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Observations 12 hours ago
Curious carnivorous dinosaur had a humpback -
Scientific American Mind 19 hours ago
Prescription for a Healthier Brain: Coffee and Cigarettes? -
Features 9/7/10
8 of the Most Extreme Places in the Solar System [Slide Show] -
Scientific American Magazine 9/7/10
Can a 1960s Approach Unify Gravity with the Rest of Physics?
Features
17 hours ago
In the Market for Pollution: Selling the Blue Sky
Environmental markets are a bazaar selling various types of pollution, dependent entirely on government regulations. But do they actually reduce emissions? Second of three parts.
- Special Interactive Feature
- How Much Is Left? The Limits of Earth's Resources, Made Interactive
- This Web-only article is a special rich-media presentation of the feature, "How Much Is Left?," which appears in the September 2010 issue of Scientific American. The presentation was created by Zemi media. Find all our other interactive offerings here.
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Scientific American Magazine posted 18 hours ago
Quantum Light Switch: Single Atom Acts as a Transistor for Photons -
Nature posted 9/8/10
NASA panel weighs asteroid danger -
Nature posted 9/7/10
Questions over ghostwriting in drug industry -
Nature posted 9/7/10
Rare victory in fight against melanoma -
Features posted 9/7/10
Making a Market for Pollution - More >
- Blogs & Opinion
- Extinction Countdown
Deepwater doom: Extinction threat for world's smallest seahorse - Observations
Curious carnivorous dinosaur had a humpback - Observations
Psilocybin found to ease end-of-life anxiety in small study of patients with fatal cancer - Expeditions
Burn, baby, burn: Student-engineered stoves put to the test by Tanzanian women - Observations
Open-source personal robotics seeks a community to make it affordable [video] - More >
- Podcasts
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60-Second Science
Organic Strawberries Beat Conventionally Grown In Test Plots
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60-Second Science
Mice Show Heritable Desire For Exercise
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60-Second Science
Ancient Brewmasters Made Medicinal Beer
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- Mind Matters
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You Are What You Touch: How Tool Use Changes the Brain's Representations of the Body
How tools become a part of your body - More Mind Matters >
- Ask the Experts
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What Are Bedbugs? Are They Dangerous? [Re-post]
The blood-sucking insects are the bane of most city dwellers, but one entomologist proudly keeps a colony at the American Museum of Natural History. Is there any way for the rest of us to steer clear of them? - More Ask the Experts >
- Extreme Tech
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Down with Digital? New Circuit Design Promises to Take the Guesswork out of Probability Processing
M.I.T. start-up Lyric Semiconductor unveils flash memory error correction and has plans to improve online search, shopping and security - More Extreme Tech >
Latest Stories by Category
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Features 9/7/10
Making a Market for Pollution
What does it take to trade in a commodity that cannot be seen or touched--and isn't even a commodity in the United States? First of three parts. -
Extinction Countdown 11 hours ago
Deepwater doom: Extinction threat for world's smallest seahorse
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Mind Matters 9/7/10
You Are What You Touch: How Tool Use Changes the Brain's Representations of the Body
How tools become a part of your body -
Observations 12 hours ago
Psilocybin found to ease end-of-life anxiety in small study of patients with fatal cancer
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News 9/3/10
Wind Turbine or Airplane? New Radar Could Cut Through the Signal Clutter
The push for wind as a renewable energy source has turbines sharing the same airspace as aircraft, with aging radar systems unable to tell the difference -
Expeditions 15 hours ago
Burn, baby, burn: Student-engineered stoves put to the test by Tanzanian women
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In-Depth Reports 8/11/10
Your Next New Car: Cleaner, Greener and Smarter
Luxury, speed and performance are always in demand, but cars of the future will be defined more by their impact on the environment -
In-Depth Reports 6/15/10
Urban Visions: The Future of Cities
What will population centers look like in 20 years' time? Innovations in transportation, energy production and technology will have to keep pace with a host of challenges
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If the world is going to hell, why are humans doing so well?
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Got E. coli? Raw Milk's Appeal Grows Despite Health Risks
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Evolutionary psycho-logy: Commandeering genetics to explain why Obama really is a Muslim
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In-Depth Reports 8/25/10
What's Next for AIDS: New Approaches for Tackling HIV in the Developing WorldThe surprise success this summer of a clinical trial on an antiretroviral-based vaginal microbicide provides new traction for efforts to combat AIDS in the developing world. Here are some new directions to expect for treatment and prevention of this widespread killer
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