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General Science news 1234

Study: Cancer cure worth $50 trillion

April 26, 2006 | User rating: 5 / 5 after 6 vote(s) | No comments yet

University of Chicago researchers calculate the prospective gains from a cure for cancer would be worth about $50 trillion.


Novel Structure In South Pacific Plant May Be 'Missing Link' In Evolution Of Flowering Plants

May 17, 2006 | User rating: 5 / 5 after 7 vote(s) | No comments yet

A new University of Colorado at Boulder study involving a "living fossil plant" that has survived on Earth for 130 million years suggests its novel reproductive structure may be a "missing link" between flowering ...


Hybrid butterfly created by scientists

June 15, 2006 | User rating: 5 / 5 after 8 vote(s) | No comments yet

Scottish scientists say a South American butterfly species was created from two different butterflies in an evolutionary process thought impossible.


Insects, plants vanishing from Britain

June 25, 2006 | User rating: 5 / 5 after 7 vote(s) | No comments yet

Hundreds of species of British insects and plants have been quietly disappearing while public attention as been focused on birds and mammals.


Large dinosaurs were extremely hot in their day

July 11, 2006 | User rating: 5 / 5 after 17 vote(s) | No comments yet

If you think dinosaurs are hot today, just think back to about 110 million years ago when they really ran hot and heavy.


Mellow in Europe, crazy in America

February 26, 2007 | User rating: 5 / 5 after 6 vote(s) | No comments yet

Reed canarygrass is a bit like some people on vacation. At home, they stay on their side of the fence, and speak nicely with the neighbors. But jet them into Las Vegas and by week's end they are shoving other people out of ...


Arming the fight against resistant bacteria

April 27, 2007 | User rating: 5 / 5 after 8 vote(s) | No comments yet

In 1928, Alexander Fleming opened the door to treating bacterial infections when he stumbled upon the first known antibiotic in a Penicillium mold growing in a discarded experiment.


Wild wheat shows its muscles

May 10, 2007 | User rating: 5 / 5 after 6 vote(s) | No comments yet

A grain of wild wheat has everything required for plant propagation - even tools for drilling into the soil. It uses its two awns for this: in the dry daytime air, these bristles bend outwards. At night, dampened ...


Graduate students find no match in evening cell phone use spike and crash data

August 14, 2007 | User rating: 5 / 5 after 6 vote(s) | No comments yet

It's conventional wisdom that talking on cell phones while driving is risky business, but two University of California, Berkeley, graduate student economists report that a spike in cell phone use in recent years and on weekday ...


Bacteria from sponges make new pharmaceuticals

September 04, 2007 | User rating: 5 / 5 after 7 vote(s) | No comments yet

Thousands of interesting new compounds have been discovered inside the bodies of marine sponges according to scientists speaking today at the Society for General Microbiology’s 161st Meeting at the University of Edinburgh, ...


Researchers discover forests of endangered tropical kelp

September 26, 2007 | User rating: 5 / 5 after 9 vote(s) | No comments yet

A research team led by San Jose State University and the University of California, Santa Barbara has discovered forests of a species of kelp previously thought endangered or extinct in deep waters near the Galapagos Islands. ...


Scientists claim citrus originated in Australasia

October 01, 2007 | User rating: 5 / 5 after 6 vote(s) | No comments yet

Scientists at the Centre for Plant and Food Science at the University of Western Sydney have questioned the long-established perception that citrus originated in Southeast Asia. They believe it may have originated closer ...


UK children's exposure to science and arts 'hijacked'

November 05, 2007 | User rating: 5 / 5 after 6 vote(s) | User comments: 2

A ten year review of primary education has found that children are now taught an 'alarming' amount of maths and English at the expense of science, arts and the humanities compared to ten years ago.


More pedestrians killed during a new moon

November 14, 2007 | User rating: 5 / 5 after 14 vote(s) | No comments yet

The next time you decide to go for a moonlight stroll, you may want to check first if the moon is full.


Like humans, monkey see, monkey plan, monkey do

December 06, 2007 | User rating: 5 / 5 after 10 vote(s) | User comments: 1

How many times a day do you grab objects such as a pencil or a cup? We perform these tasks without thinking, however the motor planning necessary to grasp an object is quite complex. The way human adults grasp ...


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