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Any number of results, or 0 to have the keyword displayed in the Failed Keywords reportev1.attr1="";ev1.attr2="";ev1.attr3="";ev1.attr4="";//END EDITABLE SECTION//REQUIRED SECTION. CHANGE "YOURSERVER" TO VALID LOCATION ON YOUR WEB SERVER (HTTPS IF FROM SECURE SERVER) Ancient Greek drinkers didn't have far to stagger home Some Greek houses had an unsuspected double life – they were also used as drinking taverns and brothels, suggests an archaeological analysis LATEST NEWS Whalers attempt to block refuelling of activists' ship UPFRONT:  00:00 07 January 2009  | 2 comments Japanese whalers are calling on Australia and New Zealand to prevent a vessel run by anti-whaling activists' from refuelling after a collision in Antarctica Immoral advances: Is science out of control? FEATURE:  10:14 09 January 2009  | 7 comments When research raises deeply felt objections, it's not enough just to dismiss them as "irrational", says Dan Jones Gallery: Nanobristles that twist and grip This neat arrangement was made simply by letting wet bristles dry, click the link left for more images (Image: Joanna Aizenberg/Harvard University/<b>Science</b>) 19:00 08 January 2009 The same process that makes wet hair tangle as it dries can be harnessed to make biological-looking spirals of tiny bristles Artificial molecule evolves in the lab 19:00 08 January 2009  | 12 comments A new molecule that performs the essential function of life – self-replication – could shed light on the origin of all living things Billions could go hungry from global warming by 2100 19:00 08 January 2009  | 70 comments Temperatures at the close of this century could be above those that crippled food supplies on at least three occasions since 1900 Drugs unlock the body's own stem cell cabinet 15:56 08 January 2009  | 11 comments The discovery of drug regimes that liberate specific types of stem cells from the bone marrow could allow patients to produce their own healing stem cells Climbers show record low blood oxygen levels UPFRONT:  13:00 08 January 2009  | 5 comments The finding in medics who climbed Mount Everest might mean that some people in intensive care can tolerate lower oxygen levels than previously thought Wildlife confused by polarised light pollution 12:40 08 January 2009  | 8 comments The way dark, reflective industrial materials polarise light is setting "ecological traps" for animals that have evolved to lay eggs in water Obama team to raise questions over Ares rocket UPFRONT:  12:20 08 January 2009  | 11 comments Why is NASA developing a new generation of space rockets when the US already has two that could do the same job? Invention: Recycled trash construction materials 11:25 08 January 2009 Plant and plastic waste destined for landfill can be recycled into heat or noise insulation, and could even be used for construction, says a patent application Gallery: Paintings of the disappearing rainforests Click the link, left, to enter the gallery (Image: Harry Holcroft) 10:30 08 January 2009 Artist Harry Holcroft spent four years travelling the world's rainforests, and created a collection of paintings depicting the scenes he discovered Insulin grown in plants gets human tests UPFRONT:  10:00 08 January 2009  | 6 comments Safflower plants have been engineered to produce insulin – it is hoped they will provide a cheaper source of the hormone for people with diabetes Mystery radio signal could be from universe's first stars A balloon-borne instrument called ARCADE mapped a doughnut-shaped region that covered some 7% of the sky (coloured region), turning up an unexplained radio signal (Illustration: NASA/ARCADE) 04:13 08 January 2009  | 12 comments A balloon-borne experiment has turned up mysterious radio static that could come from the universe's first stars Black holes grew up before galaxies Astronomers used the Very Large Array of radio telescopes to study the gas in this galaxy as it appeared just 870 million years after the big bang (Image: NRAO/AUI/NSF) 21:08 07 January 2009  | 14 comments A study of four distant quasars suggests that supermassive black holes may have matured long before the galaxies that surround them Runaway stars carve eerie cosmic sculptures Bow shocks are created when winds of particles shed by runaway stars slam into surrounding gas (Image: NASA/ESA/R Sahai/JPL) 19:54 07 January 2009  | 2 comments Hubble has found 14 stars that are shooting through interstellar gas, creating 'bow shocks' that resemble the waves at the bow of a boat Repulsive quantum effect finally measured Artist's rendition of how a repulsive quantum force between nanoscale objects can allow an object to become "bouyant" on a liquid less dense than itself (Image: Jay Penni/Federico Capasso) 18:00 07 January 2009  | 2 comments Physicists at last observe a "quantum buoyancy" effect that could one day be used to oil the wheels of nanomachines Ten extinct beasts that could walk the Earth again COVER STORY:  18:00 07 January 2009  | 68 comments There's no hope for the dinosaurs, but other long-dead creatures really could be brought back to life. New Scientist looks at the most likely candidates A good night out began at home in ancient Greece THIS WEEK:  18:00 07 January 2009  | 7 comments Some Greek houses had an unsuspected double life – they were also used as drinking taverns and brothels, suggests an archaeological analysis Danger ahead as the Sun goes quiet A huge, twisted solar prominence (lower left) in the corona of the Sun. The prominence is a massive cloud of plasma confined by powerful magnetic fields. If it breaks free of the Sun's atmosphere, such an event can cause electrical blackouts and auroral storms, if directed towards Earth. This image was taken in the light of ionised helium (30.4 nanometres), which corresponds to a temperature of around 60,000 Kelvin. It was taken on 18th January 2000 by the Extreme Ultraviolet Imaging Telescope (EIT) on board the SOHO (Solar and Heliospheric Observatory) spacecraft (Image: SOHO / ESA / NASA / SPL) THIS WEEK:  18:00 07 January 2009  | 101 comments The Sun is about to go into a period of low sunspot activity, which could let more harmful cosmic rays enter the solar system Should nuclear fuels be taken out of national hands? THIS WEEK:  18:00 07 January 2009  | 11 comments To discourage proliferation, calls are growing to establish a system where nuclear materials are managed under international auspices Cool your brain, save your mind FEATURE:  18:00 07 January 2009  | 5 comments Techniques that rapidly chill the brain could prevent damage and even aid resuscitation after a heart attack Many pulsars sport gamma-ray beltsMovie Camera Newly found pulsars that emit only gamma rays suggest the radiation is produced above a pulsar's equator (magenta) and not in tight beams above the magnetic poles, as are radio waves (green)  (Illustration: NASA/Fermi/Cruz deWilde) 17:20 07 January 2009  | 1 comment Pulsars are not simply lighthouses that beam out radio waves from their poles - many also emit gamma rays from their equators Comet smashes triggered ancient famine THIS WEEK:  15:44 07 January 2009  | 22 comments Multiple comets struck the oceans in 536 AD, throwing up a 'dry fog' that caused crops to fail over half the globe Rise of the garage genome hackers (Image: Mackenzie Cowell) FEATURE:  15:36 07 January 2009  | 21 comments A do-it-yourself movement is hoping to open up synthetic biology to anyone with a passion for tweaking DNA World's smallest fuel cell promises greener gadgets The new micro fuel cell is just 3 mm by 3 mm (Image: Saeed Moghaddam) 11:42 07 January 2009  | 12 comments Portable devices could be hydrogen powered if fuel cell technology could be made smaller – a design 3 mm across might do the trick Good memory for a face? Thank the love hormone 11:51 07 January 2009  | 1 comment Oxytocin – a hormone dubbed the "cuddle chemical" for its role in long-term love – might also help us recall the faces of friends Inside the mind of an autistic savant INTERVIEW:  11:40 07 January 2009  | 45 comments We could all unleash extraordinary mental abilities if we learned to think like savants, says Daniel Tammet We have the technology to rebuild ourselves FEATURE:  11:28 07 January 2009  | 18 comments With better, stronger and faster components, the bionic age has finally arrived, says Julian Smith Supernova's ghost caught expanding in new videoMovie Camera Cassiopeia A is the ghostly remnant of a supernova that exploded in the Milky Way some 330 years ago (Image: NASA/CXC/SAO/D Patnaude et al.) 10:00 07 January 2009  | 5 comments A time-lapse movie suggests the supernova remnant Cassiopeia A may be channelling its energy into creating high-speed cosmic rays Alien asteroid dust hints at Earth-like planets White dwarfs can chew apart errant asteroids, leaving only dusty remains. New infrared observations suggest the dust left behind in six such stars has a composition similar to rocky objects in the inner solar system, suggesting the stars may have hosted rocky planets. (Illustration: NASA/JPL-Caltech) 17:22 06 January 2009  | 27 comments Dust with a similar composition to the Earth has been found swaddling six stars, suggesting rocky planets may be common RSS GALLERY Gallery: Snowflakes as you've never seen them before This snowflake has fernlike stellar dendrites - so called because the crystals have so many sidebranches that they look like ferns. Follow the link in the text to see many more types of snowflake (Image: Kenneth Libbrecht) 11:50 10 December 2008 We still do not understand how the different types of snowflake form, but new technologies are starting to crack the mystery by revealing their internal structure SHORT SHARP SCIENCE BLOG Should a TV news doctor be US surgeon general? 18:22 08 January 2009 - updated 18:30 08 January 2009 Should a TV news doctor be US surgeon general? That's the question buzzing on the blogs and in the mass media, following the revelation that president-elect Barack Obama has approached CNN's Sanjay Gupta to fill the post known as "America's... Solar power for cheap cold food and pure water 16:42 08 January 2009 - updated 16:48 08 January 2009 Solar power in the developed world is becoming ever more high-tech, and big business. Witness the attempts to steer president-elect Obama towards space-based solar power.But low-tech ways to harness the Sun's energy can have big impacts too, as these two... Who will be NASA's next chief? 02:12 08 January 2009 - updated 04:43 08 January 2009 A former astronaut is reportedly the strongest contender for the agency's top post Could your social networks spill your secrets? 17:16 07 January 2009 - updated 17:16 07 January 2009 In an article at the end of last year we looked at some of the ways data-mining techniques are being used by marketeers and security services to extract sometimes private information by assembling huge amounts of data from web visits,... Using Tetris to treat trauma 17:03 07 January 2009 - updated 12:27 08 January 2009 Mention Tetris to anyone between the ages of 25 and 40 and his or her head will probably brim with blocks of various shapes and colours. The video game is so insidious that a long session can lead to Tetris... God's own space race 19:12 06 January 2009 - updated 19:30 06 January 2009 Talk of an Islamic space agency raises questions about the role of religion in space Cheap climate-engineering schemes could get off the ground 15:40 06 January 2009 - updated 17:02 06 January 2009 Plans to engineer the climate on a global scale in order to counter climate change have often been presented as near-science fiction scenarios - shooting a cloud of mirrors into space to reflect the sun's rays, for instance. But now some of these ideas - such as sulphur sunshades and cloud seeding - are slowly gaining pace and popularity, and reputable scientists are working on computer models to simulate their effects... Fred's Footprint: Migration controls are the new apartheid 11:45 06 January 2009 - updated 16:59 06 January 2009 I like heretical ideas. Especially ones that make more sense the longer you think about them. So here is my New Year offering: let's open the world's borders to migrants... Space elevators needed for space solar power? 19:49 05 January 2009 - updated 20:05 05 January 2009 Could space elevators one day be used to save the planet? Artificial butterfly flaps like a pro 16:12 05 January 2009 - updated 17:19 05 January 2009 Flying insects continue to inspire roboticists. Early in 2008, US researchers added an artificial control system to the brain of moths, effectively creating remote controlled cyborg insects. Meanwhile, others are busy creating winged robots that flap around like real insects.A... MORE FROM THE BLOG VIDEO Best videos of 2008 01:01 24 December 2008 Watch the five most popular videos posted to New Scientist this year, including rat-brained robots and the world's deepest-living fish ADVERTISEMENTAdvertising Most read Most commented Inside the mind of an autistic savant Ten extinct beasts that could walk the Earth again Danger ahead as the Sun goes quiet We have the technology to rebuild ourselves Mystery radio signal could be from universe's first stars Most read Most commented Danger ahead as the Sun goes quiet Ten extinct beasts that could walk the Earth again Inside the mind of an autistic savant Review: Why Evolution is True by Jerry Coyne Yellowstone quakes raise explosion fears switchTab('tabRead','tabCommented'); GENETICS Genes give Africans a better sense of taste People from Cameroon and Kenya have far more variation in a gene that controls sensitivity to bitterness, say researchers – could it be a survival adaptation? 60 SECONDS Pink iguanas, autism bank, heavy galaxy, confusing light and flu fatalaties 60 SECONDS:  00:00 07 January 2009  | 1 comment The UK has launched its first bank of donated brain tissue samples dedicated to autism research Earliest spider web and more 60 SECONDS:  00:00 17 December 2008 Has the world's oldest spider web been found? Strands 140 million years old were found inside a piece of amber on a UK beach and look similar to those made by modern orb spiders... Banning bluetongue 60 SECONDS:  00:00 10 December 2008 A new EU law is set to make the fight against bluetongue - a disease that affects sheep and cows - a little easier... Gorilla welfare 60 SECONDS:  00:00 03 December 2008  | 1 comment The UN has deemed 2009 the year of the gorilla in a bid to stop them becoming extinct within a few decades... Acid surprise 60 SECONDS:  00:00 26 November 2008  | 2 comments Ocean acidity is rising at least 10 times faster than climate models predict, according to eight years of daily measurements off the Washington state coast RSS SOUNDBITES 'It appears that she does it for her own satisfaction' SOUNDBITES:  00:00 17 December 2008 Al Setka of the Great Ape Trust on Bonnie, an orang-utan in a zoo in Washington DC, who has learned to whistle to pass the time... 'We have 'survival' emissions, you have lifestyle emissions' SOUNDBITES:  00:00 10 December 2008  | 1 comment India's envoy to the UN climate conference in Poznan, Poland, on why India won't accept emissions limits Soundbites SOUNDBITES:  00:00 03 December 2008 "Assessing ecosystems without taking into account the fungi is like taking care of computers but not the chips inside" MORE SOUNDBITES RSS This week's issueSubscribeCover of latest issue of New Scientist magazineFor exclusive news and expert analysis every week subscribe to New Scientist print EditionCurrent issueArchiveFull Access10 January 2009For exclusive news and expert analysis every week subscribe to New Scientist print EditionCurrent issueArchiveFull AccessADVERTISEMENTAdvertising Subscribe to New Scientist var era_rc = { ERADomain: 'newscientist.firstlightera.com' }; Partners We are partnered with Approved Index. 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