Fall of antibiotics
Break out the garlic and sulfur compounds. The Guardian’s predicting the end of antibiotics in as soon as 10 years:
… Read the rest “Fall of antibiotics”Hyperbole? Unfortunately not. The highly serious journal Lancet
Break out the garlic and sulfur compounds. The Guardian’s predicting the end of antibiotics in as soon as 10 years:
… Read the rest “Fall of antibiotics”Hyperbole? Unfortunately not. The highly serious journal Lancet
Not Galactus, but Jupiter, says New Scientist. The king of planets got to be so big because it gorged itself on super-Earths sometime in its early past:
… Read the rest “Eater of planets.”New simulations by Shu Lin Li of Peking
Nature reveals a hidden connection between Sahara dust and the Amazon rainforest:
… Read the rest “Desert feeds jungle.”Significant amounts of plant nutrients have been found in atmospheric mineral dust blowing from a vast
Big show. Shooting stars. Tomorrow night, night after that. Space.com has some details.
Go. Watch the skies.
Oh. OK.
Discovery is reporting that the population of radioactive boars is increasing in Europe:
… Read the rest “Radioactive boars rising.”Radioactive wild boars are on the rise in Germany, where they have attacked and frightened
A close-up from another page of Charles Knight’s Pictorial Museum of Animated Nature. This may be mistitled – other creatures on the same page were called… Read the rest “Science Art: Ventricose Cuttlefish, probably by Charles Knight”
The Telegraph heralds the future fleet of mighty airships:
… Read the rest “Zeppelin reborn”Hybrid Air Vehicles has built a scale prototype of what will soon be the largest flying vessel in the world – a huge balloon made
Science Daily has the skinny on cheaper solar power:
… Read the rest “Bringing down the sun.”Stanford engineers have figured out how to simultaneously use the light and heat of the sun to generate electricity in a way that could
The Christian Science Monitor loves primates. On the heels of the flying squirrel discovery, they’re analyzing the economic ramifications of “gorilla glass”:
… Read the rest “Gorilla glass!”Two
It’s really hard to beat the Christian Science Monitor’s headline on this story…. Monkeys hate flying squirrels, report monkey-annoyance experts:
… Read the rest “Need to bother your monkey? Try flying squirrels!”“Human
They came for Pluto. They came for Brontosaurus. And now, BoingBoing reports, they’ve come for Triceratops:
… Read the rest “Fare thee well, Triceratops.”maybe we should be calling it torosaurus now, I’m not sure. See,
Seals and seal hunters, from Charles Knight’s Pictorial Museum of Animated Nature, exact publication date unknown but currently accessible at archive.org.… Read the rest “Science Art: Seals, from The Pictorial Museum of Animated Nature.”
Nature wades into the controversy, asking scientists what would really happen if we killed all the mosquitoes:
… Read the rest “The mosquito conundrum: Why not kill ’em all?”A stronger argument for keeping mosquitoes might be found if they provide
I have a vague memory of writing a story back in the 1990s about researchers trying to figure out how to use lethal cone snail venom for medical purposes. Well, EurekAlert says they finally… Read the rest “Snail spit kills pain.”
This is more covering-the-coverage than flogging a new discovery, but the New York Times is keeping tabs on the process of turning pond scum into an industrial fuel source:
… Read the rest “Super-scum. Again.”Foreign genes
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