Remake of The Day the Earth Stood Still still shakes a warning finger at humanity ... [more]
What came before science? ... [more]
It's fun to take things apart, see how they work and put them back together in different ways, whether you're in the lab or in the kitchen ... [more]
If you're feeling old, spare a thought for a dozen living fossils still kicking around the planet ... [more]
Objects can spark the wonder of science, whether maps, prisms, soap bubbles, sand castles, mud and chocolate meringue, dice and marbles, bikes and lasers ... [more]
Science fiction movies are not really about science, but are about us ... [more]
In trying times, the turn to advice books can be a dangerous one ... [more]
There are fortunes to be made from junk history and junk science, just as there are from junk food ... [more]
An Amazon encounter leads to a linguist's loss of faith [more] ... [more]
Take a look at how the International Space Station has changed over the past 10 years ... [more]
Who lives by the road dies by the road ... [more]
Novel tells the true story of the Great Diamond Hoax of 1872 ... [more]
A man and his wolf talks about the relationship between human and non-human animals ... [more]
Health care providers won't be surprised to learn of suppression and inaccurate reporting of new drug information ... [more]
The dopiness of so-called ecotainment — environmentally virtuous entertainment — rises in direct proportion to its message-mongering ... [more]
The scarcest resource in an information society is not information but attention ... [more]
Space VidVision winner: Space is like lingerie -- it’s only when someone’s in it that it becomes interesting ... [more]
Now that climate has become the world’s cause célèbre, it is no surprise that there is a steady shower of books on meteorological matters ... [more]
An eighteenth-century longitutional hoax took in Dava Sobel and others ... [more]
IIRC, there's good news from the frontline of memory research ... [more]
Our society's almost total reliance on mathematics is largely unknown and unappreciated ... [more]
It's more than molecular chemistry, photosynthesis is an adventure ... [more]
Having access to all the knowledge on the Internet drives out diversity ... [more]
What will the future of war bring? ... [more]
Can you trust the medical advice you hear on the radio? ... [more]
As a great twitcher once said, consider the birds ... [more]
Fake lunar images brought a truthful representation to the early days of scientific photography ... [more]
Darwin art flipped the bird ... [more]
The whole history of Western medicine can be seen in the crowded and unhealthy streets of London ... [more]
Computers can fundamentally shape the cognition of those who grow up using them ... [more]
One might not have the mathematics to follow quantum science, but everyone has a potential stake in what it seems to imply about reality and our relationship with it ... [more]

[Search Archive]


Analysis and Opinion


If you're still trying to detocx after new year celebrations, take the claims of the multimillion-dollar detox industry with a grain of salt ... [more]
What does it take to build an affordable house? ... [more]
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There were a lot of shonky statistics around in 2008 ... [more]
Stephen Pinker talks about science, politics and trust ... [more]
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Befriending environmentalists will be your golden ticket to free lightbulbs, handmade soap,and many other perks ... [more]
We should recognize how primitive and crude our understanding of psychiatric drugs is, and how limited our understanding of the biology of mental disorder ... [more]
The way we're psychologically wired and socially conditioned to respond to crises makes us ill-suited to react to the abstract and seemingly remote threat posed by global warming ... [more]
Fertility rates can decline rapidly, and not necessarily as a result of family planning programmes ... [more]

Try listening to water or to silence itself ... [more]
Tell your friends about SciTech Daily Review

Technology, culture and virtue ... [more]
Now that the old, predictable future of monorails and flying cars is safely behind us, what can we say of the impossibly vast ocean of time that looms? ... [more]
Hysteria is a condition that depends on words, so we must look hard and carefully at the words we use and misuse ... [more]
The reasons why more young single women vacation abroad may be the same as why most neo-Nazis are young single men ... [more]
Though by no means a perfect instrument, polls do make it possible for more opinions from more people to be heard ... [more]
Check out our sister site
Arts & Letters Daily
for excellent items on art, literature and philosophy.

Can a career scientist successfully navigate Washington, stand up to Big Oil and push major energy reform through the legislature? ... [more]
Teaching science in the classroom can be a downright pleasure ... [more]
Who owns the Moon? ... [more]
Should anthropologists work alongside soldiers? ... [more]
Why do religionists crave so much the recognition of science? ... [more]
Everyone is, to some degree, inbred -- so how much does it matter?, asks Steve Jones ... [more]
Tweaks, not sermons, may be the most effective tools in promoting environmentalism ... [more]
Does modern cosmology force us to choose between a creator and a system of parallel universes? ... [more]
If I'm not gullible and you're not gullible, how come some improbable stories take a long time to die? ... [more]
What is a paediatrician to do when a young patient says "please don't tell my parents this"? ... [more]
Attitudes to nanotech split along a cultural divide ... [more]
Consumers should be wary of websites from clinics that offer stem-cell treatments ... [more]
Snake oil or signalling a path to success? Genetic tests for athletic ability attract ambitious parents [more]...[more] ... [more]
Dr Josef Mengele regarded himself as a normal scientist, held seminars, got research funds from the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute, and reported regularly to his mentor ... [more]
How scientists thwarted Bush on stem cell research ... [more]
Are computers and the Internet making people a little bit autistic? ... [more]
It's hard to see how religious critics of biotechnology can object to the resurrection of the Neaderthal, having drawn a tight moral line around our species ... [more]
Proposal to mass test for AIDS in Africa reflects public health at its best and worst ... [more]
Social scientists and historians have long made a serious error by not taking natural resources into account in their attempts to understand social structures ... [more]
How could treating science like finance be helpful? ... [more]
The catastrophic career of Walter Alvarez ... [more]
Pakistan’s closure of the Khyber Pass supply route simply reinforces the need to invest in space-based solar power ... [more]
Can prize money do more to stimulate innovation than existing incentives? ... [more]
Neuroscience has become a popular way for people to make wild irrational claims ... [more]
The growing popularity of female genital cosmetic surgery has troubling ramifications ... [more]
The threat of genetic McCarthyism sparks debate on the limitations and complexities of genomic information, whether regarding our health or that of our leaders ... [more]
Instead of sports academies at high school, why not school science academies? ... [more]
The house in space gets an extreme makeover, but is it just window-dressing? ... [more]
South Dakota doctors are required to tell patients that abortion will "terminate the life of a whole, separate, unique, living human being" as part of extensive informed consent ... [more]
Financial and political leaders led us to ruin because they did not understand Keynes, not Darwin ... [more]

[Search Archive]


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