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阪大の四方教授ら、進化の機能を持った人工細胞を作製、Nature姉妹誌で発表
from 日経バイオテクONLINE
(2013-10-4 6:00)
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大阪大学大学院情報化学研究科の四方哲也教授と科学技術振興機構(JST)戦略的創造研究推進事業(ERATO)四方動的微小反応場プロジェクトの数田恭章技術参事らは、生物の特徴である「進化する能力」を持つ人工細胞を作り出すことに成功し、英Nature Communications誌のオンライン速報版で2013年10月3日に発表した。
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Zoologger: mollusc grows hardest teeth in the world
from New Scientist - Online news
(2013-10-4 3:19)
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The teeth of the chiton mollusc are its answer to Wolverine's adamantium skeleton– they are made out of magnetite, the hardest material made by any organism
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Dance work shows how physics and art Collide@CERN
from New Scientist - Online news
(2013-10-4 2:24)
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Dancers whirl and spin just metres away from where the Higgs was found. They're part of a contemporary dance work with a strong attraction
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Gleaming beetle one of 60 new species in Suriname
from New Scientist - Online news
(2013-10-4 2:09)
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The tiny acorn-like beetle was discovered along with 11 fishes, six frogs, a snake, and several insects in one of Earth's most isolated natural havens
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Is Earth's missing xenon hiding in iron's hot embrace?
from New Scientist - Online news
(2013-10-4 2:00)
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It seems that xenon, a normally inert gas, can form chemical bonds with iron under the hot and heavy conditions in Earth's core
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Today on New Scientist
from New Scientist - Online news
(2013-10-4 1:45)
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All the latest on newscientist.com: civilisation's true dawn, four futures for Earth 2100, five ways to rob a bank online, supervolcanoes on Mars and more
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Print a working paper computer on an $80 inkjet
from New Scientist - Online news
(2013-10-4 1:00)
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Imagine printing out a paper computer and tearing off a corner to share? ink laced with silver nanoparticles could make it a reality, to the joy of hobbyists
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ButtonMasher: The rise of consequences in video games
from New Scientist - Online news
(2013-10-4 0:36)
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Grand Theft Auto V lets players kill and be killed with no comeback, but a new breed of games uses open-ended social interactions to explore moral choices
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Hunter, gatherer… architect? Civilisation's true dawn
from New Scientist - Online news
(2013-10-4 0:00)
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The discovery of huge temples thousands of years older than agriculture suggests that culture arose from spiritual hunger, not full bellies, says David Robson (full text available to subscribers)
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Human brain boiled in its skull lasted 4000 years
from New Scientist - Online news
(2013-10-3 23:30)
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Buried in an earthquake and cooked in the resulting fire, one of the oldest brains ever found may help open a window on the health of ancient people
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