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Global curbs on overfishing are beginning to work Australian Beth Fulton, a fishery ecosystem scientist from the CSIRO Wealth from Oceans Flagship, was among an international team of 19 co-authors of a report on a two-year study, led by US scientists Dr Boris Worm of Dalhousie University and Dr Ray Hilborn of the University of Washington. view more (2009-07-31)
Building a Terabyte Archive at the ESO HQ This event marks the closing of the data flow loop at the VLT for the first time and the successful culmination of more than 5 years of hard work by ESO engineers and scientists to implement a system for efficient and effective scientific data flow. This was achieved by a cross-organization science operations team involving staff in Chile and... view more... (1999-06-21)
Wrinkled membranes create novel drug-delivery system A University of Illinois scientist studying how membranes wrinkle has discovered a novel system for on-demand drug delivery. view more (2006-02-15)
MIGRATING DOCTORS (pp 177, 245) The increasing divide between less-developed and more-developed countries in the quality of health care is well recognised. In this week's LANCET, Peter E Bundred and colleagues, from Liverpool and Canada describe how the prospects of a better standard of life are attracting large numbers of doctors to more-developed countries and away from... view more... (2000-07-12)
Researchers appeal for new regulations to save coral reefs from live fish trade Researchers are calling for tighter controls on the live reef fish trade, a growing threat to coral reefs, in letters to the international journal Science. view more (2006-08-07)
New life found in ancient tombs Life has been discovered in the barren depths of Rome's ancient tombs, proving catacombs are not just a resting place for the dead. The two new species of bacteria found growing on the walls of the Roman tombs may help protect our cultural heritage monuments. view more (2008-09-25)
Microwaves could take the grind out of the rock business The feasibility of using microwaves to extract minerals from rocks has been demonstrated by UK researchers. This revolutionary technique could cut mining and mineral processing industry costs, and make it viable to process previously uneconomic mineral reserves. It could also help the environment by saving energy as 3 - 5% of the world's entire... view more... (2003-05-16)
Scientists solve longstanding astronomy mystery Scientists may have solved one of the most longstanding astrophysical mysteries of all times: How massive stars - up to 120 times the mass of our sun - form without blowing away the clouds of gas and dust that feed their growth. view more (2009-01-16)
AP2000 Millennium Conference on Antennas & Propagation Antennas and radio-wave propagation involve key technologies for space communications, navigation and remote sensing, for all terrestrial wireless transmission systems, for radar, and for a number of other applications ranging from mine detection to biological wave interactions and medical electromagnetics. "With the explosion of wireless... view more... (2000-03-24)
Who Killed MG Rover? The Phoenix consortium was not to blame for the collapse of Rover. The fault-lines that finally led Rover into administration actually go back as far as the early 1960s, says a new report published today (26 April 2005) by the Cambridge-MIT Institute Centre for Competitiveness and Innovation at Cambridge University. In the report 'Who Killed MG... view more... (2005-04-27)
Bogus e-mails from FDIC link computer users to viruses, says UAB computer forensics expert Cyber criminals are using fake messages claiming to be from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) to deliver a virus capable of stealing unsuspecting victims' bank passwords and other sensitive personal information, says Gary Warner, the director of research in computer forensics at the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB). view more (2009-10-28)
What Happened on Easter Island? @ the London `Catastrophes` conference Easter Island is exceptionally isolated in the South Pacific. When Europeans first visited the island in 1722 AD, they found a population of about 4000 Polynesians scratching a living among what appeared to be the ruins of a collapsed civilization. Stone figures weighing up to 80 tonnes littered the landscape and there were also numerous... view more... (2002-08-17)
Scientists detect first afterglow of short gamma-ray bursts In the powerful, fast-fading realm of gamma-ray bursts, scientists say they have detected for the first time a lingering afterglow of the shortest types of bursts, which themselves disappear within a second. view more (2002-02-18)
Using waste to recover waste uranium Using bacteria and inositol phosphate, a chemical analogue of a cheap waste material from plants, researchers at Birmingham University have recovered uranium from the polluted waters from uranium mines. view more (2009-09-08)
NJIT professor says certain home shapes and roofs hold up best in hurricane Certain home shapes and roof types can better resist high winds and hurricanes, according to a researcher at New Jersey Institute of Technology (NJIT). view more (2007-06-20)
Discovered: World's Largest Tsunami Debris A line of massive boulders on the western shore of Tonga may be evidence of the most powerful volcano-triggered tsunami found to date. Up to 9 meters (30 feet) high and weighing up to 1.6 million kilograms (3.5 million pounds), the seven coral boulders are located 100 to 400 meters (300 to 1,300 feet) from the coast. view more (2008-09-26)
Study of coastal disasters yields surprising findings, arresting images Two of the world's worst natural disasters in recent years stemmed from different causes on opposite sides of the globe, but actually had much in common, according to researchers who are part of a large National Science Foundation-funded research initiative that has been studying both the Indian Ocean Tsunami of 2004 and the Hurricane Katrina of... view more... (2007-04-12)
Robot-assisted, laparoscopic surgery for vaginal vault prolapse found to be effective Mayo Clinic researchers have found that laparoscopic surgery assisted by a surgical robot to fix vaginal vault prolapse, a collapse of the vagina that can occur after a hysterectomy, is an effective option to the traditional, open surgical repair when measured at least a year after the surgery. view more (2006-07-24)
NASA's robotic sub readies for dive into Earth's deepest sinkhole An underwater robot, shaped like a flattened orange, maneuvered untethered and autonomously within a 115-meter-deep sinkhole during tests this month in Mexico, a prelude to its mission to probe the mysterious nether reaches of the world's deepest sinkhole. view more (2007-03-01)
UT Southwestern urologist uses Botox to treat debilitating condition Eight years ago, Lynette Kunz suffered a severe spinal cord injury that left her a quadriplegic and sufferer of involuntary bladder contractions. The condition constantly interfered with her daily life. view more (2007-12-05)
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