 Thursday March 11, 2010
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A satellite image of a deforested area in Central Africa has revealed a 36-45 km wide circular crater in Central Africa which is most likely the result of an impact from a 2 km wide space rock
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Alberta researchers have used a respiratory reovirus to kill prostate cancer cells in a small number of patients.
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Disease and stress resulting from long summer in 2009 resulted in death of 90 percent of Vancouver Island bee hives.
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More headlines...
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Gut check
Researchers have published a genetic catalogue of bacteria living in the human digestive tract.
So what?
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Rich prefer enriching poor
A team of economists, neurologists and psychologists was surprised to discover in brain scans that rich people seemed happier seeing someone less well off gain money than when they gained money themselves. This was revealed through the brain activity of subjects during various role-play scenarios. Though the study is in no way conclusive, it suggests that fairness may be more deeply rooted in humans than previously thought.
How do you react to the success of others?
What do you think?
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Do you consider yourself a good conversationalist?
Total no. of votes:
1524
Vote!
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EPISODE 100: What's cooking in the cosmic soup?
Get some quarks, add gluons and heat to four trillion degrees Kelvin, stirring frequently. A recipe for...what?
Listen...
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Predicting snow problem
University of Utah scientists have developed an easier way for meteorologists to predict snowfall density before it falls.
So what?
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Electric car owners cash in
Most people, on average, drive their cars only an hour or two a day.
So what?
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Botnet gets the boot
Microsoft has approval to shut down a botnet that was sending out more than a billion spam messages a day. Botnets are essentially a network of slave machines which have been infected with a virus or worm by hackers. Hackers then sell or hire out the botnet to other criminals who use it for fraud, spamming and other cyber crimes. A US court allowed Microsoft to shut down 277 internet domains which were commanding and controlling up to 90,000 infected PCs globally.
How concerned are you about cyber crime?
What do you think?
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Birds lead more colourful life
A new study says that chickens have better colour vision than humans.
So what?
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Snake and spider phobias inborn
Researchers have proven that unborn crickets can gain arachnophobia (fear of spiders) based on their mother's experience. Other research suggests the widespread fear in humans of spiders and snakes may also be inborn. Both adults and children could detect images of snakes or spiders among a variety of non-threatening objects faster than they could find frogs, flowers or caterpillars. Our snake phobia may go back to when snakes were the first predators of early primates.
What specific phobia makes you sweat with fear?
What do you think?
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EPISODE 99: What does it take to become an olympic biathlete?
Julie shares the ingredients required to give the biathlon your best shot.
Listen...
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Beer boosts strong bones
A recent food science study looked at commercial beer production to find out the impact that raw materials and brewing methods have on the quantity of dietary silicon in beer.
So what?
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EPISODE 98: What is narcissism?
Why a little navel gazing might actually be good for us.
Listen...
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What do you think? Take a look at stuff IDea members are doing.
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