Latest Articles: Science/Tech
Woman's first partner may become genetic father of all her kids, telegony says Post Date: 2007-07-01 18:20:21 by Zipporah
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27.06.2007 Recently, the phenomenon of telegony has become really popular as propagation of womens faithfulness and virginity. It is quite OK to speak about telegony as the philosophy of morals. But for some reason people speak about telegony in connection with genetics. Why so ? The telegony idea gained much popularity among those who supported segregation between blacks and whites, and was said to be particularly popular among the circles connected to the Ku-Klux-Klan. One of the ardent advocates of telegony, candidate of historical sciences Valery Bochkarev says that if a woman has had lots of sexual contacts with various men before her first childbirth she then has her ...
Perception: The Reality beyond Matter Post Date: 2007-07-01 11:29:08 by gengis gandhi
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AqnEGu8VF8Y
Babies not as innocent as they pretend Post Date: 2007-07-01 01:23:45 by Horse
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Whether lying about raiding the biscuit tin or denying they broke a toy, all children try to mislead their parents at some time. Yet it now appears that babies learn to deceive from a far younger age than anyone previously suspected. Behavioural experts have found that infants begin to lie from as young as six months. Simple fibs help to train them for more complex deceptions in later life. Until now, psychologists had thought the developing brains were not capable of the difficult art of lying until four years old. Following studies of more than 50 children and interviews with parents, Dr Vasudevi Reddy, of the University of Portsmouth's psychology department, says she has ...
the Carver - is it a car? or a bike? Post Date: 2007-07-01 01:10:14 by kiki
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Saturday's Full Moon Offers Strange Illusion Post Date: 2007-06-30 19:15:05 by kiki
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This weekend's full moon hangs lower in the sky than any other full moon of 2007, according to NASA, and it's a good time to be fooled. When low on the horizon, the Moon can appear to be larger than when it's higher in the sky. It's all an illusion, scientists say, and it does not involve any enlarging effects of the atmosphere. Rather, it's all in your mind. Here's how it works: Our brains think things on the horizon are farther away than stuff overhead, because we're used to seeing overhead clouds that are close compared to those on the horizon. In the mind's eye, the sky is a flattened dome. With this dome as a reference, we expect something on the ...
IPCC Scientists Challenge Al Gore's View of Global Warming Consensus Post Date: 2007-06-29 23:20:47 by sourcery
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The chinks in the armor that is a supposed scientific consensus regarding man57;s role in global warming continued to grow this week when it was identified that many of the folks involved in the most recent report from the United Nations57; Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change were not in agreement with the study57;s findings.
Didn't hear about this? Well, how could you? Nobody reported it!
In fact, what you also didn't hear or read due to the media's universal eschewing of this information was that many of the views expressed in the IPCC57;s report go quite contrary to assertions regularly being made by the very press outlets not covering this new revelation and the Global ...
Why Do Cats Hang Around Us? Post Date: 2007-06-29 17:14:34 by Minerva
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Why Do Cats Hang Around Us? Genetic Research Suggests Felines 'Domesticated Themselves' By David Brown Washington Post Staff Writer Friday, June 29, 2007; A03 Your hunch is correct. Your cat decided to live with you, not the other way around. The sad truth is, it may not be a final decision. But don't take this feline diffidence personally. It runs in the family. And it goes back a long way -- about 12,000 years, actually. Those are among the inescapable conclusions of a genetic study of the origins of the domestic cat, being published today in the journal Science. The findings, drawn from an analysis of nearly 1,000 cats around the world, suggest that the ancestors of ...
NASA Satellite Captures First View of 'Night-Shining Clouds' Post Date: 2007-06-29 14:35:23 by Eoghan
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A NASA satellite has captured the first occurrence this summer of mysterious shiny polar clouds that form 50 miles above Earths surface. The first observations of these "night-shining" clouds by a satellite named "AIM" which means Aeronomy of Ice in the Mesosphere, occurred above 70 degrees north latitude on May 25. People on the ground began seeing the clouds on June 6 over Northern Europe. AIM is the first satellite mission dedicated to the study of these unusual clouds. These mystifying clouds are called Polar Mesospheric Clouds, or PMCs, when they are viewed from space and referred to as "night-shining" clouds or Noctilucent Clouds, when viewed by ...
Inflatable Space Station Design Tested Post Date: 2007-06-28 21:08:59 by farmfriend
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Inflatable Space Station Design Tested By JOHN ANTCZAK, Associated Press Writer LOS ANGELES - A new inflatable, unmanned test module for a proposed private space station was launched into orbit Thursday aboard a Russian rocket, the U.S. company developing the technology said. The Dnepr rocket carrying the Genesis II module lifted off shortly after 7 p.m. local time from the ISC Kosmotras Yasny Cosmodrome in Russia's Orenburg region, according to Bigelow Aerospace of Nevada. The 15-foot-long module was designed to expand to a diameter of 8 feet. Contact with the module was established later in the day and data indicated good voltage in the power system and "decent" air ...
Egypt Says Mummy Is Queen Hatshepsut Post Date: 2007-06-28 20:59:35 by farmfriend
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Egypt Says Mummy Is Queen Hatshepsut By KATARINA KRATOVAC, Associated Press Writer CAIRO, Egypt - A tooth found in a relic box led archaeologists to identify a long-overlooked mummy as that of Egypt's most powerful female pharoah _ possibly the most significant find since King Tutankhamun's tomb was uncovered in 1922, experts said Wednesday. The mummy was identified as Queen Hatshepsut, who ruled for 20 years in the 15th century B.C., dressing like a man and wearing a fake beard. A monumental builder, she wielded more power than two other famous ancient Egyptian women, Cleopatra and Nefertiti, who unlike her never took the title of pharaoh. But when she died, all traces of her ...
Incredibly Amazing Pyrokinesis, Combat Ki & More Video, Taoist Immortal John Djang Post Date: 2007-06-28 16:41:25 by gengis gandhi
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featured on a pbs show called ring of fire, then a book was written on this man called 'magus of java'. amazing stuff, and it is real. in fact, my shihan practices iron shirt, and takes full blows to the throat from black belts on each side. i will bet anyone ten thousand dollars that with their best punch they will do nothing...and its a sucker bet. here is the stuff on john djang and pyrokinesis. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RAAB0dbc3Es&NR=1 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Aos0hnwiHt8&mode=related&search= http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PERiIq5WM4M&mode=related&search= shaolin chikung and iron vest http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hmbw8gxft-0 ...
iPhone - Reviews Are In: "Beautiful" "Breakthrough" And "Dead Simple To Operate" Post Date: 2007-06-28 00:31:52 by robin
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The first reviews are coming in, and iPhone seems a hit, (almost) worth waiting in line for for three days. Today's Wall Street Journal writes: We have been testing the iPhone for two weeks, in multiple usage scenarios, in cities across the country. Our verdict is that, despite some flaws and feature omissions, the iPhone is, on balance, a beautiful and breakthrough handheld computer. Elsewhere, David Pogue in the New York Times today describes the $600 gadget this way: The phone is so sleek and thin, it makes Treos and BlackBerrys look obese. The glass gets smudgy -- a sleeve wipes it clean -- but it doesn't scratch easily. I've walked around with an iPhone in my pocket for ...
Will science render men unnecessary? Post Date: 2007-06-27 17:12:27 by farmfriend
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Will science render men unnecessary? The possibility seems real but don't drop your guy just yet By Brian Alexander MSNBC contributor I normally dont spend a great deal of time thinking about my sperm. But recently a team of scientists announced they had made artificial sperm from human bone marrow, and media reports abounded with the dire news that my goodfellas (and by extension, me) had been rendered unnecessary. If a woman chose to do so, speculated tabloid journalists, she could make sperm from her own bone marrow, fertilize another womans egg and voila! Men could be completely sidelined, according to Britains Daily Mail. Women to ...
Chimps gain smarts from hanging with humans Post Date: 2007-06-27 13:29:16 by Tauzero
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Chimps gain smarts from hanging with humans Study shows those raised by humans more likely to learn how to use tools Studies have shown that chimps have culture, cooperate intelligently, and may also be altruistic. Now scientists learn that those enculturated by humans have greater capacity for learning. By Charles Q. Choi Updated: 11:57 a.m. CT June 19, 2007 A bit of human nature can apparently rub off on chimpanzees. Chimps nurtured by humans since birth have a far better chance of figuring out how to use new tools, a new study shows. The findings highlight untapped potential within chimpanzees that can get uncovered "by studying them when they have been raised under very ...
Crustaceans eating away island off Hiroshima Post Date: 2007-06-26 22:22:46 by Zipporah
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Crustaceans eating away island off HiroshimaA photograph of Hoboro Island taken between about 1955 and 1965. (Photo courtesy of Hiroshima University emeritus professor Yuji Okimura) A recent photograph of Hoboro Island. (Photo courtesy of Yuji Okimura)Nanatsuba-kotsubumushi crustaceans dig holes in the rock on the island. (Photo courtesy of Yuji Okimura) HIGASHIHIROSHIMA, Hiroshima -- An island off the coast of Higashihiroshima is crumbling away due to countless crustaceans that have made holes in its rocks and caused its highest peak to completely disappear.The rocky Hoboro Island has become a breeding ground for huge numbers of creatures known in Japanese as nanatsuba-kotsubumushi, a ...
Look to Mars for the truth on global warming The Deniers -- Part IX Post Date: 2007-06-26 17:50:18 by richard9151
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Look to Mars for the truth on global warming The Deniers -- Part IX Lawrence Solomon, Financial Post Published: Friday, February 02, 2007 Climate change is a much, much bigger issue than the public, politicians, and even the most alarmed environmentalists realize. Global warming extends to Mars, where the polar ice cap is shrinking, where deep gullies in the landscape are now laid bare, and where the climate is the warmest it has been in decades or centuries. "One explanation could be that Mars is just coming out of an ice age," NASA scientist William Feldman speculated after the agency's Mars Odyssey completed its first Martian year of data collection. "In some ...
Will the sun cool us? The Deniers -- Part VII Post Date: 2007-06-26 17:43:50 by richard9151
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Will the sun cool us? The Deniers -- Part VII Lawrence Solomon, Financial Post Published: Friday, February 02, 2007 Apology To Dr. Nigel Weiss The science is settled" on climate change, say most scientists in the field. They believe that man-made emissions of greenhouse gases are heating the globe to dangerous levels and that, in the coming decades, steadily increasing temperatures will melt the polar ice caps and flood the world's low-lying coastal areas. Don't tell that to Nigel Weiss, Professor Emeritus at the Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics at the University of Cambridge, past President of the Royal Astronomical Society, and a scientist as ...
'Butt dialing' and the nine new deadly sins of cell phone use Post Date: 2007-06-25 18:42:56 by Zipporah
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'Butt dialing' and the nine new deadly sins of cell phone useDavid Haskin June 22, 2007 (Computerworld) Like many people these days, Sara Winkler dreads being the butt of "butt dialing." That's the name given to unintentional dialing that occurs when keys are inadvertently pressed on cell phones stowed in pants pockets or purses. "It's happened to me twice in the last three months," says Winkler, who lives in Winter Haven, Fla., and is a leadership development specialist at a large insurance company. "I had three-minute messages of shuffling and background noise on my answering machine." "I've done that to my husband, and ...
The Deniers -- Part III & Part IV Post Date: 2007-06-25 14:50:12 by richard9151
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The hurricane expert who stood up to UN junk science The Deniers -- Part III Lawrence Solomon, Financial Post Published: Friday, February 02, 2007 December 8, 2006 You're a respected scientist, one of the best in your field. So respected, in fact, that when the United Nations decided to study the relationship between hurricanes and global warming for the largest scientific endeavour in its history -- its International Panel on Climate Change -- it called upon you and your expertise. You are Christopher Landsea of the Atlantic Oceanographic & Meteorological Laboratory. You were a contributing author for the UN's second International Panel on Climate Change in 1995, writing ...
Statistics needed Post Date: 2007-06-25 14:42:54 by richard9151
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The Deniers -- Part I Lawrence Solomon, National Post Published: Friday, February 02, 2007 Tuesday, November 28, 2006 In the global warming debate, there are essentially two broad camps. One believes that the science is settled, that global warming is serious and man-made, and that urgent action must be taken to mitigate or prevent a future calamity. The other believes that the science is far from settled, that precious little is known about global warming or its likely effects, and that prudence dictates more research and caution before intervening massively in the economy. The "science is settled" camp, much the larger of the two, includes many eminent scientists with ...
Science, not politics Post Date: 2007-06-25 14:32:23 by richard9151
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Published: Friday, April 13, 2007 (I got it, farmy!) Of all the scientists who are labelled "deniers" because they don't support the orthodoxy of the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, none comes in for more vilification than Eigil Friis-Christensen. For understandable reasons. Dr. Friis-Christensen questions the very premise that man-made activities explain most of the global warming that we see, and through his work he has convinced much of an entire scientific discipline to explore his line of inquiry. With his 1991 paper in Science, showing a startling correlation between global warming and the activities of the sun, Dr. Friis-Christensen unleashed ...
I Was On the Global Warming Gravy Train Post Date: 2007-06-25 01:55:16 by richard9151
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See the post; The Case Against Anthropogenic Global Warming I devoted six years to carbon accounting, building models for the Australian government to estimate carbon emissions from land use change and forestry. When I started that job in 1999 the evidence that carbon emissions caused global warming seemed pretty conclusive, but since then new evidence has weakened that case. I am now skeptical. In the late 1990s, this was the evidence suggesting that carbon emissions caused global warming: 1. Carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas, proved in a laboratory a century ago. 2. Global warming has been occurring for a century and concentrations of atmospheric carbon have been rising for a century. ...
CO2 levels as Responsible for Climate Change - True or False? Post Date: 2007-06-25 01:46:02 by richard9151
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Thanks to sourcery, who found the info! The ice-core man Once upon a time, and for millennia before then, carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere were low and stable. Then came the industrial revolution and CO2 levels began to rise. The more man industrialized, the more that CO2 -- and the temperature -- rose. In the last half century, with industrialization at unprecedented levels, CO2 reached levels unprecedented in the human history. This is the story of global warming. This story is a fable, says Zbigniew Jaworowski, past chairman of the United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation, a participant or chairman of some 20 Advisory Groups of the International ...
The Case Against Anthropogenic Global Warming Post Date: 2007-06-25 01:05:06 by sourcery
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Lawrence Solomon's "The Deniers" (a series of articles on the view of scientists who have been labelled "Global Warming Deniers"): Science, not politicsStatistics neededThe original denier: into the coldEnd the chillThey call this a consensus?The limits of predictabilityUnsettled scienceThe ice-core manThe hurricane expert who stood up to UN junk sciencePolar scientists on thin iceThe sun moves climate changeBright sun, warm Earth. Coincidence?Look to Mars for the truth on global warmingRead the sunspotsForget warming - beware the new ice ageLittle Ice Age is still with usFighting climate 'fluff' Other References: Father of Climatology Throws Up at the ...
Will a Disruptive Technology Mothball Therapeutic Cloning? Post Date: 2007-06-24 20:40:15 by farmfriend
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Will a Disruptive Technology Mothball Therapeutic Cloning? By Michael Cook : BIO| 19 Jun 2007 The global grandees of therapeutic cloning recently gathered in sun-soaked Cairns, the gateway to Australia's Great Barrier Reef, for their annual conference. They have serious strategic issues to deal with along with their scientific papers and posters: persuading governments to open their wallets, ensuring that the Bush Administration's restrictions on their work are lifted, allaying the public's qualms about creating embryos solely for research. But hovering over the buzz of morning coffee has been a dark cloud: as governments everywhere promote it, is therapeutic cloning going to ...
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