Latest Articles: Science/Tech
CIA Is Funding Government-Led Chemtrailing Project: Spy Agency to Help Study “Security Impacts” of Geo-engineering Post Date: 2013-07-21 13:56:06 by Southern Style
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CIA Is Funding Government-Led Chemtrailing Project: Spy Agency to Help Study Security Impacts of Geo-engineering by Steve Watson The CIA is funding a scientific study to determine the feasibility of altering the planets climate in order to stave off climate change, according to documents released by The National Academy of Sciences. The papers reveal that the project will run for 21 months at a cost of $630,000, with a final report due in 2014. The CIA backed scientists will study how weather patterns could be influenced and altered, and assess the potential impacts of geo-engineering attempts. The NAS website notes that the funding for the study is coming from the ...
Evidence of Major Cataclysm on Mars Which Would Have Destroyed Any Life Post Date: 2013-07-20 19:27:10 by Original_Intent
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Analysis of data collected by the Mars Curiosity Rover has shown that a cataclysmic event would have resulted in the end of life on the surface of Mars. Photo: NASA By John BlackAncient OriginsJuly 20, 2013 The event could be related to volcanos or a massive collision of some sort that would have completely destroyed the atmosphere. To make it clear, there is evidence that on Mars billions of years ago, there was an atmosphere rich in oxygen and recently the Mars Curiosity team also found proof of water (which may still exist underground). The measurements of different gases in the Martian atmosphere and a comparison to Earths, showed that the event must have happened about 4 billion ...
You Did Not Go to the Moon Post Date: 2013-07-19 21:26:27 by Original_Intent
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NASA Mission Control Engineer Raymond Teagues Quoting A Russian Scientist and Colleagues on the Apollo Moon Landings by Avalon Intellihub.com July 3, 2013 The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) has named these three astronauts as the prime crew of the Apollo 11 lunar landing mission. Left to right, are Neil A. Armstrong, commander; Michael Collins, command module pilot; and Edwin E. Aldrin Jr., lunar module pilot. The 30th anniversary of the Apollo 11 Moon mission is celebrated July 20, 1999. (Photo by NASA/Newsmakers) Air Force Veteran and NASA Mission Operations Control Room Engineer Raymond F. Teague, who appeared on the Alex Jones InfoWars.com broadcast July 3, 2013, ...
The FBI Does Some Much-Needed Soul Searching About Just How "Expert" Its Expert Testimony Is Post Date: 2013-07-19 10:28:25 by Ada
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The FBI is instigating a massive review of its forensic science practices. Photo by EMMANUEL DUNAND/AFP/Getty Images The Washington Post brings us a look at the preliminary findings of a sweeping federal review into thousands of old criminal cases in which FBI forensic experts may have overstated their scientific testimony to help secure a conviction. The early takeaway is difficult to ignore: Exaggerated testimony may have played a role in landing at least 27 people on death row. It's too early to say how many of those cases resulted in wrongful convictions, but the news has already led to an 11th-hour stay of execution for a Mississippi man who was facing death by lethal injection. ...
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A Sword-Like Attachment For Planes Will Save United Airlines $200 Million Per Year Post Date: 2013-07-18 01:36:29 by farmfriend
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A Sword-Like Attachment For Planes Will Save United Airlines $200 Million Per Year Alex Davies Jul. 17, 2013, 2:49 PM There's a new United Airlines plane in the skies, with a dangerous-looking feature that will actually make it more efficient. The Boeing 737-800, which took its maiden test flight in Washington on Tuesday, is the first aircraft fitted with the new Split Scimitar Winglet, a curved attachment to the tip of the wing that is appropriately named for a sword. The winglets reduce wind drag, and can cut fuel use on the 737 by 2%. That doesn't sound like a ton, but United says that once the winglets are installed on its 737, 757, and 767 fleets, it will save more than $200 ...
9th grade student “Cress + WiFi” experiment attracts international attention Post Date: 2013-07-15 22:43:15 by Southern Style
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9th grade student Cress + WiFi experiment attracts international attention Home → Health Effects → 9th grade student Cress + WiFi experiment attracts international attention Cress expose to WiFi. Yum? Foreign researchers are extremely excited for a biology project from five 9th grade girls. Researchers from England, Holland and Sweden have shown great interest in the five girls biology experiments. Take 400 Cress seeds and place them into 12 trays. Then place six trays in two rooms at the same temperature. Give them the same amount of water and sun over 12 days, and remember to expose half of them to mobile [Wi-Fi] radiation. It is ...
Snowden reveals HAARP’s Global Assassination Agenda Post Date: 2013-07-15 15:59:32 by Itistoolate
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Snowden reveals HAARPs Global Assassination Agenda By Oliver Wilis, on July 10th, 2013%Snowden speaking from a Custom Faraday Cage in Sheremetyevo Airports Hotel Novotel (Photo: The Internet Chronicle) MOSCOW, Russia Edward Snowden, NSA whistleblower and fugitive, released documents Tuesday to Internet Chronicle reporters proving that the High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program, or HAARP, is definitively engaged in a program of assassination and mind control. While the military prison industrial complex has routinely insisted that the Alaskan-based HAARP is only meant to study natural phenomena in earths ionosphere, Snowden has managed to blow open a brutally ...
Typewriter makes a comeback in Russia Post Date: 2013-07-13 00:58:57 by Tatarewicz
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President Vladimir Putin's secret service the FSO has invited tenders for hundreds of ink and correction typewriter ribbons for the classic Triumph Adler Twen 180 and Olympia Comfort models. Olympia, which is based in Hattingen, North Rhine-Westphalia, has also confirmed that Russian firms recently ordered 20 new, electric typewriters for at least 200 each, along with supplies of ink ribbons. The Russian newspaper Iswestija which has seen the invitation for tender, says that particularly sensitive documents are now only being put on paper and no longer archived electronically - because it is more secure that way. And this is not only the case for secret services, but also in ...
Emerging evidence suggests that Armageddon will surface in 1 billion years Post Date: 2013-07-12 01:19:39 by Tatarewicz
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Experts are warning that life on Earth as we know it, will die out in the future, and will look like the Upper Geyser Basin region in Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming State. The death of all living species will begin to happen once the Sun grows older and hotter. This is according to research findings, which were released at the National Astronomy conference in Scotland, at the University of St. Andrews. Mainly, the reason why life forms will be die off is because they will not have much carbon dioxide to work with, claims the study. Soaring temperatures will generate larger amounts of evaporation, leaving the rainwater to respond by lowering the amount of carbon dioxide to such a ...
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50,000-Year-Old Underwater Forest Discovered Near Alabama Post Date: 2013-07-09 08:01:23 by Ada
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Scuba divers have discovered a primeval underwater forest off the coast of Alabama. The Bald Cypress forest was buried under ocean sediments, protected in an oxygen-free environment for more than 50,000 years, but was likely uncovered by Hurricane Katrina in 2005, said Ben Raines, one of the first divers to explore the underwater forest and the executive director of the nonprofit Weeks Bay Foundation, which researches estuaries. The forest contains trees so well-preserved that when they are cut, they still smell like fresh Cypress sap, Raines said. The stumps of the Cypress trees span an area of at least 0.5 square miles (0.8 kilometers), several miles from the coast of Mobile, Ala., ...
This Thorium Reactor Has the Power of a Norse God Post Date: 2013-07-04 13:12:28 by Southern Style
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This Thorium Reactor Has the Power of a Norse GodThe Uranium-235 and -238 we use in modern nuclear fission reactors are humanity's single most energy-dense fuel source (1,546,000,000 MJ/L), but that potent power potential comes at a steep priceand not just during natural disasters. Its radioactive plutonium byproducts remain lethally irradiated for millennia. That's why one pioneering Nordic company is developing an alternative fuel that doesn't produce it.When uranium is used in a conventional Light Water Reactor, it's converted into plutonium (and if the U238 isotope is used, the result can be fissable Pu239). Even without the danger of weapons-grade plutonium ...
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Jobs - the trailer Post Date: 2013-06-30 09:59:28 by Lod
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Three-person IVF: UK government backs mitochondrial transfer Post Date: 2013-06-29 15:50:05 by scrapper2
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The government is to push ahead with plans that would allow doctors to prevent major childhood diseases by creating IVF babies that have genetic material from three people. The controversial procedure, called mitochondrial transfer, uses a snippet of DNA from a healthy female donor to prevent mothers passing on devastating genetic disorders such as muscular dystrophy and heart and liver conditions. Pioneered in Britain by researchers at Newcastle University, the procedure targets diseases caused by faulty mitochondria the tiny power units inside our cells. The disorders tend to affect parts of the body that need the most energy, including the heart, brain and muscles. Around one in ...
Sensory signals travel to two separate areas of the brain simultaneously Post Date: 2013-06-29 05:45:21 by Tatarewicz
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Science Daily: June 27, 2013 A series of studies conducted by Randy Bruno, PhD, and Christine Constantinople, PhD, of Columbia University's Department of Neuroscience, topples convention by showing that sensory information travels to two places at once: not only to the brain's mid-layer (where most axons lead), but also directly to its deeper layers. The study appears in the June 28, 2013, edition of the journal Science. Share This: For decades, scientists have thought that sensory information is relayed from the skin, eyes, and ears to the thalamus and then processed in the six-layered cerebral cortex in serial fashion: first in the middle layer (layer 4), then in the ...
'Phishing' scams explode worldwide, researchers shows Post Date: 2013-06-28 05:40:15 by Tatarewicz
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Those insidious email scams known as phishing, in which a hacker uses a disguised address to get an Internet user to install malware, rose 87 percent worldwide in the past year, a security firm said Friday. These schemes affected some 37.3 million users around in the 12 months to April 30, according to a report by the Russian-based security firm Kaspersky. "The number of fraudulent websites and servers used in attacks has more than tripled since 2012, and more than 50 percent of the total number of individual targets were fake copies of the websites of banks and other credit and financial organizations," Kaspersky said. The attackers often use emails purportedly from trusted ...
For the First Time, a Donor Mouse Has Been Cloned Using a Drop of Peripheral Blood from Its Tail Post Date: 2013-06-28 00:51:35 by Tatarewicz
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ScienceDaily: June 26, 2013 From obesity to substance abuse, from anxiety to cancer, genetically modified mice are used extensively in research as models of human disease. Researchers often spend years developing a strain of mouse with the exact genetic mutations necessary to model a particular human disorder. But what if that mouse, due to the mutations themselves or a simple twist of fate, was infertile? Currently, two methods exist for perpetuating a valuable strain of mouse. If at least one of the remaining mice is male and possesses healthy germ cells, the best option is intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI), an in vitro fertilization procedure in which a single sperm is ...
New laser to detect methane leaks Post Date: 2013-06-27 23:32:25 by Tatarewicz
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ScienceAlert: Researchers are developing a new type of laser system that will monitor methane, the main component of natural gas, levels across large areas. This will provide a useful tool for monitoring greenhouse gas emissions. The system has the potential to detect methane leaks from long-distance underground gas pipelines and gas fields, including coal seam gas extraction operations, and to measure methane emissions from animal production. The researchers, based in the University's Institute for Photonics and Advanced Sensing, have conducted a preliminary study and are developing the laser system for further testing. "We hope to accurately measure methane concentrations up ...
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High-Octane Bacteria Could Ease Pain at the Pump: Engineered E. Coli Mass-Produce Key Precursor to Potent Biofuel Post Date: 2013-06-26 01:51:39 by Tatarewicz
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ScienceDaily: June 25, 2013 New lines of engineered bacteria can tailor-make key precursors of high-octane biofuels that could one day replace gasoline, scientists at the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard University and the Department of Systems Biology at Harvard Medical School report in the June 24 online edition of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Share This: ? The same lines can also produce precursors of pharmaceuticals, bioplastics, herbicides, detergents, and more. "The big contribution is that we were able to program cells to make specific fuel precursors," said Pamela Silver, Ph.D., a Wyss Institute Core Faculty ...
Richard Clarke: Hastings Accident “Consistent with a Car Cyber Attack” Post Date: 2013-06-25 10:35:40 by Ada
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Intelligence agencies
know how to remotely seize control of a car. Former U.S. National Coordinator for Security, Infrastructure Protection, and Counter-terrorism Richard Clarketold The Huffington Post on Monday that the fatal crash of journalist Michael Hastings Mercedes C250 coupe last week is consistent with a car cyber attack. There is reason to believe that intelligence agencies for major powers including the United States know how to remotely seize control of a car, Clarke said. On Saturday, Infowars.com posted a video of a talk presented by Dr. Kathleen Fisher, a program manager for DARPA, the Defense Advanced ...
Initial step in origin of life Post Date: 2013-06-24 22:57:42 by Tatarewicz
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ScienceDaily: June 24, 2013 How is it that a complex organism evolves from a pile of dead matter? How can lifeless materials become organic molecules that are the bricks of animals and plants? Scientists have been trying to answer these questions for ages. Researchers at the Max Planck Institut für Kohlenforschung have now disclosed the secret of a reaction that has to do with the synthesis of complex organic matter before the origin of life. Since the 1960's it has been well known that when concentrated hydrogen cyanide (HCN) is irradiated by UV light, it forms an imidazole intermediate that is a key substance for synthesis of nucleobases and nucleotides in abiotic ...
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