| Reclaiming the night sky: award-winning astrophotography 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2009-9-26 6:00) | 
  | Iranian photographer Babak Tafreshi has won the 2009 Lennart Nilsson scientific photography prize? see his stunning images here 
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  | How astronauts could 'harvest' water on the moon 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2009-9-26 3:49) | 
  | Now that we know there is water on the moon, how do we extract it? A NASA design would zap the frigid lunar soil with microwaves and collect the resulting water vapour 
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  | Immigrant species aren't all bad 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2009-9-26 2:05) | 
  | Non-native animals and plants get a poor press, but this often has more to do with prejudice than science, says biologist Mark Davis 
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  | Today on New Scientist: 25 September 2009 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2009-9-26 1:39) | 
  | Today's stories on newscientist.com, at a glance, including: a quantum computing breakthrough, how smacking hits kids' IQ and a chance to ask Terry Pratchett a question 
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  | Fabulous furry pterosaur unearthed in China 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2009-9-26 1:22) | 
  | The flying reptiles that dominated the skies during the age of the dinosaurs were fuzzballs 
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  | Get close to hundreds of insects 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2009-9-26 0:58) | 
  | A quirky new building at London's Natural History Museum brings 17 million insect specimens under one climate-controlled roof. See some of them here 
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  | What would you ask Terry Pratchett? 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2009-9-25 23:51) | 
  | Next week, we're going to interview Terry Pratchett, author of the enormously successful Discworld series of books– or rather, you are 
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  | This week's top stories [25 September 2009] 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2009-9-25 22:00) | 
  | Our top articles ranked by reader popularity.    Better world: Be nice to people    Today on New Scientist: 18 September 2009    Alan Turing gets belated apology    Why are we the naked ape?    Wind, not water, may explain Red Planet's hue    Video games need a more diverse cast of characters    The population delusion    Moon is coldest known place in the solar system    Visions of data    Trash trackers: The secret life of garbage 
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  | Live video makes Google Earth cities bustle 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2009-9-25 21:37) | 
  | Data from traffic and weather cameras can bring the ghost towns of virtual earth programmes to life with people, cars and weather 
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  | Smacking hits kids' IQ 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2009-9-25 21:19) | 
  | Toddlers who were smacked regularly developed lower IQs than kids whose mothers didn't hit them 
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