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Scientific American June 2008 Charles Q. Choi |
Green Porno: SciAm Talks Insect Sex with Isabella Rossellini A humanized view of invertebrate love.  |
Scientific American June 2008 Charles Q. Choi |
Can the "Amphibian Ark" Save Frogs from Pollution/Extinction? A repopulation plan for endangered amphibians.  |
Chemistry World July 7, 2008 Olivia Walker |
Steak could be healthier with a glass of red wine Scientists in Israel have found that polyphenols in red wine could help protect against heart disease and cancers by reducing toxic by-products of fat digestion.  |
Popular Mechanics July 7, 2008 Erik Sofge |
For Future of Mind Control, Robot-Monkey Trials Are Just a Start A study in the journal Nature this spring all but confirmed the latest evolution in the hard-charging, heady field of cybernetics: Monkeys can control machines with their brains.  |
Chemistry World July 4, 2008 Emma Davies |
Creating a Second Genetic Code Japanese researchers have made artificial DNA that acts like the real thing, even forming right-handed duplexes with complementary artificial strands.  |
Chemistry World July 2008 Mark Peplow |
Editorial: There's plenty of room in the middle Today, chemists and biologists are looking at the space between their own disciplines and asking big questions about where science at the interface might lead them.  |
Psychology Today May/Jun 2008 Robert Kunzig |
Finding the Switch Homosexuality may persist because the associated genes convey surprising advantages on homosexuals' family members.  |
Chemistry World July 2008 Ananyo Bhattacharya |
Sparks of creation Chemists are at the forefront of synthetic biology, the burgeoning field that could soon create artificial life.  |
Chemistry World June 30, 2008 James Mitchell Crow |
Mercury link to dolphin deaths Australian scientists have found that mercury poisoning could be leading local dolphins to beach themselves.  |
Chemistry World June 27, 2008 Richard Van Noorden |
UK's chem-bio interface gets mixed report United Kingdom scientists working at the interface between chemistry and biology think their research councils don't adequately support interdisciplinary research, a survey suggests.  |
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