MRI Abundance May Lead To Excess In Back Surgeries, Study Shows

Patients reporting new low-back pain are more likely to undergo surgery if treated in an area with a higher-than-average concentration of magnetic resonance imaging machines, according to new research.
Source: ScienceDaily: Latest Science News | 16 Oct 2009 | 12:00 pm

'ECG For The Mind' Could Diagnose Depression In An Hour

An innovative diagnostic technique invented by an Australian researcher could dramatically fast-track the detection of mental and neurological illnesses.
Source: ScienceDaily: Latest Science News | 16 Oct 2009 | 12:00 pm

Catching The Interstellar Wind: Spacecraft Finds Ribbon-like Structure At Edge Of Heliosphere

NASA's Interstellar Boundary Explorer, or IBEX, spacecraft has made it possible for scientists to construct the first comprehensive sky map of our solar system and its location in the Milky Way galaxy. The new view will change the way researchers view and study the interaction between our galaxy and sun. Results include the discovery of a narrow ribbon of bright details or emissions not resembling any of the current theoretical models of the interstellar boundary region.
Source: ScienceDaily: Latest Science News | 16 Oct 2009 | 12:00 pm

Cell's Powerhouses Dismantled: Complete Inventory Of All Proteins In Mitochondria

All of life is founded on the interactions of millions of proteins. These are the building blocks for cells and form the molecular mechanisms of life. The problem is that proteins are extremely difficult to study, particularly because there are so many of them and they appear in all sizes and weights. Now, researchers have made a breakthrough in protein research -- making virtually the complete inventory of all the proteins in the mitochondria, the energy producers found in every cell.
Source: ScienceDaily: Latest Science News | 16 Oct 2009 | 12:00 pm

Magnetic Leaves Reveal Most Polluted Byways

Tree leaves may be powerful tools for monitoring air quality and planning biking routes and walking paths, suggests a new study. Leaves along bus routes were up to 10 times more magnetic than leaves on quieter streets, the study found.
Source: ScienceDaily: Latest Science News | 16 Oct 2009 | 12:00 pm

Is The Person Next To You Washing Their Hands With Soap?

People are more likely to wash their hands when they have been shamed into it, according to a new study.
Source: ScienceDaily: Latest Science News | 16 Oct 2009 | 12:00 pm

Golgi Apparatus: Simple Explanation For How Baffling Structure Works

Researchers have provided a surprisingly simple explanation for the mechanism and features of the "Golgi apparatus" -- a structure that has baffled generations of scientists. The new model developed by scientists suggests that the Golgi's unusual shape is a direct consequence of the way it works.
Source: ScienceDaily: Latest Science News | 16 Oct 2009 | 9:00 am

Scientists Give Flies False Memories

By directly manipulating the activity of individual neurons, scientists have given flies memories of a bad experience they never really had, according to a new report.
Source: ScienceDaily: Latest Science News | 16 Oct 2009 | 9:00 am

Breast Tenderness During Hormone Replacement Therapy Linked To Elevated Cancer Risk

Women who developed new-onset breast tenderness after starting estrogen plus progestin hormone replacement therapy were at significantly higher risk for developing breast cancer than women on the combination therapy who didn't experience such tenderness,
Source: ScienceDaily: Latest Science News | 16 Oct 2009 | 9:00 am

Skin Cells May Provide Early Warning For Cancer Risk Elsewhere In Body

If susceptibility to cancer is the result of inherited genetic mutations, then DNA in all the body's cells should have these mutations. A cell biologist argues that, since skin cells are easy to culture, it may be possible to observe the behavior of skin cells in a Petri dish and detect those mutations involving growth that increase our cancer risk.
Source: ScienceDaily: Latest Science News | 16 Oct 2009 | 9:00 am

The nation's weather (AP)

AP - A jet stream trough was forecast to persist across the eastern United States on Friday bringing more unsettled weather to the region.
Source: Yahoo! News: Science News | 16 Oct 2009 | 3:06 am

Last chance to see

Photographer' s search for an endangered giant
Source: BBC News | Science & Environment | UK Edition | 16 Oct 2009 | 2:42 am

Joel Salatin, America's farming heavyweight (AFP)

joel=AFP - A diehard activist for some, a pioneer for others, Joel Salatin is fighting against America's genetically-modified foods and for local subsistence farming.



Source: Yahoo! News: Science News | 16 Oct 2009 | 1:40 am

Maldives cabinet rehearses underwater meeting (AFP)

Maldives' Defence Minister Ameen Faisel is seen practising SCUBA diving by an islet near the capital Male. The 14-member cabinet is to have its first underwater cabinet meeting on October 17 to attract international attention to the plight of low-lying nations, such as the Maldives, which are highly vulnerable to climate change and rising sea levels.(AFP/HO/File)AFP - Ministers in the Maldives dived in their final rehearsals Friday ahead of an underwater cabinet meeting this weekend aimed at drawing attention to the dangers of global warming for the island nation.



Source: Yahoo! News: Science News | 16 Oct 2009 | 1:18 am

Smog Tougher on the Obese (HealthDay)

HealthDay - THURSDAY, Oct. 15 (HealthDay News) -- Air pollution appears to hit the obese hardest, causing significant increases in blood pressure, a new study finds.
Source: Yahoo! News: Science News | 15 Oct 2009 | 9:49 pm

Stem Cells Grow Heart Tissue in Lab (HealthDay)

HealthDay - THURSDAY, Oct. 15 (HealthDay News) -- Researchers report a major step toward the goal of literally rebuilding a broken heart -- creating a strip of working heart muscle in the laboratory by using a newly identified human cardiac master stem cell.
Source: Yahoo! News: Science News | 15 Oct 2009 | 9:49 pm

Mission finds bright ribbon at solar system border

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A bright ribbon of hydrogen atoms marks the edge of the solar system, where the Sun's wind meets emissions from the rest of the galaxy, researchers reported on Thursday.

Source: Reuters: Science News | 15 Oct 2009 | 8:16 pm

Nigeria's main armed group says resumes attacks (AFP)

Fighters from the Movement for the Emancipation of Niger Delta seen preparing for an operation against the Nigerian army in the oil-rich region of the Niger Delta. The group, claiming to be fighting for a fairer share of oil revenues for impoverished residents of the region, said the 90-day ceasefire it declared has ended and that it is resuming attacks against the oil industry and the military.(AFP/File/Pius Utomi Ekpei)AFP - Nigeria's main armed group in the Niger Delta, MEND, said the 90-day ceasefire it declared had ended Friday and that it is resuming attacks against the oil industry and military forces.



Source: Yahoo! News: Science News | 15 Oct 2009 | 7:13 pm

Brilliant! Roof Tiles Change Color to Save Energy

MIT graduates has developed roof tiles that change color based on the temperature.
Source: Livescience.com | 15 Oct 2009 | 6:32 pm

Forest pursues 'dark sky' status

An official bid is submitted to see a south of Scotland forest become the first "dark sky park" outside the US.
Source: BBC News | Science & Environment | UK Edition | 15 Oct 2009 | 6:29 pm

Newfangled Pogo Stick Soars 9 Feet

This is not your father's pogo stick. Hang on.
Source: Livescience.com | 15 Oct 2009 | 6:15 pm

Huge Holes in the Earth: Open-Pit Mines Seen From Space

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People have become significant earth movers, outpacing all sources of natural erosion. More and more of our footprint can be seen from space in many forms, including cities, reservoirs, agriculture and deforestation. Among the most impressive human scars on the planet are open-pit mines.

We’ve gathered some of the biggest, most spectacular and interesting mines, as captured by astronauts and satellites on the following pages.

Above: Berkeley Pit, Butte, Montana

This former copper mine operated between 1955 and 1982. Gold and silver were also mined. An elaborate system of pumps and drains kept the local water level low enough for mining. Today, the 1,780 foot-deep pit is filled with around 900 feet of very contaminated water filled with metals and chemicals such as arsenic, cadmium, pyrite, zinc, copper and sulfuric acid. The water can be as acidic as battery acid, and copper can actually be “mined” directly from the water.

Currently, the 1-mile-by-0.5-mile pit is listed as a federal Superfund site with the potential to contaminate surrounding ground water, and, surprisingly, is also a tourist attraction, complete with gift shop and $2 admission fee.

This photograph was taken Aug. 2, 2006, by astronauts aboard the International Space Station.

Image: NASA



Source: Wired: Wired Science | 15 Oct 2009 | 5:40 pm

Feds deny protection for spotted seals near Alaska (AP)

This undated photo provided by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration shows a spotted seal off of Alaska's coast. NOAA says it will not list two populations of spotted seals off Alaska's coast as threatened or endangered. (AP Photo/National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration)AP - Spotted seals off Alaska's coast do not merit endangered species protection despite losses of Arctic sea ice from global warming, a federal agency announced Thursday.



Source: Yahoo! News: Science News | 15 Oct 2009 | 5:23 pm

U.S. Congress oks sanctions on Iran's fuel suppliers (Reuters)

Reuters - The U.S. Senate on Thursday approved legislation to punish foreign oil companies that export gasoline to Iran, marking the first time both chambers of Congress have cleared the same bill imposing economic sanctions on Iran to protest its nuclear program.
Source: Yahoo! News: Science News | 15 Oct 2009 | 4:26 pm

Edge of Solar System Is Not What We Expected

ibex-copy

The edge of the solar system is tied up with a ribbon, astronomers have discovered. The first global map of the solar system reveals that its edge is nothing like what had been predicted. Neutral atoms, which are the only way to image the fringes of the solar system, are densely packed into a narrow ribbon rather than evenly distributed.

sciencenews“Our maps show structure and energy spectra that are completely different from what any model has predicted,” says study co-author Herbert Funsten of the Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico.

NASA’s Interstellar Boundary Explorer satellite, or IBEX, discovered the narrow ribbon, which completes nearly a full circle across the sky. The density of neutral atoms in the band is two to three times that in adjacent regions.

These and related findings, reported in six papers posted online Oct. 15 in Science, will not only send theorists back to the drawing board, researchers say, but may ultimately provide new insight on the interaction between the heliosphere — the vast bubble in which the solar system resides — and surrounding space.

The bubble is inflated by solar wind, the high-speed stream of charged particles blowing out from the sun to the solar system’s very edge. For 48 years, researchers have assumed that the solar wind sculpted the structure at the heliosphere’s boundary with interstellar space, says Tom Krimigis of Johns Hopkins University’s Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Maryland. But the newly found ribbon’s orientation suggests that the galaxy’s magnetic field, just outside the heliosphere, seems to be the chief organizer of structure in this region, says theorist Nathan Schwadron of Boston University, a lead author of one of the studies.

It’s not known whether the ribbon lasts for just a few years or is a permanent feature.

Equally puzzling are observations of the same boundary region with an instrument on the Cassini spacecraft, which recorded the density of atoms at higher energies, above 6,000 electron volts. From its vantage point at Saturn, Cassini sees a belt rather than a ribbonlike structure, a team led by Krimigis also reports in Science. The belt is substantially broader than the ribbon seen by IBEX but is in the same general area.

The heliosphere shields the solar system from 90 percent of energetic cosmic rays — high-speed charged particles that would otherwise bombard the planets and harm life. Understanding more about the heliosphere and its ability to filter out galactic cosmic rays could be critical for assessing the safety of human space travel, Schwadron notes. The new findings may also help predict how the heliosphere varies in shape and size as it moves through the galaxy and encounters regions of space having different densities and magnetic field strengths.

ibexmapThe ribbon found by IBEX, recorded at energies between 200 and 6,000 electron volts, is brightest at about 1,000 electron volts and lies between about 100 and 125 astronomical units from the sun, notes David McComas of the Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio. One astronomical unit is the distance between the Earth and the sun. The atoms recorded by IBEX, which orbits Earth, took a year or two, depending on their energies, to reach the craft from the outer edge of the heliosphere.

The IBEX ribbon runs perpendicular to the direction of the galaxy’s magnetic field at the interstellar boundary, an indication that the field has a much stronger than expected influence on the sun’s environs, report Schwadron and his colleagues. One possibility is that pressure from this external magnetic field has forced particles just inside the heliosphere to bunch together into a ribbon.

“First and foremost, this is a big surprise because we thought we know a lot about this region, the edge of the heliosphere,” McComas says. The Voyager 1 craft in 2004 (Science News: 1/3/04, p. 7) and the Voyager 2 craft in 2007 (Science News: 8/2/08, p. 7) journeyed to opposite sides of this fringe region of the solar system and crossed the termination shock — where the solar wind encounters a shock that precedes the influx of particles drifting into the solar system from interstellar space. Both craft recorded the density of particles and the strength of the magnetic fields.

Both Voyager 1 and 2 missed seeing the newly found ribbon because it spans a region between their flight paths, says McComas. No existing model can explain the ribbon, he adds, which was found independently by two instruments on IBEX.

Researchers had assumed that the pressure from the solar wind would compress in the heliosphere in the direction that the solar system was moving through space and create a cometlike tail in the opposite direction, notes Krimigis. “Now we know that’s wrong,” he says.

IBEX has also generated the first maps of neutral hydrogen and oxygen atoms entering the solar system from interstellar space. Previous observations had traced only incoming helium atoms. The sensitivity of the IBEX instruments allowed researchers to record the relatively small number of oxygen atoms that travel from beyond the termination shock, about 16 billion kilometers from Earth, to the spacecraft, notes study co-author Stephen Fuselier of the Lockheed Martin Advanced Technology Center in Palo Alto, California.

Hydrogen atoms are more abundant than either helium or oxygen but their low mass means they are easily swept aside by the high-speed solar wind and can’t readily be detected. The sun’s unusually low activity during the current minimum in the solar cycle allowed more of the hydrogen atoms from the outer heliosphere to travel unimpeded to the inner solar system, enabling IBEX to record those atoms, Fuselier says.

Images: 1) NASA. 2) Southwest Research Institute.

See Also:



Source: Wired: Wired Science | 15 Oct 2009 | 3:18 pm

Balloon Thought to Carry Boy Could Have Floated Longer

Helium balloons can float for days, moving up and down, according to the temperature of the gas.
Source: Discovery News Top Stories : Discovery Channel | 15 Oct 2009 | 3:15 pm

How Fake Treatments Reduce Real Pain (LiveScience.com)

LiveScience.com - People who think a placebo treatment for pain is working in fact experience reduced pain signaling in their spinal cord, according to a new study.
Source: Yahoo! News: Science News | 15 Oct 2009 | 2:51 pm

High-Speed 'Other' Internet Goes Global

A super high-speed global Internet devoted solely to science and education now includes half the countries of the world.
Source: Livescience.com | 15 Oct 2009 | 1:53 pm

Winter forecast: Warmer West, North; cooler South (AP)

AP - The Midwest and Northern United States are likely to get a warmer winter, while the Southeast can expect just the opposite: cooler and wetter conditions.
Source: Yahoo! News: Science News | 15 Oct 2009 | 1:52 pm

Mystery Emissions Spotted at Edge of Solar System

In the murky boundary between our solar system and the rest of the galaxy, scientists have spotted a bright band of surprising high-energy emission.
Source: Livescience.com | 15 Oct 2009 | 1:19 pm

Study finds potential key to growing heart cells

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Researchers looking for ways to turn stem cells into the types of heart cells they want said on Thursday they had found the key to making one important type in mice.

Source: Reuters: Science News | 15 Oct 2009 | 1:08 pm

Space Probe Hints at Moon Water Source

Findings from India's space probe bolster a theory of how water arrived on the moon.
Source: Discovery News Top Stories : Discovery Channel | 15 Oct 2009 | 1:00 pm

Sour: It’s What Carbonation Tastes Like

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The carbon dioxide in your favorite soda pop tastes sour to your tongue, thanks to an enzyme that converts CO2 into protons that sour-sensing cells can detect.

That means your Coca Cola isn’t just packed with high-fructose sweetness, but, perhaps counterintuitively, its carbonation delivers a delicious squirt of sour too, according to a new study in mice, published Thursday in the journal Science.

“The same taste cell has all the machinery to turn carbon dioxide into protons and then detect the protons as sour taste stimuli,” said Alexander Bachmanov, who was not involved in the study.

The discovery is of particular interest in the food and beverage world, Bachmanov said, because carbonation has long been recognized as a complex phenomenon for the mouth. Even if the sour-sensing cells signal that the carbonation is sour, there are more elements to the process of actually tasting, say, soda water.

detailed-tongue“If you think about carbonation, it has more than one attribute,” he said. “One is sourness, which we perceive, but there is probably also some tactile sensation how the bubbles form and burst, tickling the tongue.”

The researchers, led by longtime taste researcher Charles Zuker, now at Columbia University Medical Center, conducted the study using mice that had been genetically altered to lack sour-sensing cells. They found that such mice could not detect carbon dioxide, as seen in the chart. While the study was carried out with mice, the mechanism is expected to have been preserved in other mammals.

Zuker and his colleagues posed a natural evolutionary question: Why would mammals have developed such an excellent carbon dioxide detector?

“CO2 detection could have evolved as a mechanism to recognize CO2-producing sources — for instance, to avoid fermenting foods,” they wrote.

One happy irony of such a hypothesis is that the very same mechanism that allowed our deep ancestors to recognize and avoid fermentation allows modern humans to intentionally create the fermented beverages beer and champagne.

Or, our carbonation-detecting skills could be an accident. The sour-cell enzymes might be maintaining the pH balance of the taste buds, and the tang of soda water is just fallout.

Accident or adaptation, from sparkling wine to Coca Cola to energy drinks to the carbonated yogurt popular in Iran called doogh, humans love carbonation in its many forms. Though their share of the beverage market might be slipping a bit, the world’s population still spends half its drink money on carbonated quenchers.

Zuker’s company Senomyx develops artificial flavors, and have disclosed that they have a partnership with Coca Cola, among other companies.


Image: adamcomerford/Flickr

See Also:

WiSci 2.0: Alexis Madrigal’s Twitter, Google Reader feed, and green tech history research site; Wired Science on Twitter and Facebook.



Source: Wired: Wired Science | 15 Oct 2009 | 12:51 pm

Placebo effect is in the spine as well as the mind

LONDON (Reuters) - It's not all in the mind -- the so-called placebo effect is real and reaches right down to the spine, German scientists said on Thursday.

Source: Reuters: Science News | 15 Oct 2009 | 12:48 pm

Arctic to be ice-free in summer in 20 years: scientist

LONDON (Reuters) - Global warming will leave the Arctic Ocean ice-free during the summer within 20 years, raising sea levels and harming wildlife such as seals and polar bears, a leading British polar scientist said on Thursday.

Source: Reuters: Science News | 15 Oct 2009 | 12:37 pm

Glimpses of Solar System's edge

The first results from Nasa's Interstellar Boundary Explorer spacecraft show surprises at our Solar System's edge.
Source: BBC News | Science & Environment | UK Edition | 15 Oct 2009 | 12:13 pm

How Fake Treatments Reduce Real Pain

People who believe a pain treatment is working have reduced pain signaling in their spinal cord, says a new study.
Source: Livescience.com | 15 Oct 2009 | 12:11 pm

Study: Tingle of Carbonation Is Tasty, Too

New research suggests carbonation has a taste.
Source: Livescience.com | 15 Oct 2009 | 12:09 pm

Speed of Thought-to-Speech Traced in Brain

Electrodes implanted in brains of epileptics show neural steps of language production.
Source: Livescience.com | 15 Oct 2009 | 12:06 pm

Virtual maze 'maps' mouse memory

Researchers take live recordings from inside the brain cells of mice as they move around a virtual reality maze.
Source: BBC News | Science & Environment | UK Edition | 15 Oct 2009 | 11:26 am

Wires Inserted Into Human Brain Reveal Speech Surprise

sahin-ice

A rare set of high-resolution readouts taken directly from the wired-in brains of epileptics has provided an unprecedented look at how the brain processes language.

Though only a glimpse, it was enough to show that part of the brain’s language center handles multiple tasks, rather than one.

“If the same part of the brain does different things at different times, that’s a thunderously complex level of organization,” said Ned Sahin, a cognitive scientist at the University of California, San Diego.

In a study published Thursday in Science, Sahin’s team studied a region known as Broca’s center, named for French anatomist Paul Pierre Broca who observed that two people with damage to a certain spot in the front of their brains had lost the ability to speak, but could still think.

Broca’s discovery was made in 1865, but subsequent research has been relatively incremental, reinforcing the language-central role of this area but saying little about what goes on inside it. Speech can’t be tested in any life form other than ourselves, and the standard tool for reading the human brain is fMRI, which averages the activity of millions of neurons at set intervals. It’s useful for highlighting regions of the brain that are involved in cognitive tasks, but can’t detail what’s happening inside those areas.

Sahin’s team benefited from a brain-reading technology called intra-cranial electrophysiology, or ICE, in which electrodes are positioned inside the brain itself. It’s a medical rather than a research tool, used to precisely measure electrical activity in the brains of epileptics who don’t respond to treatment. ICE lets doctors see exactly which parts of a patient’s brain may be surgically removed to prevent future seizures. Though it’s far too invasive and risky to ever be used for academic research, it gave Sahin’s team a chance to watch brains as they processed language.

The patients are “just sitting in a hospital bed, looking at a laptop, and they’re jacked in, with wires right into their brain. And we’re listening to the brain cells talking,” said Sahin. “It’s fantastic that we cold get so close to the actual neural data. Compared to fMRI, it’s like a close-up, high-speed camera where you can see each beat of a hummingbird’s wings, versus taking a picture of the bird flying around a flower.”

During the several days that three patients at Massachusetts General Hospital were medically wired, Sahin’s team asked them to repeat words verbatim, and translate them to past and present tense.

In the space of a quarter-second, a small part of Broca’s area — the only part read by the electrodes — received each word, put the word in a correct tense, and sent it to the brain’s speech centers.

This tested only one type of verbal cognition, cautioned Sahin, and the focus was unavoidably narrow, but it was enough to show that Broca’s area is involved not only in translating speech, but receiving it. That role was considered specific to part of the brain called Wernicke’s area.

More broadly, the findings may represent a general rule for Broca’s area, and perhaps other brain regions: Each part plays multiple roles, rather than performing a single task.

“It’s very distinct from a model where part A does job A. Instead it’s part A doing jobs A, B and C,” said Sahin.

In a commentary accompanying the findings, Max Planck Institute cognitive scientists Peter Hagoort and Willem Levelt said that since Broca’s original observations, “relatively little progress has been made in understanding the neural infrastructure that supports speech production.” The fine-grained Science data “suggests that we are witnessing the ‘first go’ process at work here,” they said.

In further ICE studies of patients, Sahin’s team will study other parts of the language process, as well as the role of Broca’s area in music and movement. In addition to illuminating the brain’s complex choreography, researchers hope the findings will eventually be applied to treating language disorders.

“I’m happy to contribute a piece to the puzzle,” said Sahin. “And the puzzle seems to get more complicated each time you put another piece into it.”

Image: Ned Sahin

See Also:

Citations: “Sequential Processing of Lexical, Grammatical, and Phonological Information Within Broca’s Area.” By Ned T. Sahin, Steven Pinker, Sydney S. Cash, Donald Schomer, Eric Halgren. Science, Vol. 326 No. 5951, October 16, 2009.

“The Speaking Brain.” By Peter Hagoort and Willem Levelt. Science, Vol. 326 No. 5951, October 16, 2009.

Brandon Keim’s Twitter stream and reportorial outtakes; Wired Science on Twitter. Brandon is currently working on a book about ecosystem and planetary tipping points.



Source: Wired: Wired Science | 15 Oct 2009 | 11:12 am

Bunny boilers - Stockholm 'burning rabbits to produce heat'

Swedes have mixed reactions after hearing reports of rabbits being used to produce renewable heat.
Source: BBC News | Science & Environment | UK Edition | 15 Oct 2009 | 11:03 am

BLOG: This Winter: Warmer North, Cooler South

Forecasters predict a wetter and cooler south and a drier and warmer north this winter.
Source: Discovery News Top Stories : Discovery Channel | 15 Oct 2009 | 10:10 am

Arctic Ice Cap to Vanish During Summers

North Pole summers will be ice-free within 20 to 30 years, a polar research team says.
Source: Discovery News Top Stories : Discovery Channel | 15 Oct 2009 | 9:50 am

BLOG: Google Wave by Invitation Only

Google Wave is a new communications tool that's just for the cool kids.
Source: Discovery News Top Stories : Discovery Channel | 15 Oct 2009 | 9:25 am

Body Part Mummified With Ancient Egyptian Recipe

Researchers mummify a body part using an Ancient Egyptian salt drying process.
Source: Discovery News Top Stories : Discovery Channel | 15 Oct 2009 | 8:25 am

Plants Know Their Siblings

Plants use chemical cues to recognize and cooperate with siblings, while spurring competition among rivals.
Source: Livescience.com | 15 Oct 2009 | 8:21 am

Human Genetic 'Switchboard' Mapped

A map of the switches governing the operation of the human genome is plotted.
Source: Discovery News Top Stories : Discovery Channel | 15 Oct 2009 | 8:20 am

Bunnies Burned for Heat

Sweden has come up with a novel solution for the growing suburban rabbit population.
Source: Livescience.com | 15 Oct 2009 | 7:58 am

Arctic Poised to be Open Sea

Arctic ocean could be ice free in 30 years.
Source: Livescience.com | 15 Oct 2009 | 7:58 am

Pharaonic-era sacred lake unearthed in Egypt

CAIRO (Reuters) - Archaeologists have unearthed the site of a pharaonic-era sacred lake in a temple to the Egyptian goddess Mut in the ruins of ancient Tanis, the Culture Ministry said on Thursday.

Source: Reuters: Science News | 15 Oct 2009 | 7:07 am

Massive killer whale pod sighted

A massive pod of specialist mackerel-eating killer whales is filmed off the coast of Scotland by a BBC crew for the first time.
Source: BBC News | Science & Environment | UK Edition | 15 Oct 2009 | 6:20 am

Artificial Retina Can Restore Sight to the Blind

Scientists have developed a retinal implant that send images directly to optical nerves.
Source: Discovery News Top Stories : Discovery Channel | 15 Oct 2009 | 6:00 am

The toad that throws itself down a mountain - and survives

The pebble toad of Venezuela curls up like a ball and throws itself down the side of a mountain.
Source: BBC News | Science & Environment | UK Edition | 15 Oct 2009 | 3:08 am