2019-03-01
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More Space Tourism
July 26, 2006Taking a vacation in space is an idea that just won't go away. Jeff Bezos, the founder of Amazon.com, has branched out into selling a great many things other than books. Now he has plans to develop commercial spacecraft that... continued
Sex in Space
July 25, 2006If it takes generations to travel to other galaxies, this is something we'll have to deal with in the future, since one generation will leave the earth and another generation will arrive at the destination. One problem is?weightlessness. NASA space... continued
Cancer Preventing Sunscreen Finally Available Here
July 25, 2006A little over two years ago, we wrote a story about an extraordinary sunscreen that was available abroad but not yet approved by the FDA. It was so much more effective than we what we had that US sunbathers were... continued
Gas Shortage Savior?Oil from Plankton?
July 25, 2006Some researchers have already suggested that we burn grass in our cars instead of fossil fuel. But while grass seems to be everywhere, plankton is actually one of the most common types of vegetation on earth?although it's actually in the... continued
Whitley’s Journal: We May Lose the Rain Forest
July 25, 2006In his dynamite new journal, Whitley writes, "As the summer of 2006 rages on, with heatwaves stretching from the American Pacific coast all the way across the North Atlantic to Europe and virtually around the world, we now discover that... continued
Animation: A Hairy Problem
July 24, 2006Science is changing the world of animation. Filmmakers are reviving old techniques, like rotoscoping, and making it new. And a group of university mathematicians has created an algorithm that makes animated hair look more realistic. "A Scanner Darkly" uses rotoscoping,... continued
We Became Human to Get Away From Snakes
July 24, 2006In evolutionary terms, humans may have gotten so smart because we needed to get away from poisonous snakes. This lends new credence to the Adam and Eve legend. In LiveScience.com, Ker Than reports that anthropologist Lynne Isbell thinks that snakes... continued
More About That Mysterious Necklace
July 24, 2006We're still trying to solve the mystery of the mysterious nuclear necklace of King Tut. Prehistoric humans roamed the Sahara, which is now the world's largest desert, for thousands of years before it became a desert. There are isolated ruins... continued
Skeleton in the Einstein Closet
July 21, 2006Quantum mechanics has been called "the skeleton in Albert Einstein's closet," because while he proposed the theory of relativity, which is the cornerstone of quantum mechanics, he thought that quantum laws were too random and said, "God doesn't play dice... continued
Asteroid?or Nuclear?Jewelry?
July 21, 2006Ancient texts from India describe a scenario which sounds to us very much like a nuclear war. If this is true, some of the only evidence may have been made into jewelry. In 1966, Veincenzo de Michele saw a strange... continued