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Archive by category: On Nature News

October 11, 2010

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Video: a nuclear exchange - October 11, 2010

Recently, I was given the opportunity to travel to Poland and watch as the US moved a shipment of highly enriched uranium out of the country. The fuel came from the Maria research reactor, one of around 130 or so that use bomb grade uranium:

You can read more about the trip, and research reactors, in this feature.

June 24, 2010

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Nature Podcast - June 24, 2010

natpod.GIFThis week, a strange condition called blindsight, a function for pseudogenes, and storing quantum information encoded in light. Plus, the Nature Podcast Salary Survey Game Show.

June 17, 2010

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Nature Podcast - June 17, 2010

natpod.GIFThis week, the boundaries of humanity, tracking objects in the dark, icy depths of the solar system, and an immortal contributor to science. Plus, what's hot elsewhere in Nature.

June 03, 2010

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Nature Podcast - June 03, 2010

natpod.GIFThis week, mentoring by numbers, quantum physics gets frustrated, a new twist on the Big Bang theory and the best of the rest in Nature.

May 13, 2010

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Nature Podcast - May 13, 2010

natpod.GIFThis week, studying natural selection in Caribbean lizards, testing the theory of common ancestry, a nanoscale factory strikes gold, and we hear what made Dorothy Hodgkin such a great scientist. Plus, a look at what's hot elsewhere in Nature.

May 05, 2010

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Nature Podcast - May 05, 2010

natpod.GIFThis week, cracking the splicing code, how scientists have engineered a muscle-mimicking material, and looking back at the biggest earthquake ever recorded. Plus, the best of the rest in Nature.

April 29, 2010

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Nature Podcast - April 29, 2010

natpod.GIFThis week, we discover how the similarities of identical twins go beyond their appearance, learn how new dinosaur fossils shed light on the evolution of feathers, and hear about an asteroid study with some rather frosty findings. Plus, a round-up of what's hot elsewhere in Nature.

April 22, 2010

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Nature Podcast - April 22, 2010

natpod.GIFThis week, we put brain training to the test, learn how the Red Sea could help refill the Dead Sea, hear how a look into an exoplanet's atmosphere has revealed unexpected results, and learn why loopholes in the Copenhagen Accord could mean we overshoot our targets on global warming. Plus, a round-up of what's hot elsewhere in Nature.

April 20, 2010

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Nature Video - Brain training: does it work? - April 20, 2010

Brain-training computer games are a multimillion pound industry. But this week, a study published in Nature suggests they may not live up to their promise. Neuroscientist Adrian Owen teamed up with the BBC popular science programme 'Bang Goes The Theory to recruit more than 11,000 volunteers for a massive online experiment. The results demolish the widely held belief that the regular use of brain-training games improves general cognitive function. To read the story in full, go to: No gain from brain training.

April 12, 2010

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Caterpillar 'talking' from walking  - April 12, 2010

Watch how the masked birch caterpillar defends its leaf shelter. New research shows that the noisy, bottom-scraping display you see here evolved from walking. The finding has implications for the evolution of animal communication in many species. Read the original research here: The evolutionary origins of ritualized acoustic signals in caterpillars (open access).

April 08, 2010

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Quotes of the day - April 08, 2010

“Usually an injustice happens and nobody really cares.”
Robert Dougans, lawyer for Simon Singh, discusses the high profile science and libel case with The Lawyer.

“No doubt all those named contributed to the research. However, I find it difficult to understand how 144 individuals, however close their working relationship, could be involved in writing it.”
Gavin Fairbairn, professor of ethics and language at Leeds Metropolitan University, is perplexed by the author list of a paper with “more authors than any other publication I have ever come across in any of the areas in which I have worked” (Times Higher). No one tell him about the human genome project papers...

“When we’re measuring glacier margins, by the time we go home the glacier is already smaller than what we've measured.”
Dan Fagre, an ecologist with the US Geological Survey, comments on the fact that Glacier National Park has lost two of its glaciers (Discovery News).

“The casual reader might have the impression that there are real doubts about whether emissions can be reduced without inflicting severe damage on the economy. In fact, once you filter out the noise generated by special-interest groups, you discover that there is widespread agreement among environmental economists that a market-based program to deal with the threat of climate change — one that limits carbon emissions by putting a price on them — can achieve large results at modest, though not trivial, cost.”
Nobel prize winning economist Paul Krugman writes about climate economics in the New York Times.

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Nature Podcast - April 08, 2010

natpod.GIFThis week, pigeons with GPS systems show how birds of a feather flock together, how gut bacteria vary with diet, and the effects of livestock on the greenhouse gas nitrous oxide. Plus, the usual news round-up and the best stuff elsewhere in Nature.

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On Nature News - April 08, 2010

A genetic gift for sushi eaters
Seaweed-rich diet leaves its mark on gut microbes.

Airborne pigeons obey the pecking order
During flight, pigeons in a flock follow the leader.

Telescope arrays give fine view of stars
Optical interferometry is no longer on the fringe of astronomy.

April 01, 2010

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On Nature News - April 01, 2010

Future funding for agricultural research uncertain
Financial donors wrangle over global research group's strategy.

River reveals chilling tracks of ancient flood
Water from melting ice sheet took unexpected route to the ocean.

Atomic clocks use quantum timekeeping
Entanglement could make state-of-the art clocks more precise.

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VIDEO: The stethoscope in your iPhone - April 01, 2010

Cross posted from Nature's Spoonful of Medicine blog.

You might not realize it, but if you have an iPhone, you also have a stethoscope and a CPR trainer within reach. Those are just two of the more than 2,000 medical applications available on the iPhone — and with Apple’s iPad launching this Saturday, you can expect plenty more apps to soon help doctors and researchers alike.

For more on this growing area of mobile medicine, check out the ten apps we’ve highlighted below.

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Nature Podcast - April 01, 2010

natpod.GIFThis week, we've got a new answer to an old paradox about the young Earth, over 20,000 human genes caught on camera, and the first global conference on agricultural research for development on the show this week. Plus, the best of the rest of Nature.

March 31, 2010

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On Nature News - March 31, 2010

Breast cancer gene patents judged invalid
Court ruling may spell bad news for biotech industry.

Geoengineers get the fear
Researchers fail to come up with clear guidelines for experiments that change the planet's climate.

Synching Europe's big science facilities
Momentum grows for body to coordinate the continent's research infrastructure.

Space probe set to size up polar ice
Europe's ice-monitoring project gets a second chance after 2005 launch mishap.

March 26, 2010

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We've set the news free - March 26, 2010

All content hosted on the Nature News site is now freely available. This includes online news articles, and news and news features articles published in Nature. Previously, this content was free for the first four days from publication before becoming subscription-access only. The Nature News archive is now accessible to all.

Nature Publishing Group (NPG) has made this change so that Nature's news content can be disseminated and discussed as widely as possible, as we develop nature.com as the hub for quality science news and comment. With the rise of social media such as Twitter, Facebook and our own Connotea and Nature Network, we'd like to ensure that discussions about our news and comment can include an accessible link to the article.

The Nature News website links out to other articles such as opinion articles and features hosted by Nature and associated journals such as Nature Medicine. These articles, as well as analysis pieces including News and Views and Research Highlights, remain subscription access. These articles can be accessed via personal subscription, site license or individual article purchase.

March 25, 2010

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Hubble 3D: The interview - March 25, 2010

Astronaut Scott Altman and director Toni Myers discuss their latest 3-D IMAX film documenting the 2009 repair of the Hubble Space Telescope.

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On Nature News - March 25, 2010

Maths behind Internet encryption wins top award
Abel prize awarded to number theorist John Tate.

How 1918 flu antibodies fend off swine flu
Structural similarities reveal why some elderly people were spared in the recent pandemic.

Fossil finger points to new human species
DNA analysis reveals lost relative from 40,000 years ago.

Methane-eating microbes make their own oxygen
Bacteria may have survived on Earth without plants, thanks to unique metabolism.

Soils emitting more carbon dioxide
Trend could exacerbate global warming.

March 24, 2010

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Nature Podcast - March 24, 2010

natpod.GIFThis week, we discover how fossil DNA from Siberia reveals a new human ancestor, learn about the first clinical trial to use RNA interference on tumours, and hear about the wait to see if an anti-ageing molecule holds the key to longevity. Plus, what's hot elsewhere in Nature.

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On Nature News - March 24, 2010

Nanoparticle kit could diagnose disease early
Colour change shows the presence of minuscule amounts of key enzymes.

China boosts African research links
Expanded programme of academic collaboration promised.

Teams set for first taste of Antarctic lakes
Samples could reveal unique life forms from beneath the ice.

US health bill promises changes for biomedical researchers
Translational work set to receive a boost.

March 23, 2010

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Work for Nature: biomedical news reporter (London) - March 23, 2010

Nature is looking for a biomedical reporter to work in its London office.

The ideal candidate will have previous experience in reporting biomedical science and policy issues at a national or international level.

Duties shall include:

>Writing news for both print and online outlets, as well as contributing to other parts of the magazine as needed.
>Scanning key journals, press releases and other sources for news to generate research highlights, editorial and features ideas.
>Attending conferences to source story ideas as above.

Candidates should have a university degree in a biomedical science or equivalent, be a fast and accurate writer and able to synthesise complex ideas and topics. The successful candidate shall be a self-starter who can manage their time well whilst able to spot news stories suitable for Nature’s audience.

All candidates must demonstrate the right to live and work in the UK to be considered for the vacancy.

To apply please send your CV, covering letter and three recent clips, quoting reference number (NPG/029/10), to londonrecruitment@macmillan.co.uk

Closing date: 5 April 2010

March 22, 2010

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On Nature News - March 22, 2010

Purifying the sea one drop at a time
Microfluidic channels offer promise of cheap, portable desalination.

Cancer genes silenced in humans
Tiny particles carrying short strands of RNA can interfere with protein production in tumours.

March 18, 2010

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Nature Podcast - March 18, 2010

natpod.GIFThis week, we discover how scientists have detected quantum behaviour in a visible object, hear about the sinister side of male pregnancy in pipefish, learn how modern forensic techniques have been helping criminal law suits, and we ponder the question: are we alone in the universe?

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On Nature News - March 18, 2010

Elite English universities gain in 2010 funding round
But other institutions left with a smaller slice of the pie.

Male pipefish abort embryos of ugly mothers
Males show sexual selection before and after copulation.

Scientists supersize quantum mechanics
Largest ever object put into quantum state.

Hobbit origins pushed back
Stone tools reveal that hominins lived on the Indonesian island of Flores a million years ago.

March 17, 2010

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Male pregnancy: The dark side - by Nature Video - March 17, 2010

Male pregnancy is very rare, occurring only in seahorses, pipefish and seadragons. The female deposits her eggs in the male's brood pouch, and the male protects and feeds the developing offspring. Are these the best dads in the animal kingdom? It seems not - new research shows that male pipefish selectively abort embryos from less attractive females, saving their resources for future, more attractive, mates. The finding reveals a dark side to male pregnancy, but it also adds to Darwin's theory of sexual selection. Read the original research here.

March 15, 2010

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On Nature News - March 15, 2010

Nano-antennas could help keep quantum secrets
Nanorod arrays can guide light along the path toward quantum communication.

Snake infrared detection unravelled
Scientists have discovered the receptors that allow snakes to find prey in the dark.

March 12, 2010

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On Nature News - March 12, 2010

A tale of two Scandinavian cities
Research funding changes trigger hiring in Lund but firing in Copenhagen.

A direct hit for thalidomide
The drug stunts limb development in zebrafish and chicks by binding to a protein called cereblon.

Scientists against proposed ivory auction
Researchers want science to take precedence over politics in decisions on elephants.

Genomes for the whole family
Sequencing of families' genomes offers insights into rare genetic diseases.

March 11, 2010

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Thomson Reuters gets into the university rankings game - March 11, 2010

Thomson Reuters today launched the first of its surveys among academics to try to identify which of more than 6,000 universities worldwide are the strongest in specific fields both in terms of teaching, and of research. The data will be used for the Times Higher Education's World University Rankings. It's part of efforts by the THE ranking list to remake itself in the face of criticism.

Nature last week published a two-page news article exploring new trends in university ranking systems. See below the fold for some snippets from the article about the Thomson Reuters's reputational survey – if you missed the Nature article, you can read it in full here – “University rankings smarten up”.

Continue reading " Thomson Reuters gets into the university rankings game" »

March 10, 2010

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On Nature News - March 10, 2010

Pristine DNA discovered in fossilized eggshells
Finding could advance sequencing studies of ancient animals.

BRIEFING: A new dawn for transgenic crops in Europe?
Approval of the Amflora potato could signal a fresh approach to genetically modified organisms.

Old rocks drown dry Moon theory
Samples collected during Apollo missions suggest a wet interior, raising questions about lunar origins.

Securing UK science
Royal Society sets out case for investment in research.

Science survives Canadian budget
Spending plans aim to battle national deficit yet still invest in research.

March 05, 2010

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On Nature News - March 05, 2010

Heavy antimatter created in gold collisions
Most massive antimatter nucleus yet identified in particle experiments.

Woody shrubs don't slurp up water
Clearing encroaching plants from savannah might make drought worse.

March 04, 2010

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Nature Podcast - March 04, 2010

natpod.GIFThis week, we learn how our body's own cells could cause sepsis after trauma, hear why the risks of enriching uranium using lasers outweigh the benefits, discover what a new fossil reveals about dinosaur evolution, and do some genome sequencing on a massive scale in China.

March 02, 2010

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On Nature News - March 02, 2010

The snake that swallowed dinosaurs
Fossils reveal that some snakes preyed on baby sauropods.

Soil bacteria could yield drug to treat roundworm
The natural insecticide Bt treats infections in mice.

Ancient polar-bear fossil yields genome
Oldest mammalian DNA sequence reveals link to brown bears.

February 26, 2010

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Work for Nature: biomedical news reporter - February 26, 2010

Biomedical reporter (fulltime, temporary), Nature, Washington DC

Nature, the international weekly journal of science, is looking for a biomedical reporter to cover a nine-month maternity leave from early April until the end of December 2010.

The ideal candidate will have a background in reporting biomedical science as well as some experience in policy and business reporting. Duties include writing news for both print and online outlets, as well as contributing to other parts of the magazine as needed. This is a fulltime position without benefits. Only candidates with the ability to work in the US will be considered.

It is highly preferable that the position be based in Nature’s Washington, DC offices; however, New York or San Francisco may also be considered for self-starting candidates.

To apply, send a resume, short cover letter and two recent clips to Mark Peplow m.peplow_at_nature.com by 10 March. Put ‘Biomedical reporter’ in the subject line.

February 25, 2010

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On Nature News - February 25, 2010

Concessions over science advice principles
Proposal that advisors should seek 'shared position' with government abandoned.

Underwater robot automates ocean testing
'Lab in a can' eliminates the middleman between sample site and lab.

Bacteria buzzing in the seabed
Nanowires growing from bacteria might link up distant chemical reactions in sediments.

A land without Google?
A survey reveals how Chinese scientists could be affected by the stand-off between their government and the search-engine giant.

February 24, 2010

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Nature Podcast - February 24, 2010

natpod.GIFThis week, we hear how electric currents enable marine bacteria to wire together, learn how our brains respond to social inequality, and discover how an exoplanet is being stripped of its atmosphere by its host star. Plus, a round-up of what's hot elsewhere in Nature.

February 23, 2010

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On Nature News - February 23, 2010

Cosmic-ray theory unravels
Astrophysicists ponder whether ultrahigh-energy particles really do come from the centre of galaxies.

NIH may allow stem-cell lines from younger embryos
Lines derived from pre-blastocyst stage embryos could be eligible for agency funding.

February 19, 2010

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On Nature News - February 19, 2010

Sexual predators flock to energy boom towns
Oil and gas attract more criminals than tourism or agriculture do.

Personalized biomarkers monitor cancer
Pilot study harnesses sequencing power to track tumours.

Ancient filter feeders found lurking in museums
Fish fossils fill gaps in dinosaur-era ocean food chains.

February 18, 2010

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Nature Podcast - February 18, 2010

natpod.GIFThis week, we learn how to redesign the ribosome to make designer proteins, speak to the first seismologist on the scene of the Haiti earthquake and learn about the incredible diversity in southern African genomes.

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On Nature News - February 18, 2010

UCLA brings together animal-research factions
Dialogue is key to dealing with extremism, say panellists on both sides of debate.

Q&A;: Setting the climate record straight
A co-chair of the IPCC's beleaguered second working group discusses recent criticisms.

Africa yields two full human genomes
Sequences show rich diversity among the population.

How accurate are cancer cell lines?
Some argue that tumour cells obtained directly from patients are the best way to study cancer genomics.

February 17, 2010

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On Nature News - February 17, 2010

King Tut's death explained?
Experts question claims that malaria and osteonecrosis contributed to Pharaoh's decline.

Three biologists slain on campus
Professor's arrest sends shock waves around the University of Alabama in Huntsville.

COLUMN: Drug discovery for the masses - Premium content
To sustain innovation, pharmaceutical companies will have to change the way they do research, says Derek Lowe. But does anyone know what changes to make?

Trees spit out gas from soil microbes
Trunks act as giant methane chimneys.

Hopes grow over potential autism treatment
Oxytocin hormone shown to improve social interaction.

February 16, 2010

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On Nature News - February 16, 2010

Subatomic soup is hot stuff
Twisting vortices seen in fireballs could unravel matter-antimatter conundrum.

China's patents push
Asia defies patent-filing downturn as global economy slips.

'Climategate' scientist speaks out
Climatologist Phil Jones answers his critics in an exclusive interview with Nature.

February 12, 2010

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On Nature News - February 12, 2010

Sea-level records challenged
High point 80,000 years ago may hint at flaws in ice-age theory.

Acid soil threatens Chinese farms
Overuse of fertilizers is imperilling food supply.

February 11, 2010

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On Nature News - February 11, 2010

Genetic basis for stuttering identified
Mutations found in genes responsible for directing enzymes to their cellular destination.

Brain surgery boosts spirituality
Lose a tumour, gain self-transcendence.

Untangling HIV transmission in men
Study could put scientists on the right path to blocking the spread of new infections.

January 27, 2010

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Nature Podcast - January 27, 2010

natpod.GIFThis week, we learn how engineered bacteria are helping to produce better biofuels, how functional brain cells have been created directly from skin cells, and discover what fossils found in Northern China tell us about the colour of feathered dinosaurs. Plus, a round-up of what's hot elsewhere in Nature.

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Nature Video: The Barefoot Professor - January 27, 2010

Harvard professor Daniel Lieberman has ditched his trainers and started running barefoot. His research shows that barefoot runners, who tend to land on their fore-foot, generate less impact shock than runners in sports shoes who land heel first. This makes barefoot running comfortable and could minimize running-related injuries. Read more here and find the original research here.

January 22, 2010

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Work for Nature - January 22, 2010

Nature, the international weekly journal of science, is seeking an intern reporter to work full-time in either its Washington, DC, or London offices. (Location will be determined by the nationality and work permit status of the successful candidate.) This six-month, paid position will begin in early July 2010.

Applicants should be self-starting and have a keen news sense. The intern will write news and other journalistic items for Nature’s website and print magazine. Please e-mail a cover letter, resume and three published articles to Mark Peplow (m.peplow_at_nature.com), Nature’s news editor, by 10 February. Put “internship application” in the subject line.

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On Nature News - January 22, 2010

Most powerful hurricanes on the rise
Global warming could lead to fewer but more-intense storms.

Virus spreads by bouncing off infected cells
Viral ping-pong lets vaccinia get to other cells faster.

Superbug family tree sketched out
Next-generation genome sequencing enables detailed tracking of MRSA infections.

January 21, 2010

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Nature Podcast - January 21, 2010

natpod.GIFThis week, we discover how mammals arrived in Madagascar, hear how synthetic biologists have synchronized bacterial clocks, learn how emissions from Asia could be polluting the atmosphere above western North America, and discuss the holes in climate research.

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On Nature News - January 21, 2010

VIDEO: Bacterial clocks chime in unison
Genetic circuit allows entire colonies to keep time.

Brother sperm train together
Mouse sperm cells team up with their kin in the race to fertilize eggs.

Lemurs' wet and wild past
Model shows how mammals could have 'rafted' to Madagascar.

January 20, 2010

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On Nature News - January 20, 2010

'Big science' spurs collaborative trend
Complicated projects mean that science is becoming more globalized.

NIH scrutinizes drug-company payments at Baylor
Funding agency raises 'serious concerns' about conflicts of interest.

GlaxoSmithKline goes public with malaria data
Company to place structures and properties of drug leads in the public domain.

January 19, 2010

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On Nature News - January 19, 2010

Mystery of the brown giant panda deepens
Rare sighting of brown-and-white panda sparks conservation debate.

Bulgarian science reform attacked
Researchers say law wouldn't fix nation's higher-education system.

January 18, 2010

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On Nature News - January 18, 2010

VIDEO: Robotic roach creates order from chaos
Chaos theory eases the path of autonomous robots.

Why oil from the Exxon Valdez lingers
Rocky beaches may have locked oil away in airtight pores.

January 15, 2010

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On Nature News - January 15, 2010

Parasitic wasps' DNA laid bare
Nasonia wasp genomes should improve agricultural biological control.

Pollutants plucked from air with copper

Fortuitous catalyst discovery offers a new way to suck carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.

January 14, 2010

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Nature Video: The most vulnerable brains - January 14, 2010

Nature reporter Erika Check Hayden visits a San Francisco hospital where doctors are using new treatments to help infants at risk of brain injury. Read the full report here: The most vulnerable brains

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Nature Video: Dwarf galaxy dance - January 14, 2010

In this week's Nature Fabio Governato and colleagues present computer simulations that appear to have solved a long-standing problem in cosmology — namely, how the standard cold dark matter model of galaxy formation can give rise to the dwarf galaxies we see around us.

This beautiful animation shows how exploding stars are a key force in shaping dwarf galaxies.

Read the original research here: Bulgeless dwarf galaxies and dark matter cores from supernova-driven outflows

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On Nature News - January 14, 2010

BRIEFING: The Haiti earthquake in depth
Fault produces its biggest quake since 1751.

The fickle Y chromosome
Chimp genome reveals rapid rate of change.

Pulsar watchers race for gravity waves
Radio telescopes vie with laser detectors to hunt for signs of massive cosmic collisions.

January 08, 2010

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On Nature News - January 08, 2010

Oceans release DDT from decades ago
Emissions of controversial pesticide are heading northwards.

Sea stars suck up carbon
Much more carbon is sequestered by echinoderms than previously thought.

January 07, 2010

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Nature Video: Walking with Tetrapods - January 07, 2010

The fossilized remains of 395-million-year-old footprints in Poland have turned back the clock on the evolution of four-legged creatures, or tetrapods. The finds, reported this week in Nature, are 18 million years older than the earliest confirmed tetrapod fossils.

See also: Discovery pushes back date of first four-legged animal

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Nature Podcast - January 07, 2010

natpod.GIFThis week, we push back the date of the first appearance of four-legged creatures, and find out where leading researchers think their fields will be ten years from now. Plus, a round-up of what's hot elsewhere in Nature.

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On Nature News - January 07, 2010

Sea stars suck up carbon
Much more carbon is sequestered by echinoderms than previously thought.

Quivering ions pass quantum test
Table-top experiments unlock quantum realm predicted by Dirac equation.

Discovery pushes back date of first four-legged animal
But controversy surrounds 400-million-year-old fossilized tracks.

January 06, 2010

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On Nature News - January 06, 2010

Frogs' secret disposal system revealed
Talented amphibians urinate foreign objects implanted in their body cavities.

Israeli government advisers threaten walkout
Research council says it wants independence from ministry.

Kepler finds its first planets
Early data hints at discoveries to come in the hunt for Earth-like worlds.

December 24, 2009

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That was the year that was - December 24, 2009

main_bg.jpg
The end of 2009 is nigh, and the Great Beyond is signing off for another year.

And what a year! If you feel like reliving any of the moments, Nature has a host of end of year specials for your festive entertainment, whether it be the news that made the headlines in 2009, the pictures that defined the year, the end of year podcast, or an update on some of the years most intriguing stories you’ll find all that and more.

And thanks to you, our readers, we have a round up of the most popular Great Beyond blog posts.

All that remains is for us to wish you a wonderful festive season, and a happy New Year. We’ll be back in full swing January, but if anything major happens in the meantime fret not, we'll be covering it.

Cheers!

December 23, 2009

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On Nature News - December 23, 2009

Fossil evidence of early reptiles' last meal
Insect remains found in the mouths of early vertebrate fossils.

News 2009

The year in which …

2009 Gallery: Images of the year

Take a tour through the images that defined 2009.

December 17, 2009

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Nature Podcast - December 17, 2009

natpod.GIFThis week, we discover how sequencing the giant panda genome has provided clues to its bamboo diet, hear about a waterworld orbiting a nearby star, learn how wars follow power laws, and discuss the earthquake risk from geothermal energy.

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On Nature News - December 17, 2009

Sea level rise may exceed worst expectations
Seas were nearly 10 metres higher than now in previous interglacial period.

Modellers claim wars are predictable
Insurgent attacks follow a universal pattern of timing and casualties.

Cancer genomes reveal risks of sun and smoke
Sequencing of skin and lung cancers show that many mutations could be prevented.

December 16, 2009

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On Nature News - December 16, 2009

Q&A;: From climate news to classroom views
New York Times reporter Andrew Revkin reveals his thoughts on science journalism and Copenhagen.

Consent issue dogs stem-cell approval
NIH director bows to restrictions on use of cell lines.

Satellites beam in biomass estimates
Additional detail could help bring woodland into a future climate treaty.

December 14, 2009

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On Nature News - December 14, 2009

Stem-cell induction made simpler
Induced pluripotent stem cells made by inserting genes at just one location.

Genome reveals panda's carnivorous side
Bamboo-eater seemingly has no genes for cellulose-digesting enzymes.

December 09, 2009

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Nature Podcast - December 09, 2009

natpod.GIFThis week, we learn why female birds glam up when it comes to sharing childcare, discover how the Mediterranean basin rapidly refilled 5.6 million years ago, why the probability of species extinction is constant and how modifying our response to fear could help to treat anxiety disorders.

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On Nature News - December 09, 2009

Exoplanet claim bites the dust
Ground-based astrometry dealt a blow as planet found not to exist.

Testosterone link to aggression may be all in the mind
A dose of the hormone makes human game-players behave more fairly.

Israel weighs up new funding agency
Top scientists say that basic biomedical research is flagging.

December 08, 2009

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On Nature News - December 08, 2009

Primate study halted by US university
Officials fear violent reprisals from a reinvigorated animal-rights movement.

Tar sands mining linked to stream pollution
Canada's oil sands could be bad for local fish.

London's biomedical research institute takes shape
Tight budgets could mean operations begin with fewer researchers.

December 01, 2009

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On Nature News - December 01, 2009

Spanish awards rekindle old rivalries
Infrastructure programme steers substantial resources to major cities, upsetting some regional centres.

US bioethics commission promises policy action
Obama launches wide-ranging advisory body.

'Temple of the mind' unlocked
Map of fundamental brain receptor opens doors to treatments.

November 27, 2009

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On Nature News - November 27, 2009

Single-celled life does a lot with very little
Bacterial biochemistry mapped in detail.

Medical Research Council chief to step down
Early exit for Leszek Borysiewicz.

Japanese scientists rally against government cuts
Packed meeting hears a chorus of lament from Nobelists.

November 26, 2009

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On Nature News - November 26, 2009

Plans for cutting emissions could also benefit health
Global leaders target health benefits in advance of Copenhagen meeting.

Spin success for silicon
Replacing electron charge with electron spin paves the way for a new mode of computing.

Famous brain set to go under the knife - Premium content
Slices from the brain of H.M., a key patient in pioneering memory studies, will be immortalized online.

November 25, 2009

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Nature Podcast - November 25, 2009

natpod.GIFThis week, how a spintronic device may pave the way for information processing in the future, we discover the role of a pair of 'bone' proteins in the menopause, and learn that we hear not only with our ears but also our skin. Plus, a round-up of what's hot elsewhere in Nature.

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On Nature News - November 25, 2009

Storm clouds gather over leaked climate e-mails
British climate centre reeling over Internet posting of sensitive material.

Flu-virus prevalence comes under scrutiny
Projects to monitor antibodies seek true extent of H1N1 infection.

Indian neutrino lab site rejected
Nilgiri location threatens important elephant habitat.

November 24, 2009

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On Nature News - November 24, 2009

Icelandic genomics firm goes bankrupt
deCODE's demise leaves fate of its valuable genetic database unclear.

Bubble-fusion scientist debarred from federal funding
Office of Naval Research passes verdict on controversial researcher Rusi Taleyarkhan.

Diagnosing the future of genomics
Eric Green discusses his priorities as newly appointed director of the US National Human Genome Research Institute.

November 20, 2009

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On Nature News - November 20, 2009

Gene silencing predicted to improve drug manufacturing
Biotech firm hopes to use RNA interference to boost drug yields.

Europe puts brakes on fusion project
Firing up ITER in 2018 is not feasible, warn council delegates.

Maize genome mapped
Sequence should help corn breeders meet global demands for food and fuel.

November 19, 2009

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On Nature News - November 19, 2009

Gene-makers form security coalition
Latest salvo in the gene-synthesis 'standards war' sees firms set up a competing code.

Curbing population growth crucial to reducing carbon emissions
Access to contraception could tackle global warming, says United Nations.

Antarctic temperature spike surprises climate researchers
Polar region was unexpectedly warm between ice ages.

November 18, 2009

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Nature Podcast - November 18, 2009

natpod.GIFThis week in our biodiversity special, we hear why today's paleontologists need to get predictive and not just descriptive, learn how to factor environmental goods into the economy and celebrate 150 years of Darwin's On the Origin of Species by learning about the cultural context of his theories in Britain and across the world.

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On Nature News - November 18, 2009

Biologists rally to sequence 'neglected' microbes
For scientists, the thousandth microbial genome is just the start.

Climate model sets tough targets
International group outlines steps needed to reach 'safe' levels of carbon dioxide.

Japanese science faces deep cuts - Premium content
The government's election promises vowed more support for science, but so far budgets look set to shrink.

November 17, 2009

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On Nature News - November 17, 2009

Darwin's finches tracked to reveal evolution in action
A new species of finch may have arisen in the Galapagos.

Fresh hope for German stem-cell patent case
Referral to European Court may help to harmonize laws on intellectual property.

How the sponge stays slim
One species' rapid cell shedding explains its huge carbon-catching capacity.

November 13, 2009

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On Nature News - November 13, 2009

Biologists turn against worm
Researchers seek out alternative model organisms to C. elegans.

Environmental impact of cocaine strategy assessed
Studies measure effects of glyphosate-based herbicide on wildlife and human health.

November 12, 2009

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On Nature News - November 12, 2009

Evolution of a single gene linked to language
Mutations in the FOXP2 gene could help explain why humans can speak but chimps can't.

Lithium loss may be the planet-hunter's gain
Depletion of the element in stars might be linked to the existence of extrasolar planets.

Wellcome Trust makes it personal in funding revamp
People not projects are the focus of longer-term grants.

November 11, 2009

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Nature Podcast - November 11, 2009

natpod.GIFThis week we learn how a key language gene behaves differently in humans and chimps, how lithium levels in stars could reveal whether they have orbiting planets, and hear from reporter Jeff Tollefson in anticipation of the UN climate change conference in Copenhagen. Plus, a round-up of what's hot elsewhere in Nature.

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On Nature News - November 11, 2009

Global warming won't affect all deltas
Rising sea levels could submerge Mississippi Delta but leave other systems intact.

China moves to help high-tech firms
But initiatives meet with mixed response.

Britain sets up defence advisory group
Government seeks academic input on security issues.

November 06, 2009

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On Nature News - November 06, 2009

Brain disease treated by gene therapy
A treatment based on HIV finds first success in humans.

Mars rover plans its escape
Crunch time approaches for a decision on how to free Spirit from a sand trap.

Oldest American artefact unearthed
Oregon caves yield evidence of continent's first inhabitants.

Lisbon Treaty could give research a boost
European Union set to take a bigger role in climate and space policy.

November 05, 2009

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On Nature News - November 05, 2009

Q+A: Greek research supremo promises drastic reform
Achilleas Mitsos aims to sharpen up Greek science.

Gene-makers put forward security standards
But few companies are willing to sign up yet.

Supernova mystery solved?
Sooty neutron star could lie at the heart of Cassiopeia A.

November 04, 2009

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Nature Podcast - November 04, 2009

natpod.GIFThis week we learn the secrets of a star first spotted in 1680, hear how unrelated animals lend a helping hand, and discover how ecologists are bringing past ecosystems back to life in Pleistocene Parks. Plus, a round-up of what's hot elsewhere in Nature.

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On Nature News - November 04, 2009

Dark-matter test faces obstacles
Access to crystals may hamper bid to repeat experiment.

Initiative targets malaria eradication
Focus shifts to blocking parasite transmission.

US habitat rule threatens species
Conservationists call for change to Bush-era definition of 'endangered'.

Science favoured by German coalition
Budgets set to double as new government backs previous spending commitments.

Aftermath of a tsunami
A natural-hazards expert talks about surveying the destruction in Samoa.

November 03, 2009

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Nature internship - November 03, 2009

Nature, the international weekly journal of science, is seeking an intern reporter to work full-time in either its Washington, DC, or London offices. (Location will be determined by the nationality and work permit status of the successful candidate.) This six-month, paid position will begin in early January 2010.

Applicants should be self-starting and have a keen news sense. The intern will write news and other journalistic items for Nature’s website and print magazine. Please e-mail a cover letter, resume and three published articles to Alexandra Witze, Nature’s chief of correspondents for America (a.witze@us.nature.com), by November 15. Put “internship application” in the subject line.

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On Nature News - November 03, 2009

Brazil mulls major climate action
If adopted, the move would put the country ahead of other developing nations on emissions curbs.

The melting snows of Kilimanjaro
Glaciers crowning Africa's tallest mountain could disappear within decades.

Native American culture sowed seeds of its own collapse
Floods brought the Nazca to their knees — but they crippled themselves by over-farming first.

California stem-cell grants awarded
First major round of research targeted at therapies takes off.

Satellite launches to track the world's water
Soil moisture and ocean salinity set to be monitored from space.

Lions' taste for human flesh dissected
Two maneaters devoured dozens in the late nineteenth century but one ate the lion's share.

November 02, 2009

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On Nature News - November 02, 2009

New targets for old drugs
A computer program predicts thousands of previously unknown drug-target associations.

Air tides cause landslides
Pressure fluctuations can set slopes in motion.

October 30, 2009

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On Nature News - October 30, 2009

Aerosols make methane more potent
Air pollution linked more closely to climate concerns.

Amphibians rarely give earliest warning of pollution
Long-standing 'canary in the coal mine' role questioned.

October 29, 2009

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Nature Podcast - October 29, 2009

natpod.GIFThis week we discover a new type of communication between brain cells, hear some ideas about how the Earth became watery, and question the constancy of the speed of light. Plus, a round-up of what's hot elsewhere in Nature.

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On Nature News - October 29, 2009

Most distant gamma-ray burst spotted
Observations suggest the early Universe is ripe for exploration.

An intergalactic race in space and time
A burst of γ-rays lets scientists test quantum theories of gravity.

Ozone protocol squares up to climate - Premium content
Europeans back efforts to amend the Montreal Protocol to address global warming.

October 28, 2009

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On Nature News - October 28, 2009

Dark energy rips cosmos and agencies - Premium content
An international space mission to study an astronomical mystery is foundering.

US physicists propose astrophysics goals - Premium content
Dark energy and dark matter prove popular choices for funding.

October 27, 2009

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On Nature News - October 27, 2009

University tightens oversight of sensitive research
Conviction prompts rethink of data rules.

African science feels the pinch
Recession dampens donors' enthusiasm.

Woo Suk Hwang convicted, but not of fraud
Cloning pioneer gets two years for embezzlement and bioethics breach.

October 22, 2009

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Nature Podcast - October 22, 2009

natpod.GIFOn the show this week, the effects of sleep deprivation on memory, 250 years of London's Kew Gardens, watching evolution in the lab, climate change in the Himalayas, and much more.

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On Nature News - October 22, 2009

HIV vaccine trial under fire
Expert scrutiny casts doubt on 'historic' results.

Probe uncovers Mercury's youthful secret
Latest fly-by reveals planet's recent volcanic activity.

Time running out for climate talks
Rift between developed and developing nations might be too great.

Fossil primate challenges Ida's place
Controversial German specimen is related to lemurs, not humans, analysis of an Egyptian find suggests.

October 21, 2009

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On Nature News - October 21, 2009

Lazy male spiders avoid dinner date
Trespassing redbacks reap the rewards of reproduction without the costs of courting.

Moon scientist arrested on spy charges
Radar expert worked on US and Indian missions.

Darwin's geological mystery solved
Origin of odd South American boulders may have defeated the Origin's author.

October 20, 2009

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On Nature News - October 20, 2009

Europe's Galileo project gains ground
Long-troubled satellite-navigation system receives formal backing from European Commission president.

High hopes for Russia's nanotech firms
But an ambitious government initiative has been slow to incubate a domestic high-tech industry.

Major economies meeting struggles with climate
Many hurdles remain on the road to Copenhagen summit in December.

October 16, 2009

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On Nature News - October 16, 2009

EU research programme weighed up and found wanting
Audit criticizes lack of sustainability of EU-funded projects.

Flies get fright from false memories
Scientists use light activation to pinpoint where learning happens in fruit flies.

Researchers create portable black hole
Mini-hole made of metamaterials ensnares microwave light.

October 15, 2009

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On Nature News - October 15, 2009

Chemical keeps male sex drive in check
A single pheromone ensures a male fruitfly's urge to mate targets the right sex.

Gene therapy could remedy Parkinson's
Introducing three genes corrects motor defects in monkeys.

Cell invasion caught on camera
Videos show T cells breaching the central nervous system's defences.

Ocean science goes deep
A global mission to wire up sea-floor observatories gets under way.

October 14, 2009

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Nature Podcast - October 14, 2009

natpod.GIFThis week, we're impressed by video game-playing mice, go in search of a magnet with only one pole, meet Nobel Prize-winner Elizabeth Blackburn, and hear how Columbian guerrillas are helping scientists study reading.

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On Nature News - October 14, 2009

EXCLUSIVE: Particle physicist 'falsely accused', claims brother
As Adlène Hicheur is investigated for terrorist links, his brother speaks out.

EXCLUSIVE: Fusion delays sow concern
Construction on ITER won't begin until 2010.

Cancer metastasis scrutinized
Researchers shift focus to catch secondary tumours.

Japan to slash huge grant scheme
Upstart government brings fresh priorities to science.

October 13, 2009

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On Nature News - October 13, 2009

North America comet theory questioned
No evidence of an extraterrestrial impact 13,000 years ago, studies say.

Protein-design papers challenged
Reanalysis does not find same results as key 2003 study.

October 10, 2009

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On Nature News - October 10, 2009

Climate talks stumble in Bangkok
UN negotiators clash over how to succeed the Kyoto Protocol.

Physicist working at CERN arrested
Postdoc faces terrorism charges in France.

Row at US journal widens
Three papers caught up in journal probe of review process.

October 07, 2009

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On Nature News - October 07, 2009

X-ray free-electron lasers fire up
California's project has the lead as its facility goes live, but Europe aims for its own rapid-fire device.

Huge 'ghost' ring discovered around Saturn
Spitzer Space Telescope reveals a supersized dust belt.

Global warming may worsen locust swarms
Ancient records link a hotter climate to more damaging infestations.

October 06, 2009

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On Nature News - October 06, 2009

Nobel Prize in Physics awarded to light pioneers
Advances in fibre optics and digital imaging are rewarded.

Radical shift proposed for funding European research
Half of EU research budget should be spent on frontier science, say science advisers.

October 03, 2009

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On Nature News - October 03, 2009

Artificial ionosphere creates bullseye in the sky
Auroral experiments make glowing plasma patch.

Q+A: A Conservative approach to British science
How would research change under a centre-right government?

October 02, 2009

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On Nature News - October 02, 2009

Future of HIV vaccine unclear
Puzzling hints of success require explanation before trials can move forward.

BRIEFING: US Senate gears up for climate debate
Cap-and-trade bill largely mirrors legislation passed in the House of Representatives.

Oldest hominid skeleton revealed
At 4.4 million years, Ethiopian fossil clarifies human–chimp relationships.

Q+A: The new head of the NIH
Francis Collins talks about his priorities for the agency.

October 01, 2009

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On Nature News - October 01, 2009

Q+A: Driven out of research - Premium content
A virologist describes how stringent biosecurity regulations caused her to drop one line of work.

Rutherford Building cancers a "coincidence"
Independent inquiry finds cancer connection to historic radiation experiments "unlikely".

Past quakes cause future shocks
Seismic waves from earthquakes might make distant fault lines more slippery.

September 30, 2009

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On Nature News - September 30, 2009

Cellulosic ethanol hits roadblocks - Premium content
How the financial crisis is slowing efforts to commercialize next-generation ethanol.

Climate change will hit developing world harvests hardest
Report quantifies link between global warming and food security.

Exclusive: Iranian ministers in plagiarism row
Nature investigation reveals duplications in papers by science and transport chiefs.

Chinese dam may be a methane menace
Wetlands around Three Gorges produce tonnes of the greenhouse gas.

US agriculture research gets priority plan - Premium content
Federal restructuring aims to lessen the influence of pork-barrel politics.

September 29, 2009

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On Nature News - September 29, 2009

Climate sizzle could come soon
UK researchers predict 4 °C rise within decades.

Experts draw up ocean-drilling wish list
Researchers seek deeper understanding of crust formation.

Instant climate model gears up
Simulation tool gives rapid feedback on implications of policy changes.

September 28, 2009

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On Nature News - September 28, 2009

Physicists shrink X-ray source
Laser accelerator almost fits on a tabletop.

Sex chromosomes linked to evolution of new species
Questions over conflict of the sexes remain.

September 25, 2009

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On Nature News - September 25, 2009

Battery business boost
University spin-out opens trading as a billion-dollar company.

Butterflies' migrational timekeeper found
Monarchs may navigate using clocks in their antennae.

Strawberry pesticide leaves sour taste
Methyl iodide use by Californian farmers up for review.

Vaccine protects against HIV virus
A two-shot combo reduces the risk of HIV infection.

September 23, 2009

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On Nature News - September 23, 2009

Publisher retracts paper by Iran's science minister
Iranian scientists press for plagiarism inquiry.

BRIEFING: Climate summit fails to address key challenges
Lack of progress threatens global deal.

Plans for UK research assessment revealed
Peer review remains key for determining the distribution of university cash.

SPECIAL REPORT: German science looks to new political players
Coalition change could affect policies, reports Quirin Schiermeier.

Gold rush for algae
The second of four weekly articles on biofuels describes how oil giants and others are placing their bets on algae.

Climate summit fails to address key challenges
Are the global leaders listening?

Protein burns its evolutionary bridges
Mutations can set genetic change on an irreversible path.

Indian ancestry revealed
The mixing of two distinct lineages led to most modern-day Indians.

Buoy damage blurs El Niño forecasts
Missing data from the eastern Pacific Ocean may hinder predictions of this year's event.

Research chief steps down over fake data
Peter Chen's integrity 'undamaged' by incident, says boss.

September 22, 2009

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On Nature News - September 22, 2009

The elephant and the neutrino
Conservationists challenge physics observatory in Indian wildlife reserve.

Genomics shifts focus to rare diseases
Disappointing genome-wide studies prompt researchers to tackle single-gene defects.

September 21, 2009

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On Nature News - September 21, 2009

Q+A: The once-quiet scientist
A former animal researcher decides to speak out.

Nuclear test ban back on the table
United States delegation to international summit reignites hope.

Water on the Moon?
Separate lunar missions indicate evidence of ice and hydrated minerals.

September 18, 2009

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On Nature News - September 18, 2009

Arctic sea ice levels third-lowest on record
No sign that long-term trend is reversing, scientists caution

Fungus genome boosts fight to save North American forests
DNA sequence could advance efforts to control pine beetle infestations.

September 17, 2009

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On Nature News - September 17, 2009

High window on the past
Microbiologists find living stromatolites in the Andes.

Volcanoes stirred by climate change
Impact of global warming on geological hazards 'poorly understood', experts warn.

Wanted: a chief scientist for Europe
Commission president pledges to hire top adviser.

September 16, 2009

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On Nature News - September 16, 2009

North American coalition pushes for refrigerant curb
Greenhouse gases closer to Montreal Protocol regulation

Colour blindness corrected by gene therapy
Treated monkeys can now see in technicolour.

Why opposites don't always attract
A lucky lab accident helps to explain the mystery of bouncing droplets.

Climate change warning from Greenland
Small rise in temperature thousands of years ago caused rapid melting of the Greenland ice sheet.

Obama proposes greenhouse-gas standards for vehicles
US move is the first national regulation on carbon emissions.

Israeli immigrant scientists protest threat to jobs
Budget cuts freeze researchers out of Israel's KAMEA programme.

Q&A;: Greenland project drills down to record depths
Researchers read our climate record from a mile-long core of ice.

September 15, 2009

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On Nature News - September 15, 2009

RIKEN scientist arrested
Japanese researcher allegedly misused institutional funds.

Q+A: Choon Fong Shih
The first president of Saudia Arabia's King Abdullah University of Science and Technology talks.

September 14, 2009

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On Nature News - September 14, 2009

Atomic agency rescues 'dirty bomb' material
Radioactive cobalt cleared from Lebanese lab.

Publication bias continues despite clinical-trial registration

Fewer than half of registered trials publish their results.

France unveils carbon tax

Nature talks to climatologist Jean Jouzel about the plans.

September 11, 2009

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On Nature News - September 11, 2009

Italian quake analysis rumbles in
Satellite data pinpoints fault at heart of L'Aquila earthquake.

Physicists propose 'Schrödinger's virus' experiment
Laser technique could put virus in two overlapping quantum states.

September 09, 2009

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On Nature News - September 09, 2009

Chromium isotopes track oxygen's rise
Early debut for essential gas was followed by an unexpected dip.

Potato blight's gene weaponry revealed
Jumping genes may hold key to defeating mould that caused Irish famine.

How green is your campus?
Universities are working to bring sustainability to their campuses and classrooms, and could serve as a model for other institutions looking to go carbon-neutral. But there's no single way to grade the initiatives.

Export-control laws worry academics
US researchers hope planned reforms will reduce the risk of prosecution.

Darwin Centre takes doors off museum
Scientists are on display at a new Natural History Museum facility.

Stem-cell drug fails crucial trials
Experimental treatment does not halt fatal complication of bone-marrow transplant.

September 05, 2009

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On Nature News - September 05, 2009

Nations commit to share climate information
But proposed international service will face scientific and political hurdles.

Ethics scrutiny needed for Chinese–European projects
Panel calls for joint advisory body to monitor research.

Cells go fractal
Mathematical patterns rule the behaviour of molecules in the nucleus.

September 04, 2009

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On Nature News - September 04, 2009

India says no to HIV drug patents
Patent office rejects applications from two US drug companies.

'Overwhelming' evidence for monopoles
Multiple experiments reveal materials with single points of north and south.

Fresh targets give hope for HIV vaccine
Two antibodies that stop the virus in its tracks could hold the key to broad immune protection.

Europe's oldest axes discovered
Sophisticated tool-making skills more widespread than previously thought.

September 02, 2009

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On Nature News - September 02, 2009

Pandemic flu: from the front lines
Researchers describe the scientific and public-health challenges they face in battling the H1N1 virus.

Q+A: Forging a future for South African science
The country's science minister talks about her priorities in lean times.

Knockout rats made to order
Customized disease models made by deleting rat embryo genes may be on sale soon.

Climate-control plans scrutinized
The Royal Society reviews options for fighting global warming with geoengineering.

August 28, 2009

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On Nature News - August 28, 2009

Climate change exacts a high price
Costs of adapting to a warming world could be much greater than expected.

Ozone threat is no laughing matter
Nitrous oxide poses a growing atmospheric problem.

Sunspots stir oceans
Variations in the Sun's brightness may have a big role in Pacific precipitation.

August 26, 2009

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Nature Podcast - August 26, 2009

natpod.GIFWe've got a packed show this week, including gene therapy for mitochondrial mutations, a 'hot jupiter' spinning perilously close to its sun, discussion of a new report about testing toxic chemicals, a science-themed record for kids, and your chance to win a ticket to a private screening of Creation.

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On Nature News - August 26, 2009

Renewable technologies increase energy sprawl
Biofuels will have the greatest impact on land use and habitat, study finds.

Frog serenade foiled
Amphibians raise their pitch to counter traffic noise.

Fossil protection law comes under fire
Palaeontologists aim to clamp down on illegal trade.

US plans for science outreach to Muslim world
White House to send scientists as envoys.

August 25, 2009

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New videos from Nature - August 25, 2009

Nature’s video channel has put out two new short items for your delight.

The first is a film about Sci Foo, a very unusual conference held each summer at Google's headquarters in California. This gathering of geeks is informal and unstructured; there's no agenda until the first evening when the attendees collectively create one.

Nature's Charlotte Stoddart went along to Sci Foo 2009 to capture its unique spirit on film.

The second is a trailer for the Lindau film series, which details an extraordinary meeting between Nobel Laureates and young scientists takes place on Lindau Island in Germany.

The films will be released one a week from 27 August. Watch them here.

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On Nature News - August 25, 2009

Q+A: The science of Google Wave
How an online application could change research communication.

Canada assumes weighty mantle
Instrument to help redefine the kilogram makes a transatlantic move.

FDA narrows drug label usage
Cancer treatments limited to specific gene variants.

August 21, 2009

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On Nature News - August 21, 2009

BRIEFING: A question of sex
Nature explains the science behind the latest gender row in sport.

Scientists devise new way to modify organisms
Yeast cell surrogate may help scientists to engineer synthetic life.

The resistant rice of the future
Cross-breeding could create rice varieties that can survive flooding and fungi.

Flu shot guidelines criticized
Mathematical model suggests that US experts got their priorities wrong.

August 19, 2009

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On Nature News - August 19, 2009

Nanoparticle safety in doubt
Lung damage in Chinese factory workers sparks health fears.

China cuts methane emissions from rice fields
But global warming could raise greenhouse gases produced by paddies elsewhere.

Environmental concerns delay seismic testing
Lawsuit puts research voyage on hold.

August 17, 2009

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On Nature News - August 17, 2009

Irrigation reform needed in Asia
Farms must feed a growing population with a minimal impact on the environment.

India upgrades its disease surveillance network
Microbiologist Udaiveer Rana talks about the country's revamped disease institute.

World's smallest laser unveiled
The spaser promises ultrafast nanocircuits.

Ugly bats are built to bite
A face that only a mother could love conceals a skull with a surprisingly powerful jaw.

August 14, 2009

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On Nature News - August 14, 2009

Child DNA donors should have their say
Bioethicists argue for stricter rules at genetic repositories.

A screen for cancer killers
Method identifies drugs that target the cells behind cancer growth.

August 12, 2009

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On Nature News - August 12, 2009

Hurricane peak not unique
Historical estimates suggest that global warming could boost the number of hurricanes.

Flu database rocked by legal row
Dispute over ownership raises concerns among flu scientists.

Climate data spat intensifies
Growing demands for access to information swamp scientist.

Satellite data show Indian water stocks shrinking
Groundwater depletion raises spectre of shortages.

Ensuring safe landings on Mars
NASA to test inflatable shells for space craft.

August 11, 2009

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On Nature News - August 11, 2009

Return of the rat
European investment could see knock-out rats catching up with mutant mice in medical research.

Science advisers mull priorities
Climate change and energy are high on the agenda for Obama's panel.

Ice-core researchers hope to chill out
Fresh freezers needed to preserve ancient gas, scientists say.

Mystery of missing carbon cracked
Earth's mantle seems to be depleted in carbon, but chemical processes might explain why.

Nanowires get biological impulses
Primitive hybrid device controls protein ion channels.

August 10, 2009

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On Nature News - August 10, 2009

How to breathe on the Moon
Moon rock can be processed directly to produce oxygen.

Immortality improves cell reprogramming
Knocking out genes with a role in cancer prevention helps produce stem cells.

Geoengineering schemes under scrutiny
Researchers divided over the wisdom of climate manipulation.

LHC hopes for collisions by Christmas
But particle physicists will have to scale back the energies of their experiments for years.

Staving off ecological disaster in lungs
Protecting the lung's 'ecosystem' may help cystic fibrosis patients.

Cambrian's fiercest hunter defanged
Computer modelling hints that Anomalocaris didn't have the chops to chew up trilobites.

Europe prepares for drugs from GM plants
Guidelines for pharmed medicines compare favourably with US rules.

August 07, 2009

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On Nature News - August 07, 2009

The itch without the pain
A special set of neurons may be dedicated to sensing itchiness.

New site for Berkeley energy institute
Environmental campaigners force a change of plan for Californian University.

Presidential panel narrows NASA's options
Augustine commission outlines seven key scenarios for space exploration.

August 06, 2009

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On Nature News - August 06, 2009

Stimulus money unveiled for green cars
But a boost for established manufacturers leaves innovative companies out in the cold, critics say.

Crystals grown in a flash
A nanopulse of laser light is enough to trigger crystallization.

Who speaks for science in Europe? - Premium content
Questions remain over whether researchers have a coherent enough voice to influence European science policy. Natasha Gilbert reports.

August 04, 2009

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On Nature News - August 04, 2009

Drowned tundra emits more carbon
Work in Alaska looks at life in a warmer, wetter world.

Greek scientists fight research shake-up
Protests greet plans to dismantle multidisciplinary institutions.

Grant scores leave applicants in limbo
Top-rated research must wait until September for NIH funding decision.

July 31, 2009

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On Nature News - July 31, 2009

Battling scientists reach consensus on health of global fish stocks
Many depleted fisheries are making good progress to recovery.

Editor retracts sperm-creation paper
Plagiarism accusation hits stem-cell research.

July 30, 2009

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On Nature News - July 30, 2009

Malaria becoming more drug resistant
Artemisinin-based medicines fail a growing number of patients in Cambodia.

Deforestation emissions on the rise
Amazon study suggests denser forest yields will mean more carbon release.

Israel's space industry facing staff cuts
Decline in government funding precipitates cash crisis.

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Nature Podcast - July 30, 2009

natpod.GIFIn this episode, we bring you mice made from induced stem cells, the early Earth's disordered insides, jellyfish stirring up the oceans, and Saturn's spinning speed.

July 28, 2009

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On Nature News - July 28, 2009

DNA barcodes for plants a step closer
Biologists agree on genetic sequences to uniquely identify plant species.

UK universities urged to build more industry links
Business secretary calls for wider commercial interest in British science.

African disease labs to get health check
Rating system for labs could improve diagnosis and lift standards.

July 23, 2009

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On Nature News - July 23, 2009

Mice made from induced stem cells
Technical feat shows that the different route to stem cells can indeed make a full mammal body.

Heart, heal thyself
A mouse study finds that, surprisingly, heart muscle can be made to proliferate.

Big claims for tiny lenses
Physicists balk at Nature paper saying lenses can see beyond the theoretical limit.

July 22, 2009

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Nature Podcast - July 22, 2009

natpod.GIFThis week, wild chimps show signs of an AIDS-like disease, super-tiny lenses go beyond the limits of light, and we reassess the patterns in the Northern and Southern lights. Plus, the regular news round-up.

July 21, 2009

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On Nature News - July 21, 2009

Setback for Huntington's disease therapy
Brain-tissue transplants don't last very long in patients.

How raindrops fall
Exploding drops produce miniature showers.

Mystery of HIV vaccine failure deepens
Heightened immune response to cold virus may not be to blame.

July 17, 2009

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On Nature News  - July 17, 2009

Neanderthal census reveals diversity
Sequencing method uses mitochondrial DNA to build up a picture of the species.

Q+A: Weighing up the G8's promises to poor countries
Nature News talks to Namanga Ngongi about the billions of dollars pledged for food security.

July 16, 2009

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On Nature News - July 16, 2009

Tsunami forecast in real time
Russian tsunami modeller seizes unexpected opportunity after New Zealand earthquake.

California academics face prospect of unpaid leave
University of California makes furlough plans as state budget cuts continue to bite.

The moonwalker
Harrison Schmitt was the first and last scientist to touch the lunar surface.

July 15, 2009

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On Nature News - July 15, 2009

Asteroid belt's icy fringe explained
'Primordial objects' may have been captured during planetary realignment.

Sequencing unlocks secrets of blood parasites
Possible drug targets revealed in flatworms that cause schistosomiasis.

NIH nominee draws scrutiny
Francis Collins is likely to face funding challenges — and criticism of his Christian evangelism.

Medical isotope shortage reaches crisis level
Robust solutions sought urgently to shore up fragile supply chain.

How brain training makes multitasking easier
Practice speeds up the part of the brain that lets us tackle many jobs at once.

July 14, 2009

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On Nature News - July 14, 2009

Malaria drug makers ignore WHO ban
Health agency calls for clampdown on artemisinin monotherapy.

Flu furore hits Argentina
Refusal to declare national emergency restricts pandemic measures.

Pandemic flu viruses brew for years before going global
Monitoring more viral genes could provide early warning of dangerous outbreaks.

Swine flu shares some features with 1918 pandemic
Exposure to one pandemic may protect against the other.

July 13, 2009

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On Nature News - July 13, 2009

Approvals on trial
Researchers demand more harmonization of European rules for approving clinical studies.

Mars rover devours budgets
Ever-growing cost of the planned Mars Science Laboratory threatens other space missions.

July 10, 2009

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On Nature News - July 10, 2009

Q&A;: Taiwan's hopes for a biotech revolution
The president of the country's top research institute on growing the knowledge economy.

G8 leaders fail to agree on carbon cuts before 2050
Summit declaration says 2 °C warming must be avoided.

Q&A;: Helping Europe's molecular biologists
The new EMBO director speaks to Nature News about her plans.

July 09, 2009

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Nature Podcast - July 09, 2009

natpod.GIFThis week we're a step closer to an anti-ageing drug for people, we discover how and when our planet turned green, spot the most distant supernovae yet, and it's 20 years since the discovery of the cystic fibrosis gene.

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On Nature News - July 09, 2009

India hikes science budget despite slowdown
Boosts for human space flight and atomic energy.

A pill for longer life?
A drug slows the march of time in middle-aged mice.

Special Report: Developing nations tackle climate - Premium content
Emissions targets, clean-energy projects and calls for justice are multiplying, reports Jeff Tollefson.

July 08, 2009

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On Nature News - July 08, 2009

Czech researchers angry over government changes
Reform reshuffles budgets for science and industry.

Sperm-like cells made from human embryonic stem cells
But results are only preliminary, researchers caution.

Q&A;: Beyond petroleum?
BP's chief chemist talks about balancing the company's commitment to renewable energies with profit.

July 02, 2009

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Nature Podcast - July 02, 2009

natpod.GIFThis week, making stem cells for therapy, how salamanders regrow their limbs, three huge studies of genetic variation and schizophrenia, and how plants keep carbon dioxide above a certain level in the atmosphere.

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On Nature News - July 02, 2009

Funding boost for African science
Wellcome Trust grants £30 million to help build research capacity.

Salamander cells remember their origins in limb regeneration
Cell tracking shows that axolotl cells in a regrowing leg retain distinct roles.

African science drops down G8 agenda
Researchers lament poor progress on commitments to developing nations.

June 30, 2009

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On Nature News - June 30, 2009

Q&A;: Observing the scars of the Arctic thaw
Ecologist Breck Bowdon talks about the consequences of thawing permafrost in Alaska.

Chief scientist quits California stem-cell agency
Departure raises questions over leadership at flagship centre.

Lawsuit puts flu-vaccine contract in doubt
Biotech company sued by creditors.

Vital marine habitat under threat
Destruction of seagrass on a par with loss of rainforests and coral reefs.

June 26, 2009

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On Nature News - June 26, 2009

A helping hand for addicts
A neuropsychologist talks about the challenges of studying the addicted brain.

Climate refugee fears questioned
Few figures to back up prophecies of mass migration to rich countries.

Female promiscuity may not benefit offspring
'Higher quality' male seed beetles lose post-copulatory battle.

June 24, 2009

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Nature Podcast - June 24, 2009

natpod.GIFThis week's Nature Podcast is a science journalism special. Listen in as we ask whether science journalists are cheerleaders or watchdogs for science, hear how technology is changing reporting from conferences, and get the inside scoop on how science gets turned into front page news. Plus, the produce of the Nature News team in our weekly science news chat.

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On Nature News - June 24, 2009

Sodium traces hint at subsurface ocean on Enceladus
Measurements rule out geysers on Saturn's moon.

US human spacefaring questioned
Review panel takes a hard look at NASA's goal of returning astronauts to the Moon.

New protein structures replace the old
Dutch software to weed out errors in Protein Data Bank.

June 19, 2009

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On Nature News - June 19, 2009

UK climate effects revealed in finest detail yet
Detailed projections met with caution by climate scientists.

BRIEFING: NASA's Moon goals under review
But work on the first of the agency's new rockets continues.

The virus spy
Yan Li talks about spotting the novel swine flu virus at Canada's National Microbiology Laboratory.

Special: Apollo 40 years on
Exploring the legacy of the first manned lunar missions.

Drug quells anxiety in early trials
Angst-fighting compound lacks side effects of current treatments.

June 18, 2009

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On Nature News - June 18, 2009

Italy cancels G8 research meeting
Scrapped ministerial summit may jeopardize pressing climate change decisions.

Dinosaur's digits show how birds got wings
A new dinosaur species looks set to solve an old evolutionary puzzle.

Beijing's clean air claims questioned
Environment ministry now plans to monitor ozone and small particles.

June 16, 2009

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On Nature News - June 16, 2009

Patchy pig monitoring may hide flu threat
Experts call for increased surveillance of animals.

Climate talks snarled up
Two-pronged negotiations fail to bridge divide between nations.

Feather growth limits size of flying birds
Time required for moulting may be a more important factor than weight.

June 11, 2009

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Nature Podcast - June 11, 2009

natpod.GIFThis week, typhoons that trigger earthquakes, worms that refuse to die, and the search for extra terrestrial life starts on Earth.

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On Nature News - June 11, 2009

Glimpse of Earth as seen from afar
Lunar eclipse paints portrait of Earth that could aid hunt for distant habitable planets.

Typhoons trigger gentler tremors
Small quakes may act as a release valve that prevents catastrophic convulsions.

Avian influenza aided readiness for swine flu
Despite gains from threat of bird flu, pandemic preparedness is patchy.

June 08, 2009

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On Nature News - June 08, 2009

Too few women in clinical trials?
Cancer-drug studies fail to reflect true incidence of disease in the population.

Mars missions get in line
NASA planetary competitions to no longer favour Mars.

UK science pulled back to business

Government reshuffle abolishes short-lived research and education department.

June 05, 2009

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On Nature News - June 05, 2009

Q&A;: Zipping around on the ocean floor
Ocean scientists hunt for Canadian deep-sea corals.

Historic deal for german science
Eleventh-hour deal secures billions of euros for research.

War and migration may have shaped human behaviour
Demographic factors could be behind diverse aspects of social evolution.

Human-ape links heard in laughter
Similarities between laughter of tickled apes and humans mirrors genetic ties between species.

June 03, 2009

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On Nature News - June 03, 2009

Warning for diplomats over misuse of science
Use science to build partnerships, urge government science advisers.

Open access publishing gains another convert
University College London joins rapidly growing throng.

African ministers lay out climate-change policy
Common vision still lacks specifics.

Role reversal undermines speed-dating theories
Women become less choosy when they, rather than men, move from table to table.

June 02, 2009

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On Nature News - June 02, 2009

Drug giants unite to develop cancer therapy
Merck and AstraZeneca collaboration could launch a new trend — if their work yields results.

Earliest evidence for pottery making found
Fragments from a Chinese cave push back the dawn of the craft by more than 1,000 years.

Crunch time for German science programmes

Billions of euros in university funding could be delayed or lost.

June 01, 2009

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On Nature News - June 01, 2009

Boost for conservation of plant gene assets
Financial worries accompany award of first grants under international treaty.

Dark energy particle spotted?
Reported 'chameleon' particle would change its mass to match its environs.

Electrodes spark neuron growth

Deep brain stimulation could help make memories.

May 29, 2009

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On Nature News - May 29, 2009

Sweden snares neutron facility
Lund will play host to European Spallation Source.

Failure is certainly an option
Conservation scientists plead for better reporting of negative results.

Getting science into policy
New Zealand's first ever chief science adviser talks about how he will make an impact on government decision-making.

May 28, 2009

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On Nature News - May 28, 2009

Taking a fossil primate on the road
Ida's promoter defends science and showmanship.

Hot times ahead for the Wild West
American west threatened by more heatwaves than past models have predicted.

The nail in the coffin for group selection?
Benefits to an individual and its family may be enough to account for altruistic behaviour.

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Nature Podcast - May 28, 2009

natpod.GIFThis week, transgenic monkeys that glow green, quantum states that change as soon as you look at them, and a new approach to the war on cancer.

May 27, 2009

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On Nature News - May 27, 2009

Former shuttle pilot nominated as NASA head
Charles Bolden lined up to take over space agency.

Draft stem-cell guidelines criticized
Researchers complain that previously approved cell lines would not be covered.

Russia makes major shift in climate policy

Putin emphasizes the need for action on global warming.

May 22, 2009

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On Nature News - May 22, 2009

Old seasonal flu antibodies target swine flu virus
Lab results could explain why young patients are hardest hit by current H1N1 strain.

GPS signal under threat
A few years of reduced precision might affect scientists worldwide.

Flagship drug-development initiative picks projects
European project awards pharmaceutical research funding.

May 20, 2009

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Nature Podcast - May 20, 2009

natpod.GIFThis week, we investigate the link between cancer and Down's syndrome, find out how life on Earth survived multiple meteorite impacts 3.9 billion years ago, and discover why it's so hard to lose weight by dieting.


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On Nature News - May 20, 2009

Reunion of fossil halves splits scientists
Well-preserved primate suffers identity crisis.

Q&A;: Reaping the rewards of health research
The director of the University of Oxford's institute in Vietnam on studying disease in poor countries.

Exploration divides geographers
Campaigners pledge to fight on after Royal Geographical Society rejects resolution to bring back big expeditions.

May 19, 2009

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On Nature News - May 19, 2009

Public donations to lift research
Website paves way for people power.

Sunny outlook for Australian science
Research programmes win big in budget, but critics say environment is 'overlooked'.

NASA chief nearly named?
President Obama to meet with former astronaut Charles Bolden.

May 18, 2009

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On Nature News - May 18, 2009

Q+A: Mapping the world's oldest submerged town
Underwater archaeologist Jon Henderson is hoping to reveal the secrets of the ancient Greek town of Pavlopetri.

Q&A;: Defending basic research in Israel
The country's science minister speaks out on proposed budget cuts.

Thoughts of money soothe social rejection
Handling cash also eases physical pain.

May 14, 2009

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Nature Podcast - May 14, 2009

natpod.GIFThis week we discover a 35,000 year-old figurine with exaggerated breasts, look back to the origins of RNA, look forward to a new light source that could replace ugly fluorescent strip lights, and we ask: is free will an illusion?

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On Nature News - May 14, 2009

Q&A;: Marie-Paule Kieny
The vaccine research director of the World Health Organization, on swine flu.

RNA world easier to make
Ingenious chemistry shows how nucleotides may have formed in the primordial soup.

Ancient Venus rewrites history books
Female figure was carved from a mammoth tusk 35,000 years ago.

May 13, 2009

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On Nature News - May 13, 2009

Asteroid impact may have gassed Earth
Did dinosaur-killing space rock create enough carbon monoxide to trigger extreme global warming?

Erupting gas may cause lunar flashes
Eyewitness reports of flickering Moon lights stand up to scrutiny.

Q+A: The way forwards for Britain's environment policy
Bob Watson, the UK environment department's chief scientist, discusses research priorities.

May 12, 2009

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On Nature News - May 12, 2009

Synthetic biology gets ethical
UK centre hopes to blend science, policy and outreach in burgeoning field.

Swine flu spread matches previous flu pandemics
New analysis supports pandemic designation.

How thalidomide makes its mark
Drug's effects on embryonic blood-vessel growth may be the source of malformed limbs.

Making war not love
Fiercest warriors in Amazon tribe left fewer descendants.

May 08, 2009

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On Nature News - May 08, 2009

Q&A;: Bill Chadwick
A volcanologist reveals how undersea eruptions can be a boon for some species.

Austria to quit CERN
Move will end 50-year participation in physics laboratory.

Obama requests US science funding
After a massive stimulus injection in February, requests for research monies level out.

May 07, 2009

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On Nature News - May 07, 2009

'Hobbit' was a dwarf with large feet
Studies suggest Flores man was a distinct species.

DNA twisted into boxes
Molecular keys can open tiny containers.

China joins world-class synchrotron club
Nation's costliest science facility is unveiled.

May 06, 2009

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Nature Podcast - May 06, 2009

natpod.GIFThis week on the Nature Podcast, we’ve got miniature hippos and even smaller hominids, birds with culture written into their genes, a lockable box made of DNA, and a tale of Two Cultures. Plus we announce the winner of our science haiku competition.

May 01, 2009

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On Nature News - May 01, 2009

Universities warned about swine flu threat
Government agencies in the US and UK issue advisories over flu on campus.

Age-defying dinosaur collagen
Hadrosaur, dead 80 million years, yields oldest protein yet sequenced.

Q+A: German virologist's race for swine flu test
Christian Drosten talks to Nature about tackling the threat of a pandemic.

April 30, 2009

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'The coming climate crunch' - April 30, 2009

cover_nature.jpgThis week’s issue of Nature looks in detail at “the coming climate crunch”.

As my colleague Quirin Schiermeier explains on the Climate Feedback blog, “What’s it all about then? Well, Gavin Schmidt and David Archer, in their news and views piece, get to the heart of it: “Dangerous climate change, even loosely defined, is going to be hard to avoid.’”

The Real Climate blog focuses on two papers which look at the chances of staying below 2°C warming. “Both find that the most directly relevant quantity is the total amount of CO2 ultimately released, rather than a target atmospheric CO2 concentration or emission rate,” the blogging team writes. “This is an extremely useful result, giving us a clear statement of how our policy goals should be framed.”

Much of the coverage focuses on the suggestion in one of these papers that once humanity has added a trillion tonnes of carbon to the atmosphere 2°C is inevitable (eg: Wired).

In the Guardian, Myles Allen, author of one of the papers, writes:

Like all scientists, most of what I do is arcane and technical and of very little interest to outsiders. For once, however, I'm involved in a couple of studies (published today in Nature), that my fellow parents might just find interesting. The headline result of both papers is that the risk of dangerous climate change is primarily determined by the total amount of carbon dioxide that we, the human race, release into the atmosphere over all time, not by emissions in any particular year.

Joseph Romm, of the Climate Progress blog, is unimpressed though. He writes that our issue “fails utterly to provide its readers with the two must-haves in any comprehensive coverage of the issue:

-A clear and specific understanding of the plausible worst-case scenario impacts facing the world post-2050 on our current emissions path.
-A clear and specific understanding of the core climate solutions, policies for their rapid deployment, and an understanding of why the total cost of action is so darn low — one tenth of a penny on the dollar.”

Make up your own mind: all the content is here.

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On Nature News - April 30, 2009

Swine flu goes global
New influenza virus tests pandemic emergency preparedness.

California in clean-fuel drive - Premium content
State rule says biofuels aren't so green.

Japan goes for the sun - Premium content
Government pushes to regain national lead in solar-energy research.

April 29, 2009

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Nature Podcast - April 29, 2009

natpod.GIFThis week we've a climate special: Nicholas Stern tells us how the recession could help curb global warming, Nature's climate science editor is in the studio to talk us through the latest research, and we imagine what the world would look like in the worst-case scenario of 1000ppm of CO2. Also on the show, autism genes and how to fix a broken heart.

April 28, 2009

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On Nature News - April 28, 2009

Research for development
The UK Department for International Development's research chief discusses priorities.

Obama promises spending boost for science
Ambitious target for economically tough times.

Swine flu outbreak sweeps the globe
Genetic code of new influenza strain could contribute to its rapid spread.

Briefing: Swine flu jumps continents
Influenza virus spreads around the world.

April 24, 2009

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Vote for us!  - April 24, 2009

webby-awards.jpgNature.com has been nominated for a Webby Award. You can find us in the Society section under Science.

April 23, 2009

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Nature Podcast - April 23, 2009

natpod.GIFOn this show, a newly discovered fossil reveals clues to the origin of flippered mammals, we get stuck into the glue that holds species together, and mobile phone tracking: is it science or stalking?

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On Nature News - April 23, 2009

Cancer drug hits setback
Results from early-stage colon cancer trial turn spotlight on recent acquisition.

Green technologies win £1.4 billion in UK budget
Carbon reduction sees a stimulus — but blue-skies research may be at risk.

China's plants absorb a third of its carbon emissions
But another study shows vegetation will absorb less carbon dioxide as nations cut pollution.

April 22, 2009

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On Nature News - April 22, 2009

Exoplanets lighten up
More Earth-like planets spotted outside our solar system.

Why big eruptions don't always fuel mass extinctions
Rocks near the site of a volcano could determine whether an eruption causes catastrophic climate change.

Genetic profiling used to tailor cancer therapy
Tumour screening leads to more effective treatment for some patients.

April 21, 2009

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On Nature News - April 21, 2009

Q&A;: Prepare to be digitized
The World Digital Library's director explains his vision.

Platinum pollution issue gets measured
Demand for catalytic converters has spread osmium around the globe.

Designer immune cells fight prostate cancer
'Living drug' shows promise in early clinical trials.

April 17, 2009

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On Nature News - April 17, 2009

Dying trees may exacerbate climate change
Forests could emit more carbon than they store if temperatures rise.

Writing about values shrinks racial grades gap
Short essays raise school scores of low-achieving African-American students for two years.

Life thrives beneath Antarctic glacier
Unique chemistry enables microbes to survive harsh conditions.

April 16, 2009

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Nature Podcast - April 16, 2009

natpod.GIFThis week, we unzip nanotubes to make some graphene nanoribbons, challenge the idea that closely related species have similar cognitive abilities and hear about the world's largest network of cosmic ray detectors in Argentina. All that, plus our weekly NewsChat in which we celebrate the life of John Maddox, former editor of Nature.

April 15, 2009

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On Nature News - April 15, 2009

Q+A: Hong Kong university chooses new president
Nature talks to Tony Chan about his vision for the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology.

Germany bans GM maize
State defies European Union directive on genetically modified crops.

Time to sequence the 'red and the dead'
New projects could tackle the genomics of species both critically endangered and already extinct.

April 14, 2009

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On Nature News - April 14, 2009

Making new eggs in old mice
A textbook-challenging finding revives debates about extending female fertility.

Bendy laser beams fired through the air - Premium content
Curved tracks could help direct lightning or steer particle beams around colliders.

Disease in a warming climate - Premium content
Fears of a global rise in infectious conditions may be unfounded.

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RIP John Maddox - April 14, 2009

UPDATE – Current Nature editor Philip Campbell’s tribute, John Maddox 1925–2009, is now on our website:

It was with great sadness that I and my colleagues at Nature learned of the death on Sunday of Sir John Maddox — or 'JM', as his colleagues always referred to him.

There was puzzlement, too. Yes, John had been looking frail recently, but, well, this was JM — the perpetually restless, irresistible, unstoppable force. The editor who conducted some gatherings with 'shock and awe' as some recall. The 'man with a whim of iron' as others used to call him. And the man who survived countless cigarettes and glasses of red wine, many consumed late into the night as he wrote the week's Editorials at the last possible moment.




Sir John Maddox, the former editor of Nature, has died at the age of 83.

As Walter Gratzer, of King’s College, London, wrote recently, “John Maddox brought an old-fashioned Nature into the modern age from the mid-1960s.” (History of Nature feature.)

A full appreciation from Nature will follow shortly. Meanwhile, here is what the world is saying.

Without too much trouble I could probably fill blogs for a month with tales of John: of waiting at the typesetter while he finished an editorial way beyond deadline; of a plan to visit Mexico together when we wined and dined the very attractive press attache at the Mexican Consulate; of how he regularly set fire to his waste-paper basket. Of being sent to the wine bar with a fiver for a bottle of Chateau Thames. Of him disappearing on a Friday night and saying, as the door closed, that he wanted a thousand words from me by Monday for the following week’s issue – on anything I pleased. Of many cases of exasperation and irritation, and many more acts of kindness.

- Henry Gee, Nature editor

He was one of those fellows who shaped the direction of science for quite a long period of time with the power of one of the most influential science journals in the world. I suspect every scientist of my generation read his editorials in our weekly perusal of the journal.

- PZ Myers, Pharyngula

One of the toughest adversaries I’ve ever wrangled with is Sir John Maddox. He was hard-headed, scarily knowledgeable, hyper-articulate, unfailingly gracious even as he ripped you a new one.

- John Horgan, Director of the Center for Science Writings at Stevens Institute of Technology

As Editor of Nature, he restored the journal to an unchallenged position as the place to publish interesting research quickly, and did so at a time when Britain’s influence in world science was otherwise declining. His judgments, sometimes quirky but never dull, were always backed by persuasive argument and a sense of humour.

- The Times

It was a mark of his skilled editorship that Nature could publish a paper on, say, the Loch Ness monster without sacrificing its authority.

“He took command of Nature in a big way,” the evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins said. “He had a tremendous grasp of science in the full range, from physics to biology to public affairs as they affected the world of science.”

Martin Rees, the president of the Royal Society and Britain’s astronomer royal, called Mr. Maddox “a dominant figure,” adding that “he helped establish Nature’s status internationally and built it up by developing supplements to increase its coverage.” After retiring as editor in 1995, he assumed an influential elder statesman role, acting, Mr. Rees said, “as a general guru of science and scientific policy.”

- NY Times

"He adored science and talked about it all the time," she [his daughter, Bronwen Maddox] says. "He was enormously enthused by it. He was a physicist, and took to the biological sciences with enthusiasm, but I think his heart stayed in physics."

- Scientific American

April 09, 2009

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On Nature News - April 09, 2009

Q&A;: John Holdren
President Obama's science adviser talks about his new job.

Analysts spar over launch image
North Korean rocket trajectory may be too shallow for satellite launch.

One drug, two targets
Antimalarial compound fights disease and fends off drug-resistant parasites in mice.

April 08, 2009

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Nature podcast - April 08, 2009

natpod.GIFThis week we uncover a new twist in our understanding of the Great Oxidation Event, find out why some people are better than others at repairing radiation damage in their cells, and delve into the 'cancer genome' to discover more about how cells turn cancerous.

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On Nature News - April 08, 2009

Amazonian reserves have fewer fires
Satellite data reveal less deforestation in Brazil's protected parks.

Open-access policy flourishes at NIH - Premium content
Researchers, institutions and publishers have complied with the mandate, but it still has its opponents.

Volcanoes ignite monitoring efforts
Efforts intensify after eruptions in Alaska and Chile.

April 07, 2009

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On Nature News - April 07, 2009

Testosterone boost doesn't fuel risky behaviour in women
Hormones could matter less on the trading floor than suspected.

Korean satellite misses orbit
Third time unlucky as payload plunges into the Pacific.

A tiny litmus test for cells
Nanomachine senses cellular pH in real time.

April 03, 2009

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On Nature News - April 03, 2009

World leaders fail to kick-start green economy
G20 summit a missed opportunity, say climate campaigners. (See also: Nature's Climate Feedback blog.)

Muslim students weigh in on evolution
In Indonesia and Pakistan, questions about how science and faith can be reconciled.

Carbon dating shows humans make new heart cells
The cold war helps settle a hot debate about how hearts grow.

April 02, 2009

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On Nature News - April 02, 2009

Bendy displays close to market
Second-generation e-paper can be rolled up, use almost no power and even display video.

Tracing carbon dioxide's fate underground
Greenhouse gas dissolves in water rather than becoming locked into minerals.

China to spearhead anti-tuberculosis drive
Gates Foundation partners health initiative.

News Feature - The textbook of the future
Undergraduate textbooks are going digital. Declan Butler asks how this will shake up student reading habits and the multi-billion-dollar print textbook market.

April 01, 2009

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Nature Podcast - April 01, 2009

natpod.GIFThis week on the Nature Podcast, a history lesson for Obama and his science advisers. Plus, we look at the world through the eyes of an autistic toddler, and find out if it's safe to store CO2 underground.

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On Nature News - April 01, 2009

Ocean mercury on the increase
Rise may affect neurotoxin levels in fish

Migrating nanotubes add to asbestos concern
Initial tests suggest the tiny tubes can pass through the lung lining.

China denies US ship access to Taiwan Strait
Research vessel's seismology studies compromised by politics.

March 31, 2009

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On Nature News - March 31, 2009

Experimental design could reduce need for animal tests
Accounting for environmental changes may be better than trying to control them.

Anti-HIV protein made in plants
One greenhouse could produce a million doses of virus-blocking chemical.

Stern message for G20 summit
Stimulus packages must focus more resources on clean energy and averting climate change, report says.

March 30, 2009

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On Nature News - March 30, 2009

Fungus farmers show way to new drugs
Ant colonies could be key to advances in biofuels and antibiotics.

Methane-producing mineral discovered on Mars
But it may not explain the presence of the gas on the Red Planet today.

Geometer wins maths 'Nobel'
Abel prize awarded to Mikhail Leonidovich Gromov.

March 27, 2009

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On Nature News - March 27, 2009

Settling of dust warms tropical Atlantic
A decline in aerosols could account for most of the rise in regional ocean temperatures.

Q&A;: Steve Squyres on planetary priorities
Chief of Mars rover missions talks about short-listing missions for US planetary science.

Could nanomachines give friction the slip?
The quantum stickiness between very close surfaces produces no drag when they move, researchers claim.

Geometer wins maths 'Nobel'
Abel prize awarded to Mikhail Leonidovich Gromov.

March 26, 2009

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Nature Podcast - March 26, 2009

natpod.GIFThis week, we become stellar detectives to solve a supernova whodunit, find out how volcanos spawn tornado-like dust devils and investigate a curious chemical imbalance in our oceans. All that plus our weekly News Chat.

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On Nature News - March 26, 2009

Networking out of natural disasters
Open-source software could transform response to disease outbreaks and natural disasters.

Porton Down veterans not at greater health risk
Military personnel exposed to chemical warfare agents should be "reassured".

Graphene gets ready for the big time - Premium content
Physicists are talking about how to make practical use of a former laboratory curiosity.

March 24, 2009

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On Nature News - March 24, 2009

Classic behavioural studies flawed
Nobel prizewinner took short cuts to show that the way gulls feed is instinctive.

Q&A;: Save or study?
Modelling can help conservationists decide when they have collected enough data.

NOAA chief ready to tackle climate
Jane Lubchenco takes the helm at oceanic and atmospheric agency.

Q&A;: Jane Lubchenco
The new head of NOAA talks priorities.

March 23, 2009

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On Nature News - March 23, 2009

Scuttled ship endangers marine science
Weak pound forces UK to postpone building of research ship.

Pancake ice takes over the Arctic
Researchers work to put changing ice types into climate models.

Trapped under ice
Nature talks to the team behind a risky submarine mission to map the underside of an Antarctic glacier.

March 20, 2009

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On Nature News - March 20, 2009

VIDEO: Carbon nanotubes make artificial muscle
Electricity flexes strong, bendy aerogel.

UK researchers lament grant ban
A string of unsuccessful proposals means being barred from making further applications.

Promiscuous antibody targets cancer
Single molecule can bind firmly to two different antigens.

March 19, 2009

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Nature Podcast - March 19, 2009

natpod.GIFThis week the Nature Podcast is making tiny components for molecular machines, investigating heat flow in the Earth's crust, modelling the collapse of an Antarctic ice sheet, and looking into the current state of science communication.

March 18, 2009

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On Nature News - March 18, 2009

New Zealand to consolidate agricultural research
Proposed merger aims to create world-class research institute.

Society sues journal over right to reply
Row between Max Planck Society and Wiley escalates.

Cognitive enhancement drug may also cause addiction
Modafinil's effect on the brain suggests it could be addictive for some.

March 17, 2009

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On Nature News - March 17, 2009

Big interest in heavy drugs
The drug industry is seeking profits by modifying hydrogen in existing medications.

Incoming chief to tackle woes of US food and drug agency
Obama nominates Margaret 'Peggy' Hamburg as FDA chief.

US agencies brace for flood of grant applications
Online system has high risk of failure, officials say.

European clinical trial rules under fire
European medical research strangled by red tape, scientists warn.

March 13, 2009

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On Nature News - March 13, 2009

A lighter Higgs makes particle hunt harder
Longer search promised after physicists exclude heavy masses for the 'God particle'.

Copenhagen summit urges immediate action on climate change
Scientists report intensifying impact of global warming.

Rising air pollution clouds climate debate
Darker skies have uncertain effect on global warming.

There's more to life than sequences
The shape of DNA can play a crucial role in genetics, says Philip Ball.

March 12, 2009

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On Nature News - March 12, 2009

Peking Man older than thought
Classic Homo erectus fossils in Zhoukoudian caves are more than 700,000 years old.

Lithium batteries charge ahead
Researchers demonstrate cells that can power up in seconds.

The lowdown on animal testing for cosmetics
European Union continues phasing out animal experiments.

Turkish scientists claim Darwin censorship
Science-funding agency accused of removing evolution article — and its editor — from mainstream magazine.

Cosmic strings could solve positron mystery
Collapsing defects in the Universe's structure may generate antimatter excess.

March 10, 2009

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On Nature News - March 10, 2009

Web usage data outline map of knowledge
Analysis offers fresh perspective on role of humanities and social sciences.

Atomic nucleus takes two shapes
The squashed heart of a sulphur isotope fluctuates between different states.

Phytoplankton survival clouded by dust particles
Aerosols can kill as well as nourish ocean organism.

March 09, 2009

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On Nature News - March 09, 2009

Genetic test predicts eye colour
Forensic tool could help catch criminals.

Obama overturns stem-cell ban
President's executive order will allow US human embryonic stem-cell research to thrive at last.

Red tape blights European Union research programme
Independent review calls for "radical overhaul" to cut complexity.

March 06, 2009

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On Nature News - March 06, 2009

The resurrection of a disease-linked gene
An unusual tale of a gene lost, then found, during human evolution.

Evidence for ancient horse ranch uncovered
Traces of earliest known milking of horses in Kazakhstan.

Briefing: Climate change crisis for rainforests
Drought could turn carbon sinks into sources.

Test tube disease models one step closer
Skin cells from Parkinson's patients transformed into tailor-made neurons.

March 05, 2009

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On Nature News - March 05, 2009

Warmer caves may save bats from deadly fungus
Shivering bats need help to fight off white-nose syndrome.

FDA-approved warning labels won't protect companies
US court says people harmed by drugs can still sue.

Peering at proteins inside cells
Nuclear magnetic resonance spies the atomic details of proteins in action.

March 04, 2009

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Nature Podcast - March 04, 2009

natpod.GIFOn this week's Nature Podcast - This week, we find out about a microbicide gel that works magic on the monkey form of HIV, track down two black holes for the price of one, and watch proteins 'at work' inside living cells. Plus, a sociologist of science calls a ceasefire.

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On Nature News - March 04, 2009

Genome scan may save Tasmanian devils from cancer
Scientists say identifying resistant animals could be key to combating a contagious tumour.

Budget numbers for US science looking up - Premium content
Big boosts for climate and basic research in President Barack Obama's proposed spending for next year.

Looking for worlds like this one
NASA's Kepler mission is the best shot yet at detecting an Earth-sized planet elsewhere in the Galaxy.

March 03, 2009

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On Nature News - March 03, 2009

Engineered viruses fight bacteria
Viruses that target bacteria could help give antibiotics a boost.

Falsified data gets India's largest generic drug-maker into trouble
US Federal Drug Administration withdraws approval for a score of drugs from Ranbaxy.

March 02, 2009

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On Nature News - March 02, 2009

Virus-free pluripotency for human cells
Stem-cell advance could bring tailored treatments closer.

Brown pledges to protect science during downturn
Focus of UK economy should shift from finance to science, says Prime Minister.

Origin of 'T. rex' protein questioned
Dinosaur samples may have contained traces of ostrich.

February 27, 2009

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On Nature News - February 27, 2009

Science grants rise with stimulus spending
Extra money has researchers scrambling to join the queue.

African grant comes with no strings attached
Carte blanche for Malawi and Kenya to spend health research funds from international donors.

February 25, 2009

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Nature Podcast - February 25, 2009

natpod.GIFOn this week's Nature Podcast - This week the Nature Podcast plunges into the ocean to find see-sawing temperatures and a fish fossil that sheds light on the origins of sex. We also explore the ethics of brain-machine interfaces and trace the ‘footsteps’ of migrating planets.

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On Nature News - February 25, 2009

Nations pull together to cut mercury emissions
Nairobi meeting kicks off negotiations.

Stem-cell inaction prompts concern
Legal complexities may underlie the delay in fulfilling election pledge.

Satellite to monitor carbon sinks sinks
Orbiting Carbon Observatory crashes into sea.

February 23, 2009

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On Nature News - February 23, 2009

New antibodies block a range of influenzas
Discovery hints at the possibility of broad-spectrum vaccines.

Briefing: Iran's nuclear plans
Do a satellite launch and a tonne of enriched uranium add up to an arsenal?

Child abuse leaves lasting 'scars' on DNA
Lingering marks on DNA could amplify stress responses.

February 18, 2009

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On Nature News - February 18, 2009

India protects traditional medicines from piracy
Access to national database eases search for existing treatments.

European disarray on transgenic crops
Forthcoming decisions set to bring disagreements to a head.

Tumours spark stem-cell review
Russian treatment linked to cancerous growths.

Rethinking silk's origins
Did the Indian subcontinent start spinning without Chinese know-how?

February 17, 2009

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On Nature News - February 17, 2009

Nitrogen fertilizer warning for China
Farmers could cut use by two-thirds without lowering crop yield.

Hollywood star could restart damaged particle accelerator
Tinseltown goes to CERN as Tom Hanks promotes latest thriller.

Swedish authorities embroiled in furore over academic freedom
Journal removes paper from website after company threatens legal action.

February 16, 2009

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Nature at the AAAS: Part II - February 16, 2009

aaas.bmpNature reporters are still at the American Association for the Advancement of Science meeting in Chicago. Here are some recent dispatches from the science news front line. Full coverage is over on our In the Field blog.

Bowser blazes the trail
Whenever I see Elaine Ostrander talk about dogs, I feel sorry for human geneticists. Ostrander, a researcher at the U.S. National Human Genome Research Institute on Bethesda, Maryland, studies the hundreds of dog breeds that exist in the world. And because human breeders have simplified dog genetics enormously, it’s a lot easier to answer questions about the genetic basis of all kinds of traits in dogs than it is in humans.

Darwin the Buddhist
Ordinarily, Paul Ekman is to be found doing rigorous, detailed studies of facial expression, body movement, emotion and deception...

Climate issue getting "more complicated"
A leader of the the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change told the meeting today that the world's climate is likely to change much faster than predicted, leaving the world with two choices: start cutting carbon emissions earlier, or make the cuts deeper.

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On Nature News - February 16, 2009

BRIEFING: Obama may be tough on Canada's tar sands
How will future US emissions regulations affect North America's biggest oil owner?

Strike stalls reform of French universities
Sarkozy on the ropes as scientists take to the streets.

Drug banishes bad memories
Take pill, remember fear, remove fear.

February 11, 2009

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Nature Podcast: special Darwin edition - February 11, 2009

natpod.GIFFor this special edition of the Nature Podcast we're at Down House, the Darwin family home for over 40 years. Join us on the hunt for Darwin's pigeons, for poetry from a Darwin descendant, and to find out how Darwin dabbled in psychology. Plus, we talk to actor Paul Bettany about playing Darwin in the new movie 'Creation'. You can hear an extended version of that interview in our Podcast Extra.

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On Nature News - February 11, 2009

Obama puts focus on FDA after peanut poisonings - Premium content
Salmonella outbreak prompts review of US food safety.

Neglected disease boost
Fresh funding aims to raise awareness and improve control measures.

Prostate cancer marker found in urine
A simple urine test for sarcosine could be used to detect cancer.

February 10, 2009

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On Nature News - February 10, 2009

Microbicide gel may help against HIV
Early results suggest possible role against infection.

LHC faces further delay
Collisions won't come before November.

Briefing: Australian bushfires rage
Heatwaves and fires will become more frequent in a warming world.

Hidden memories guide choices
Images slip unnoticed into the brain.

February 09, 2009

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On Nature News - February 09, 2009

Test balloon breaks endurance record
NASA's pumpkin-shaped balloon stays aloft for more than 42 days.

Genome sequencing: the third generation
Companies unveil data from their latest technologies.

The world's top ten telescopes revealed
The best observatories ranked by their scientific impact.

February 06, 2009

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On Nature News - February 06, 2009

Make methane while the sun shines
Nanotubes help turn carbon dioxide and water into natural gas.

What causes schizophrenia?
Findings from a 'brain training' study challenge theory.

Pygmies share a recent common ancestor
The rise of farming may have caused formation of diverse groups.

February 05, 2009

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On Nature News - February 05, 2009

Scientists find world's biggest snake
'Titanic' boa fossils provide clues to past tropical climate.

India's drug problem
Chemists show how waste-water contamination affects ecosystem.

French scientists revolt against government reforms - Premium content
Strike threatens to undermine Sarkozy's overhaul of universities.

February 04, 2009

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Nature Podcast - February 04, 2009

natpod.GIFOn this week's Nature Podcast - Three record-breakers on this week's show: we uncover fossil evidence of the world's longest snake, discover chemical signs of the earliest animal life, and take a look at light from the oldest quasar known to mankind.

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On Nature News - February 04, 2009

Inheriting memory
Mothers that have led rich lives may have offspring with longer memories.

Fossil of pregnant whale found
Position of fetus suggests that early whales gave birth on land.

Former MIT biologist penalized for falsifying data
Faked figures found in seven published papers and five grant applications.

February 03, 2009

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On Nature News - February 03, 2009

Hybrid embryos fail to live up to stem-cell hopes
Strategy for creating pluripotent cells called into question.

Tiniest exoplanet found
Satellite spots a planet less than twice the width of Earth.

Paper sparks fossil fury
Palaeontologists criticize publication of specimen with questionable origin.

February 02, 2009

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On Nature News - February 02, 2009

Briefing: Halting the African armyworm
Liberia prepares for second plague of caterpillar pests.

Briefing: Clean-energy agency recruits its founding members
Nations have begun to hammer out the mandate for the International Renewable Energy Agency.

MS stem-cell trial shows promise
Multiple sclerosis treatment seems to reverse symptoms.

January 30, 2009

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On Nature News - January 30, 2009

Fake finger reveals the secrets of touch
Fingerprints help amplify vibrations detected by nerves deep under the skin.

Feather colour indicates survival strategy in birds
Colourful plumage linked to immune response in tawny owls.

Short RNAs protect chemical memory of genes
Epigenetic changes to plant DNA preserved through successive generations.

January 28, 2009

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Nature Podcasts - January 28, 2009

natpod.GIFYou lucky people, there are two Nature podcasts for you this week.

Nature Podcast - This week on the Nature Podcast, how iron in the oceans could clean up carbon, the genome of the hardy plant sorghum is revealed, chemists make a nausea-inducing molecule and we talk to news editor Mark Peplow about stem cell trials, abandoned plutonium and mimicking the sun’s fusion.

NeuroPod, the neuroscience podcast from Nature – This month, we celebrate fifty years of pheromones, discover how brain cells know who to network with, why imaging might be giving us a misleading picture of brain activity, and how sleeping lightly at night could be making you forgetful the next day.


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On Nature News - January 28, 2009

Science minister wants focus on fewer disciplines
Plan would concentrate UK funds on research of benefit to the economy.

Stem cells ready for prime time
US regulatory agency gives the go-ahead for first clinical trials of a human embryonic stem-cell treatment.

Pfizer to buy Wyeth in $68-billion deal
Drug giant chases stake in biologics.

Goodbye Galapagos goats
Conservationists complete the largest-ever eradication of an island-invasive mammal.

January 27, 2009

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On Nature News - January 27, 2009

First IVF pregnancy after rapid egg screening
Colourful procedure finds missing or extra DNA.

Farmer defies GM 'ban'
Environmentalists see red over maize harvest in formerly GM-free Wales.

Cutting calories may improve memory
Elderly people benefit from caloric restriction.

Humans and sponges may share a slimy ancestor
Placulan origin re-roots the tree of life.

January 23, 2009

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On Nature News - January 23, 2009

Old plutonium found in dump
Weapons-grade material discovered at Hanford nuclear site.

Europe failing to meet research targets
Europe could struggle to keep up with emerging economies.

North American tree deaths accelerate
Mortality increase correlates with climate change.

Atom takes a quantum leap
Ytterbium ion is the first element to be teleported over a distance.

January 21, 2009

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On Nature News - January 21, 2009

Reversing helps bacterial swarms to spread
Social microbes march forwards by taking a few steps back.

A fly by any other name
Drosophila experts argue over reclassification proposal

$630-million for push to eradicate polio

Gates Foundation leads group of donors promising cash for vaccination, monitoring and research

Cheating bacteria could treat infections
Freeloading microbes could help their hosts by undermining cooperation between pathogens

Brain imaging measures more than we think
Anticipatory brain mechanism may be complicating MRI studies.

January 20, 2009

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On Nature News - January 20, 2009

Green light for UK stem-cell trial
Stroke patients to be treated with tailor-made brain cells.

Secondary forests are worth saving

Biodiversity there isn't as rich as untouched rainforest, but should still be conserved, some argue

January 19, 2009

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On Nature News - January 19, 2009

Dinosaur fossils suggest speedy extinction
Arctic find challenges the idea that the massive reptiles declined slowly.

Tiny springboards detect viruses in fluids

Wobbily cantilevers 'feel' pathogens lock onto their targets.

January 16, 2009

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On Nature News - January 16, 2009

ESA seeks to join US dark energy mission
Deal would boost JDEM budget but scupper Europe's Euclid.

Hong Kong inaugurates Institute for Advanced Study
Nature talks to university president Paul Chu about his vision of a 'mecca for great scholars'.

Europe set to crack down on pesticides
Controversial rules that could ban many agents are a step closer to approval.

FDA ready to regulate transgenic animals
Agency unveils path to approval after decade-long delay.

Science wins big in US economic plan
Congressional stimulus package includes billions in extra research funding.

January 15, 2009

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On Nature News - January 15, 2009

Fish are crucial in oceanic carbon cycle
Chemistry models need to incorporate new discovery.

Crops that cool
Could shinier farmland help combat global warming?

Scientists weave invisibility cloak
Metamaterial sheet shields objects from prying microwaves.

Nuke code cracks stellar mystery
A nuclear weapons lab program simulates the birth of massive stars.

January 14, 2009

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On Nature News - January 14, 2009

Nature Podcast - This week we uncover a fishy fossil head, build a synthetic cellular clock, discover that natural killer cells have a memory, and ponder how science has fared under the Bush administration and it's future in the hands of Obama.

Science tipped to score in Obama cash stimulus - Premium content
Researchers jockey for a piece of the US economic package.

Genetic 'clock' made in lab
Synthetic metronome keeps time inside mammalian cells.

Ocean fertilization experiment suspended
German science ministry demands environmental assessment before nutrient dumping can begin.

Study fails to catch plants making methane
Greenhouse gas emitted from plants might just be passing through.

January 13, 2009

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On Nature News - January 13, 2009

What is the link between autism and testosterone?
Controversial theory of autism makes headlines, but leaves scientific community unconvinced.

Venus may have had continents and oceans
Granite highlands point to past water — and perhaps life.

Brain imaging studies under fire
Social neuroscientists criticized for exaggerating links between brain activity and emotions.

January 12, 2009

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On Nature News - January 12, 2009

Steven Chu prepares for power
Energy agency may be in for a shake-up.

How to spot moons far, far away
The search for life on another planet is about to be extended – to moons.

Mars rover needs a date
NASA's Mars Science Laboratory needs more money to reach the launch pad, and has less time.

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On Nature News - January 12, 2009

Ocean fertilization experiment draws fire
Indo-German research cruise sets sail despite criticism.

Grooming your way to the top
Nice chimps can be leader of the pack.

VIDEO: A waterway for one-way waves
There's no way back in a row of water-powered see-saws.

January 09, 2009

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On Nature News - January 09, 2009

A never-ending dance of RNA
The recreation of life's origins comes a self-catalysing step closer.

Temperature rises threaten global food security
Climate changes predicted to trigger food shortages across the world.

Earliest Americans took two paths
Genetic analysis suggests there were at least two migrations into the Americas.

Skin cancer on the rise
Increase in melanoma cases not due to better diagnosis.

January 08, 2009

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On Nature News - January 08, 2009

Did black holes form before galaxies?
Astronomers work on universe's chicken-and-egg problem.

Quantum force gets repulsive
Casimir–Lifshitz effect could help nanoengineers out of a sticky situation.

SPECIAL REPORT: Biotechs feel the pain - Premium content
The biotechnology industry is weathering the financial crisis better than some. That doesn't mean it's in great shape, reports Heidi Ledford.

European boost for particle therapy - Premium content
Treatment centres poised to use carbon-ion beams to tackle cancer.

January 07, 2009

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On Nature News - January 07, 2009

Nature Podcast - As the International Year of Astronomy kicks off, we look into the role of self-gravity in star formation, and discover a pair of unusual meteorites in Antarctica. Plus: what happens when you ‘over-squeeze’ photons, and our predictions for science in 2009.

China builds inland Antarctic base
Kunlun station to open later this month atop the frozen continent's oldest ice.

Companies racing into India's nuclear market
Deal between India and United States spurs investment rush.

January 05, 2009

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On Nature News - January 05, 2009

Science arts centre opens in a blaze of colour
Gallery launches Linz as European City of Culture.

'Mini-hibernation' essential for winter survival
A daily dose of torpor helps desert-dwelling marsupials make it through chilly nights.

Galaxies' collision history revealed
Massive mergers sparked bursts of star formation when the Universe was half its age.

December 24, 2008

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On Nature News - December 24, 2008

Rat embryonic stem cells created
Genetically engineered rats should follow soon, providing new models of human disease.

Synthetic opals show their colours
Tunable material could be used to make electronic books or advertising displays.

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On Nature News - December 24, 2008

Downturn hits Chicago's natural history museum
Staff and science cut as museum's endowments crash.

VIDEO: Optical fibres feel light's recoil
Experiment claims to resolve an old debate about how light behaves.

'Proto-spiders' made silk, but not webs
An arachnid with no talent for weaving may have excreted the first known spider silk 386 million years ago.

December 22, 2008

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On Nature News - December 22, 2008

Obama's picks underline climate focus
Strong roles for biologists as the president-elect chooses his science and technology team.

Blind man walking
Man navigates obstacles he can't consciously see.

Reprogrammed skin cells provide testing ground for new drugs
Induced pluripotent stem cells pass key milestone.

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On Nature News - December 22, 2008

Carbonate deposits found on Mars
Long-lost mineral could help explain planet's thin atmosphere.

US Environmental Protection Agency faces eleventh-hour shake-up
Scientists voice concerns as small-scale projects fall from favour.

Spanish solar firms accused of fraud
Hundreds of companies falsely registered to receive higher subsidies.

Cell biologists share their snaps
Journal of Cell Biology launches an image bank for microscopy images.

December 19, 2008

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On Nature News - December 19, 2008

US science adviser pick rumoured near
Harvard climate scientist John Holdren is the leading candidate.

Canada's scientists face an uncertain future
Political turmoil leaves key positions in doubt.

Similar genes shape diverse leaves
Distantly related plants use the same set of genes to establish the outline of their leaves.

Neurons on border patrol
The limits imposed by walls and trenches are recognized by special brain cells.

December 17, 2008

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On Nature News - December 17, 2008

Nature Podcast - In this special holiday show, we bring you sleepy songbirds, sun damage, mega-masers, Nature's Newsmaker of the Year, and our seasonal gift suggestions: what to get the scientist who has everything.

Briefing: Sucking carbon out of the air
Are plans to take carbon dioxide out of the air just a pipe dream, or a cure for global warming?

More prizewinners of 2008
Some other recipients of major science prizes this year tell Nature how they did it — and what they will do next.

How genes are silenced
Molecular snapshot reveals the mechanics of RNA interference.

December 16, 2008

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On Nature News - December 16, 2008

Imaging advances provide immune-cell breakthroughs
Microscopy tracks living cells as they move through the body.

Climate talks defer major challenges
Minor progress in Poland on adaptation and deforestation sets the stage for Copenhagen in 2009.

Europe agrees emissions deal
Heavy industry wins key concessions in last-minute negotiations.

December 15, 2008

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On Nature News - December 15, 2008

Vaccine failure explained
Immunologists show how deaths in 1966 could have been avoided.

Nobel physicist to run energy agency
Obama appointments likely to focus on renewable energy and implementing cap and trade.

Vatican toughens stance on embryo research
Proclamation on biomedical science and reproductive medicine revised.

December 12, 2008

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On Nature News - December 12, 2008

Surveys of flora and fauna may be flawed
Bat study raises doubts over our understanding of Earth's ecosystems.

Elias Zerhouni looks back
Former chief of the National Institutes of Health reflects on his years there.

Kickstarting puberty
Genes discovered for brain pathway that triggers onset of adulthood.

December 11, 2008

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On Nature News - December 11, 2008

Nature Podcast - This week we bring you the weather from an extrasolar planet, discover ocean cleaning bacteria off the coast of Namibia, worry that the food crisis isn't over yet and consider how society should respond to the growing demand for cognitive enhancing drugs like Ritalin.

Forecasting the future of hurricanes
A meteorologist's new model zooms in on how climate change affects Atlantic storms.

Exoplanet may harbour stormy skies
Signs of water and, perhaps, weather on a distant 'hot Jupiter'.

Antibody fights AIDS-like disease in monkeys
Approach being considered for HIV prevention in humans.

December 09, 2008

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On Nature News - December 09, 2008

OPINION: Fearing the fear of nanotechnology
Hard data could help dispel scientists' preconceptions about the public, argues Richard Jones.

UN suspends leading carbon-offset firm
Emissions trading rocked as Norwegian company is left in limbo.

Rule change for human grants sparks spat at NIH
Bid to extend length of certain applications draws fire.

Q&A;: UK DNA database needs overhaul
Inventor of DNA fingerprinting welcomes a ruling that will keep the innocent out of genetic databases.

December 08, 2008

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On Nature News - December 08, 2008

Clock-gene variants linked to diabetes
Receptor for body-clock hormone connected to disease risk.

LHC further delayed
Giant accelerator won't smash protons before July 2009.

Setback for key UK animal lab
Rising costs will delay the planned facility at Pirbright unless the government intervenes.

December 05, 2008

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On Nature News - December 05, 2008

UK to train 2,000 new PhDs
Multidisciplinary centres with business ties to produce physicists and engineers.

Mars rover's debut delayed
NASA will team with Europe for future big missions.

Companies spurn low-tech HIV tests
Cheap, effective tests for patients in Africa too unprofitable.

December 03, 2008

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On Nature News - December 03, 2008

Nature Podcast - This week, we discover what proportion of cancer cells actually form tumours, try to predict the size of future tsunamis, find out what's in store for farming, and talk to stargazers who have spied a blast from the past.

Indonesia to reject tagging of HIV carriers
A controversial bill to track patients with HIV using implanted microchips is unlikely to pass.

Methane bursts from frozen tundra
Ice build-up may squeeze greenhouse gas from cold soil.

Astronomers revisit a blast from the past
Light 'echoes' from 436-year-old supernova explosion first seen by Tycho Brahe.

December 02, 2008

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On Nature News - December 02, 2008

Spain in the dock over research visas
Failure to cut red tape for foreign scientists prompts legal action by the European Union.

Europe to pay royalties for cancer gene
BRCA1 patent decision may be ignored in clinics.

Can triniobium tin shrink accelerators?
Exotic superconductors promise savings.

December 01, 2008

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On Nature News - December 01, 2008

North Atlantic cold-water sink returns to life
Convective mixing resumes after a decade due to massive loss of Arctic ice.

Space agency funding defies downturn
European ministers commit €10 billion to space missions, Earth monitoring and new facilities.

Terrestrial origin mooted for more microbes
More than two-thirds of bacteria may have descended from a land-dwelling ancestor.

Saving the Majorcan midwife toad
Researchers start gearing up to mitigate the deadly amphibian chytrid fungus in the wild.

November 27, 2008

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On Nature News - November 27, 2008

Genetics of cancer relapse revealed
Biologists have tracked the origins and evolution of a type of childhood leukaemia that is deadliest when it recurs.

Enceladus shoots supersonic jets of water
Saturn's icy moon spouts water vapour from its cracks.

How the turtle got its shell
Chinese fossil forces palaeontologists to rethink turtle origins.

November 26, 2008

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On Nature News - November 26, 2008

Nature Podcast – This week we bring you news from the year’s biggest neuro jamboree, stick our heads into the oldest turtle fossil ever found, talk to the author of a new book on photosynthesis, and discover the source of water vapour jets on Saturn’s sixth moon.

Minerals yield signs of early plate tectonics
Evidence of 4-billion-year-old subduction points to an early start for modern-Earth geology.

Cosmic-ray hot spots puzzle researchers
Proton discovery may cast doubt on dark-matter theories.

Greenland gambles on warmer, richer climate
As melting ice uncovers natural resources, Greenlanders vote to step closer to independence.

November 25, 2008

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On Nature News - November 25, 2008

Astronomers unveil wish list
Roadmap sets out Europe's space priorities.

South Africa suspends water scientist
Anthony Turton may be dismissed after speaking to journalists about a canned presentation.

A new twist for horse racing
The hair on a horse's head could predict whether it is left- or right-hoofed.

Climate researchers 'should cut their carbon footprint'
Jet-setting scientists responsible for substantial greenhouse gas emissions.

November 21, 2008

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On Nature News - November 21, 2008

Brain implant allows mute man to speak
Patient with paralysis controls speech synthesizer with his mind.

Australia's big hop into genomics
Map milestone for kangaroo genome project.

Carbon dioxide discovered on distant planet
Gassy signature of habitability spied in the atmosphere of a 'hot Jupiter'.

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On Nature News - November 21, 2008

Briny mix could stop carbon dioxide leaks
Engineers hope salt-water technique could make coal-fired power plants a cleaner energy option.

Nuclear masses calculated from scratch
An exhaustive calculation of proton and neutron masses vindicates the Standard Model.

Human genomes in minutes?
Not yet, but biotechnology company is on track for 2013.

Seabed tracks suggest new origin of animal life
First evidence that earliest fossils could be attributed to protozoans.

November 20, 2008

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On Nature News - November 20, 2008

Nature Podcast - This week's show is evolution-tastic; we've got group selection, a 'proto-eye' of the kind predicted by Darwin and we delve into the genome of the now extinct woolly mammoth. Plus, a tantalizing trace of dark matter detected by a balloon experiment above Antarctica.

Obesity linked to grandparental diet
Mice eating high-fat foods confer changes on at least two subsequent generations.

Rhesus protein stops blood becoming acidic
Blood-group-factor family has a role in pH control.

Nuclear renaissance plans hit by financial crisis - Premium content
Role of fission in fighting climate change looks likely to wane.

November 19, 2008

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On Nature News - November 19, 2008

Forestry carbon dioxide projects to close down
Move releases funds for new experiments.

Nanotube 'shortcut ' boosts brain signals
But a second study finds that solutions of the tiny tubes may block neuronal activity.

Beat the itch
Scratch it by knowing first which type you have.

November 18, 2008

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On Nature News - November 18, 2008

Sniffing out a rumbling volcano
A radio-controlled helicopter could help predict when a volcano will blow its top.

The search for genome 'dark matter' moves closer
The multi-million dollar 1000 Genomes project is set to be finished in a year.

Scientists self-censor after political attack
Researchers avoid contentious language and issues in grants and papers.

Why fruit are groovy
Pumpkins, melons and gourds are ribbed and ridged by the buckling of their skin.

November 14, 2008

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On Nature News - November 14, 2008

Astronomers claim first snaps of planets beyond the Solar System
Images of potential planets orbiting distant stars after decade-long search.

The pitfalls of tracing your ancestry
Charmaine Royal of the Duke Institute for Genome Sciences and Policy explains the limitations of genetic testing.

How does bleach bleach?
The ubiquitous disinfectant may kill bacteria by unfolding their proteins.

Illegal drug shows promise in treating trauma symptoms
MDMA may boost the benefits of psychotherapy, trial suggests.

November 13, 2008

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On Nature News - November 13, 2008

Nature Podcast: Learning who to trust, how cooling bird brains slows down song, controlling quantum dots for computing, how entrepreneurs think, and a round-up of science news.

Top US court allows Navy sonar use
Environmentalists concerned over potential effects on whales.

Modified genes spread to local maize
Findings reignite debate over genetically modified crops.

Counting the human costs of conflict
Calculating the death toll from the crisis in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

November 12, 2008

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On Nature News - November 12, 2008

Lonesome George may miss out on fatherhood
Eggs laid by two females in the giant tortoise's enclosure are unlikely to hatch.

Gene-testing company fights to retain listing
Frozen assets compound deCODE's financial woes.

Company sues researcher over unfavourable review
Biopure says meta-analysis harmed its product.

November 11, 2008

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On Nature News - November 11, 2008

Climate first for Obama transition team
Appointments to key energy positions should reveal the new president's priorities.

Should healthy people take statins too?
Rosuvastatin appears to lower the risk of heart disease in healthy people.

Time to test time
The essential fuzziness of time may be the limiting factor for a gravitational-wave detector in Germany.

November 09, 2008

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On Nature News - November 09, 2008

Food research 'lost in translation'
Funders call for public and private partners to collaborate in getting new crops to farmers.

Marine census discovers more than 200 new species
Octopus origins, shark migrations and giant bacteria to be unveiled

Foreign scientists face security-check delays in Britain
After its first year, UK vetting scheme claims anti-terrorist success despite backlog.

November 06, 2008

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On Nature News - November 06, 2008

Nature Podcast: Individual genomes and personal genomics, lemmings threatened by climate change, how to find dark matter, and a news round-up with news editor Mark Peplow.

HIV vaccine failure explained?
Failed vaccine makes immune cells easier to infect in culture.

Growing up under the guidance of bacteria
Scientists discover how microbes help the mouse gut to mature.

Blink and you'll miss it
The invention of an ultrafast oscilloscope could yield advances in fields from telecoms to nuclear fusion.

November 05, 2008

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On Nature News - November 05, 2008

What Obama's win means for science
Nature takes a look at some of the races — from Congressional competitions to state-wide ballot initiatives — that will affect the nation's research.

Bush may introduce environmental regulations
Policy watchdogs expect industry-friendly changes in coming months.

Industry shifts focus to immunology and cancer
Cardiology and anaemia lose out in the hunt for the next pharmaceutical blockbusters.

November 04, 2008

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On Nature News - November 04, 2008

Q&A;: Innovating out of the financial crisis
General Electric research chief optimistic that industrial R&D; will thrive.

Court tackles whether drug labels shield manufacturers
Case pits amputee against Wyeth Pharmaceuticals.

Spectral particles spook physicsts
Ghostly visitors appear inside Tevatron accelerator.

Getting tough on makers of tiny tubes
Carbon-nanotube manufacturers need to notify the EPA before they start production.

November 03, 2008

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On Nature News - November 03, 2008

VIDEO: Nanotubes turn on the tunes
Stretchy carbon sheets act as loudspeakers.

Human genes are multitaskers
Up to 94% of human genes can generate different products.

Primate researchers ask the big questions
Scientists chart course for studies of humans' closest relatives.

Phoenix faces final curtain
Mars lander struggles to communicate in its last days.

October 31, 2008

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On Nature News - October 31, 2008

Briefing: Antarctica hit by climate change
Study shows human fingerprints on the polar thermostats.

Technological innovation may have driven first human migration
Ancient tools give up their makers' secrets.

Shell study sheds light on biomineralization
The presence of certain molecules influences calcite growth.

October 29, 2008

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On Nature News - October 29, 2008

The Nature Podcast: Ancient tsunamis, infected frogs, what economics can learn from physics, and a new book about the enigmatic Antikythera mechanism.

How to repair the biggest science experiment in the world
Physicists get CSI on the LHC.

Ancient tsunami uncovered
Indian Ocean disaster of 2004 was biggest in more than 600 years.

Stem-cell law goes to the polls
The 4 November election will settle more than who sits in the White House.

What you don't learn at school about the economy - Premium content
Ignoring decades of sophisticated economic theory spells trouble for us all, argues Philip Ball.

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On Nature News - October 29, 2008

How does your dinosaur smell?
Quite well, on the whole.

First ozone measurements from Everest's peak
Expedition records stratospheric distortion and hints of pollution.

Older scientists publish more papers
Age is no barrier to productivity.

October 27, 2008

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On Nature News - October 27, 2008

Salmon study sparks row over dams
Results dismissing link to fish mortality are called into question.

Urea pollution turns tides toxic
Kamikaze gulls that inspired Hitchcock's The Birds may have been doomed by leaky septic tanks.

German authority halts primate work
Licence for macaque experiments will not be renewed.

October 24, 2008

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On Nature News - October 24, 2008

Early bird gets the better song
Mothers transfer the gift of music to the first eggs of their brood.

Potent greenhouse gas overlooked
Rising levels of nitrogen trifluoride, used to make plasma TVs, have been found in the atmosphere.

October 23, 2008

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On Nature News - October 23, 2008

'Bad egg' gas controls blood flow
Without a little hydrogen sulphide to relax the muscles, blood pressure starts to rise.

Europe's isotope shortage will continue into 2009
Hospitals forced to use substitute procedures for medical scans.

October 22, 2008

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On Nature News - October 22, 2008

Nature Podcast - meet a feathered dinosaur with a carnival-style plume, watch in astonishment as researchers make X-rays from sticky tape and find out that oxygen-producing bacteria aren't quite as ancient as we thought. Plus, highlights from last week's autism conference in Pittsburgh.

Row brews over when photosynthesis emerged
Research contradicts key evidence that Sun-fuelled life arose 2.7 billion years ago.

Biosafety lab passes disaster test - Premium content
Texas facility cleared to analyse lethal pathogens.

Cash row threatens Earth-monitoring system
Europe's flagship Kopernikus mission faces potential delays.

Iranian paper sparks sense of deja vu
Allegations of plagiarism prompt journal to retract report.

VIDEO: Sticky tape generates X-rays
How weird is that?

October 21, 2008

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On Nature News - October 21, 2008

India heads for the Moon
Chandrayaan-1 mission launches India into the space race.

Plumes of methane identified on Mars
Finding could influence choice of landing site for Mars Science Laboratory.

Give me my genome
Personal genome sequences could herald a shift in research participation.

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On Nature News - October 21, 2008

Ancient microbes made giant magnets
Magnetic fossils show how climate change creates new extremes.

Is physics better than biology?
Citation statistics now comparable across disciplines.

October 16, 2008

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On Nature News - October 16, 2008

Agriculture unaffected by pollinator declines
Global crop yields have not suffered even though key insect populations have shrunk.

Scientists clash over wolves' endangered status
Legal and academic wrangling sees biologists accused of "crying wolf".

Yeast reveals sexual selection in action
Microbe provides way to track evolution gene by gene.

October 15, 2008

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On Nature News - October 15, 2008

Nature Podcast
This week, we restore movement to paralysed arms, get inside the head of a not-so-fishy fossil, and some organic molecules assemble themselves into a computer! Plus, world changing science meetings; we find out how the Human Genome Project got going.

Monkeys move paralysed muscles with their minds
Sending brain signals through electrodes to a paralysed wrist muscle restores movement.

New law threatens Italian research jobs - Premium content
Scientists protest over government's cost cutting.

Computer circuit builds itself
Organic molecules organize themselves to form a bridge between electrodes.

October 14, 2008

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On Nature News - October 14, 2008

Icelandic biotech feels the pinch
deCode Genetics runs risk of losing stock-market listing.

Mars missions face cost crunch
In Europe and America, future missions are in doubt.

October 13, 2008

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On Nature News - October 13, 2008

Q&A;: Glowing with pride
Nature catches up with freshly-minted Nobel laureate Martin Chalfie.

Dark energy: the quest for galaxies
South Pole Telescope offers fresh view of Universe's expansion.

How to sex a dolphin
Fin-scanning could speed up an essential conservation task — discerning male from female.

October 10, 2008

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British government tightens up lab biosecurity  - October 10, 2008

The British government is to put Paul Drayson, the science minister, in charge of coordinating biosecurity issues, in a move aimed at improving the security of high containment labs in the UK.

The move was announced yesterday in the government’s response to a report from MPs which said they were “disturbed” that ministers have not met to discuss biosecurity issues, and that no government department has responsibility or oversight in the area.

The report from the MPs on the Innovation, Universities and Skills committee, published in June, says “we do not accept the view… that it is satisfactory for no minister to have overall responsibility for biosecurity.”

The MPs investigated the biosecurity of UK laboratories after a breach at the Institute of Animal Health in Pirbright was blamed on the 2007 outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease in cattle.

Continue reading "British government tightens up lab biosecurity " »

October 09, 2008

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On Nature News - October 09, 2008

Q+A: The future of pharma
GSK's research leaders answer Nature's questions about where their company — and their industry — is headed.

One is the loneliest number for mine-dwelling bacterium
Sole member of world's first single-species ecosystem depends on rocks and radioactivity for life.

Zebrafish development tracked cell by cell
Microscopic imaging reconstructs embryo's first day.

October 08, 2008

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On Nature News - October 08, 2008

Great glowing jellyfish! It's the Nobel Prize in Chemistry
Green fluorescent protein bags the biggest gong in science.

Great balls of fire
Astronomers discover and track incoming asteroid for the first time.

Q+A: Oxford school expands to tackle global challenges
Ian Goldin, director of the James Martin 21st Century School, tells Nature about his vision for interdisciplinarity.

October 07, 2008

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On Nature News - October 07, 2008

Nanotech comes alive
Viruses and bacteria act as factories for nanostructures.

Nobel Prize in Physics for symmetry breakdown
Japanese-born theorists rewarded for work on fundamental symmetries in particle physics.

October 06, 2008

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On Nature News - October 06, 2008

Ground-level ozone on the rise
Increasing pollutant levels could cause major food crisis, says Royal Society.

A quarter of mammals face extinction
Latest Red List finds 80% of southeast Asian primates are at risk.

September 25, 2008

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On Nature News - September 25, 2008

Obama outlines science spending boost
Nobel laureates endorse Democratic candidate and his plans for science.

Millenium development goals under scrutiny
At the halfway point of the global project to eradicate poverty, Nature asks how much has been achieved and how science can help.

Cell 'rebooting' technique sidesteps risks
Virus reprograms cells without disrupting genome.

Ancient water sites for next rover
Planetary scientists shortlist top landing sites on Mars.

Record-breaking rocks?
Radiometric dating suggests Canadian outcrop contains the world's oldest rock.

September 24, 2008

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On Nature News - September 24, 2008

Ultrasmooth mirror could herald birth of a new microscope
Helium atoms could probe the smallest structures with a light touch.

Magnetar flashes astronomers
First optical signals spied from dead star.

Competition for sex hampers endangered species' recovery
Study challenges conservation management methods.

August 18, 2008

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On Nature News - August 18, 2008

Remembrance of viruses past
Long-lived survivors of the 1918 flu pandemic may hold the key to defeating future outbreaks.

Trees eat pollution products
Leaves can absorb organic nitrates and turn them into amino acids.

Virus helps to build tiny battery
Simple technique could create power packs for microdevices.

August 13, 2008

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On Nature News - August 13, 2008

Physicists spooked by faster-than-light information transfer
Quantum weirdness even stranger than previously thought.

Biodiversity body 'lacks science'
Swedish researchers criticize credentials of convention.

Physicists await dark-matter confirmation
PAMELA mission offers tantalizing hint of success.

August 12, 2008

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On Nature News - August 12, 2008

Disney backs research centres
New facilities in Zurich and Pittsburgh hope to develop film technologies for the next animated blockbuster.

Molecules multiplied
Synthetic chemists hope to apply the power of PCR to a range of other compounds.

Top climate-impacts programme shut
National Center for Atmospheric Research axes developing-world initiative.

August 08, 2008

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On Nature News - August 08, 2008

The AIDS fight: looking ahead to 2010
Nine leaders give Nature their view.

Snails transmute to guard against danger
Changes in shell structure are induced by the presence of predators.

MUSE: Crime and punishment in the lab
Before we ask whether scientific conduct is dealt with harshly enough, says Philip Ball, we need to be clear about what punishment is meant to achieve.

US backs its biofuels
Environmental agency denies request to cut back on ethanol.

First complete Neanderthal genome sequenced
Full nuclear sequence, offering clues about our relatives' demise, expected within months.

RNA tackles HIV
Antibodies help to deliver interfering RNA sequences to immune-system cells.

August 07, 2008

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On Nature News - August 07, 2008

Ten diseases in a dish
Disease-specific cell lines will help the study and treatment of medical conditions.

Environmental chemists keep watchful eye on Beijing's smog
On the eve of the Olympic Games, scientists are taking the long view on the capital's air pollution.

August 06, 2008

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On Nature News - August 06, 2008

'Virophage' suggests viruses are alive
Evidence of illness enhances case for life.

German professor in sex discrimination battle
Row throws spotlight on dearth of top female academics in the country.

Curved electronic eye created
Flexible circuits should lead to diverse imaging applications.

Google tool identifies linchpin species
Search system predicts what prey are needed to keep an ecosystem working.

Technological advances behind the anthrax investigation
Machines can quickly compare strains and pinpoint origin.

August 05, 2008

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On Nature News - August 05, 2008

The sounds of silent movies
Flickering images can trigger perception of sound.

Climate war games
Role-play negotiations test the outcomes of global warming.

Almost half of primate species face extinction
Global review shows danger is greatest in Asia.

August 04, 2008

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On Nature News - August 04, 2008

Falcon 1 blows it again
Private space travel takes another hit, but isn't doomed.

Scientists identify algae that almost swamped the Olympics
Algal bloom may have been boosted by fertilizer run-off.

Lawsuit chips away at fish research
Court order may halt attempts to train sea bass.

The end of AIDS is nowhere in sight
Battle against HIV dogged by vaccine failures, poorly targeted prevention measures and lack of fresh research talent, conference told.

July 29, 2008

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On Nature News - July 29, 2008

Slideshow: NASA turns 50
Nature takes you on a slideshow tour of the agency’s triumphs and tragedies.

Q+A: Edward Weiler
As NASA celebrates its fiftieth birthday, Nature looks to the future with the space agency's returning science chief.

Italy picks businessman to head space agency
Move seen as shift from research to commerce and defence.

July 28, 2008

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On Nature News: stem-cells, stars, Baikal and the Moon - July 28, 2008

Stats reveal bias in NIH grant review
Alternative system could make ‘fairer’ funding decisions for a quarter of awards.

Consent issues restrict stem-cell use
Some human embryonic cell lines may not be eligible for research.

Age makes Moon crater attractive site for lunar base
Dating of Shackleton crater suggests it may offer supply of ice.

Scientists to dive to the bottom of the world's deepest lake
Russian team explores the depths of Lake Baikal.

Stars may not be so fine-tuned after all
A change in nature’s fundamental constants could still allow star formation.

July 24, 2008

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On Nature News: Lonesome George, auroras, and making hydrogen - July 24, 2008

Does fatherhood loom for Lonesome George?
Female companion of unique Galapagos tortoise lays promising clutch of eggs.

Aurora's source found by string of satellites
NASA's Themis mission finds the trigger for polar light show.

Enzyme structure reveals key ingredients for making hydrogen
Iron and carbon monoxide lie at the heart of third and final hydrogenase structure.

July 23, 2008

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On Nature News: nukes, brains and wikis - July 23, 2008

Gates and Bloomberg team up to tackle tobacco epidemic
Philanthropists pledge half a billion dollars to fight tobacco use in developing countries.

US-India nuclear deal moves forward
Landmark agreement faces opposition from scientists and arms-control experts.

Brain electrodes tackle severe depression
Trial shows success for ‘deep brain stimulation’ technique.

Molecular biology gets wikified
Crowdsourcing comes to biology databases.

July 15, 2008

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On Nature News: snakes and ice - July 15, 2008

Snakes' venom chemistry varies with age and location
Lancehead pitvipers give up their poisonous secrets in first 'venomics' study.

Science on a melting ice floe
After Russian researchers are evacuated from their Arctic base, one member of the team explains what it was like to spend the winter on ice.

Climate science: The long summer begins
A research vessel embedded in the thinning Arctic sea ice has a front-row seat for the cryospheric show of the century. Quirin Schiermeier reports from Darnley Bay, Canada.

July 14, 2008

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On Nature News: sleep loss and autism - July 14, 2008

Sleep loss produces false memories
But caffeine helps to boost accurate recall

Autism study panned by critics
Plan to use chelating agents on children comes under fire.

July 10, 2008

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On Nature News: sunlight and science vs the media - July 10, 2008

Organic dyes help harvest sunlight
Katharine Sanderson on claims solar-power costs could be slashed by cheap collectors.

When reporters attack
Scientists and the media have a notoriously difficult relationship, but maybe they get on better than we think, says Philip Ball.

July 09, 2008

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On Nature News: bird flu, fossil fish, and the G8 - July 09, 2008

Whatever happened to bird flu?
The media frenzy over bird flu has receded, says Declan Butler, but the threat of a global epidemic still looms large.

The eyes have it
How fossilized flatfish settle evolutionary conundrum.

Developing nations reject G8 climate agreement
Moving targets dog greenhouse-gas deal, writes Olive Heffernan.

July 08, 2008

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On Nature News: the G8 and physics funding - July 08, 2008

Leaders still vague on emissions targets
Olive Heffernan on the G8 talks that fail to advance the fight against climate change.

Spending plan appeases UK physicists
Geoff Brumfiel says an uneasy truce has been struck after re-arrangement of limited funds.

Fossilized feathers may hold a trace of colour
Katharine Sanderson on how pigment remains might help to discern colours and patterns in feathered dinosaurs.

July 07, 2008

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On Nature News: quakes and bans - July 07, 2008

Over on Nature News today...

Shock tactics point to risk after quake
Quirin Schiermeier on how geologists aim to provide daily hazard maps.

Netherlands bans Iranians from studying nuclear technology
Geoff Brumfiel on legislation which bans Iranian nationals from courses and facilities in the Netherlands.