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Cracks on Mars hint at dried-up lakes from New Scientist - Online News (2009-9-17 3:11) |
Vanished lakes may have left behind networks of cracks on the floors of Martian impact craters
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Today on New Scientist: 16 September 2009 from New Scientist - Online News (2009-9-17 2:05) |
Today's stories on newscientist.com, at a glance? including quantum viruses, the future of literary sci-fi, and how to play Pong with cells
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Gene therapy cures colour-blind monkeys from New Scientist - Online News (2009-9-17 2:00) |
Adding a human gene lets them see red and green for the first time
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Too much radiation for astronauts to make it to Mars from New Scientist - Online News (2009-9-17 2:00) |
Crews could exceed NASA's recommended maximum doses of space radiation before they get anywhere near the Red Planet
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Brain science to help teachers get into kids' heads from New Scientist - Online News (2009-9-17 2:00) |
Neuroscience is set to bring fresh insight to teaching? and banish a few myths about the brain
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The art of thriving from New Scientist - Online News (2009-9-17 1:39) |
A frog with no name is just one image from some of the world's finest nature and wildlife photographers showing at London's Saatchi Gallery this week
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Sci-fi special: The fiction of now from New Scientist - Online News (2009-9-17 1:28) |
British science fiction is in a golden age, so why isn't it winning any literary awards? Guest editor Kim Stanley Robinson explores the "literature of our time" and challenges leading authors to write flash fiction about the world 100 years from now
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Polar bears run riot as ice melts from New Scientist - Online News (2009-9-17 1:04) |
Hungry bears raid towns for food as climate change reduces their hunting season
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[ニュース] ネットラジオ番組「のもぴ〜プラスティックラジオ」第3回公開録音レポート〜ガンダム好きアイド from Robot Watch (2009-9-17 0:00) |
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Human brains better tooled up than monkeys from New Scientist - Online News (2009-9-16 20:55) |
Our brains respond to tools in a way that macaque brains don't, which could explain how human ingenuity suddenly leapt ahead
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