Plate Tectonics Current Events | Plate Tectonics News | 9
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A new twist on power walking In an unprecedented breakthrough in the development of portable and renewable human-driven energy sources, an MBL (Marine Biological Laboratory) biomechanics expert who studies how muscle moves skeletons in fish and frogs has invented a backpack that gives new meaning to the term power walking. view more (2005-09-09)
Mega Eruption of Yellowstone's Southern Twin North America isn't the only continent that's experienced super-colossal volcanic eruptions in the recent geologic past. view more (2006-03-29)
New lens device will shrink huge light waves to pinpoints Manipulating light waves, or electromagnetic radiation, has led to many technologies, from cameras to lasers to medical imaging machines that can see inside the human body. view more (2007-07-13)
A more silent and ecological refrigerator with more precise temperature maintenance The Thermal Engineering group of researchers at the Public University of Navarre is working on the design of a domestic thermoelectric refrigerator. Unlike the conventional system of producing a cold environment - by vapour compression - the thermoelectricity used in the design of this refrigerator allows the manufacture of more compact and... view more... (2003-12-03)
Low-cost microfluidics can be a sticky problem A deceptively simple approach to bonding thermoplastic microchannel plates together with solvent could be used for low-cost, high-volume production of disposable "lab-on-a-chip" devices, according to researchers from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and George Mason University (GMU). view more (2006-05-15)
AGU Journal Highlights - 20 May 2002 American Geophysical Union AGU Journal European Highlights - 20 May 2002 ***** Contents I. Highlights, including authors and their institutions II. Ordering information for science writers ***** I. Highlights, including authors and their institutions ***** The following highlights are from Geophysical Research Letters (GRL). The research papers... view more... (2002-05-20)
Keen Sense Of Smell A unique device has been designed by the Moscow scientists - specialists of the Institute of General Physics, Russian Academy of Sciences, supported by funding from the Russian Foundation for Basic Research. The device not only helps to discover in a few seconds the minute quantities of narcotics and explosives in the air, but to identify and even... view more... (2003-10-31)
World's first "robot scientist" proves a major success in the lab A "robot scientist" that generates hypotheses about the function of particular genes in baker's yeast - and then designs and carries out experiments to test them - has been developed by a team of British scientists, according to new research published in the journal Nature today [15 January 2004]. "This research is very exciting as we have given... view more... (2004-01-12)
Millions turn a blind eye to dangerous driving As many as 2.5 million adults in the UK are putting themselves and others at risk by deliberately ignoring the fact that they have bad eyesight. Most do so largely because of outdated information about contact lenses and preconceived ideas about glasses, a study by Dr June McNicholas, senior research psychologist at the University of Warwick,... view more... (2003-08-08)
France launches in Valenciennes a new research program on transport safety France launches in Valenciennes a 6,4 million euro research program on transport safety. It reinforces the international position of Nord-Pas de Calais and the University of Valenciennes. The scientific council of the New Research Action "Safety in Transport Systems", which came together at the University of Valenciennes and... view more... (2002-02-25)
Evolution tied to Earth movement Scientists long have focused on how climate and vegetation allowed human ancestors to evolve in Africa. Now, University of Utah geologists are calling renewed attention to the idea that ground movements formed mountains and valleys, creating environments that favored the emergence of humanity. view more (2007-12-19)
November issue of Reproductive Health Matters focuses on maternal mortality Reproductive Health Matters and Elsevier are pleased to announce the publication of the November Issue devoted to the celebration of the twentieth anniversary of the Safe Motherhood Initiative launched by the World Health Organization in 1987. view more (2007-11-15)
New robot scouts best locations for components of undersea lab Like a deep-sea bloodhound, Sentry - the newest in an elite group of unmanned submersibles able to operate on their own in demanding and rugged environments - has helped scientists pinpoint optimal locations for two observation sites of a pioneering seafloor laboratory being planned off Washington and Oregon. view more (2008-08-14)
Batter out: Umpires likely to favor pitchers of the same race or ethnicity Umpires for Major League Baseball are more likely to call strikes in favor of pitchers who share their race or ethnicity, according to new research from The University of Texas at Austin. view more (2007-08-14)
Mountain ranges rise dramatically faster than expected Two new studies by a University of Rochester researcher show that mountain ranges rise to their height in as little as two million years-several times faster than geologists have always thought. view more (2006-01-27)
Biosolids Microbes Pose Manageable Risk to Workers Class B biosolids are sewage sludges that have been treated to contain fewer than 2.0 x 106 fecal coliforms/dry gram. view more (2008-10-28)
Geologically produced antineutrinos provide a new window into the Earth's interior In Jules Verne's nineteenth century classic Journey to the Centre of the Earth, an Edinburgh professor and colleagues follow an explorer's trail down an extinct volcano to the Earth's core. view more (2005-07-28)
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