| Getting married saps your testosterone 
    from New Scientist - Latest Headlines 
          (2007-10-18 18:23) | 
  | Among Kenya's Ariaal people, it's the married men who have lowered levels of the male hormone, not the older men 
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  | Himalayas created by high-speed impact 
    from New Scientist - Latest Headlines 
          (2007-10-18 2:00) | 
  | Before India smashed into Asia, it was zipping along faster than any other landmass in the recent geological past 
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  | Malaria vaccine protects infants against infection 
    from New Scientist - Latest Headlines 
          (2007-10-18 2:00) | 
  | Early trials of a vaccine against malaria suggest it could save hundreds of thousands of lives each year 
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  | Heavyweight black hole is a record breaker 
    from New Scientist - Latest Headlines 
          (2007-10-18 2:00) | 
  | A black hole 16 times the mass of the Sun could provide a clue to the formation of supermassive black holes in the centres of galaxies 
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  | Early modern humans had a taste for seafood 
    from New Scientist - Latest Headlines 
          (2007-10-18 2:00) | 
  | People ate shellfish, painted their bodies and made fine stone blades 164,000 years ago?much earlier than previously realised 
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  | Light-harvesting nanowire could drive tiny devices 
    from New Scientist - Latest Headlines 
          (2007-10-18 2:00) | 
  | The silicon nanowire, which resembles a coaxial cable, harvests enough electricity from light to power nanoscale electronic circuits 
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  | Healthy women warned over egg freezing 
    from New Scientist - Latest Headlines 
          (2007-10-17 22:55) | 
  | Experts warn against relying on frozen eggs to delay motherhood, meanwhile a study suggests children born from frozen eggs are healthy 
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  | Tree sap makes a formidable underwater insect trap 
    from New Scientist - Latest Headlines 
          (2007-10-17 19:27) | 
  | Tree resin at the bottom of small pools is more of a hazard to insects than sap on the bark, suggests a study in Florida's swamp forests 
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  | Chromosome caps may explain cell immortality 
    from New Scientist - Latest Headlines 
          (2007-10-17 18:02) | 
  | Sections of DNA that cap the ends of chromosomes could be more active than thought, and might help explain how cancer cells become immortal 
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  | [ニュース] 日本SGI、ビッグサイトでセグウェイの実証実験を開始 
    from Robot Watch 
          (2007-10-17 16:48) | 
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