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New Scientist - Drugs and Alcohol
• Gene variant role in Parkinson's uncovered
• Google tracks political allegiances
• Solar cycle may drive Venice's floods
• Which oil-mopping technology will win $1.4m X prize?
• What's the best way to eject astronauts during lift-off?
• Today on New Scientist: 30 July 2010
• Quantum electron 'submarines' help push atoms around
• Galapagos: off the danger list, still in danger
• Dog brains rotated by selective breeding
• Are cloned steak and milk on European menus?
• Reptilians were the earliest North American pioneers
• Graphene bubbles mimic explosive magnetic field
• Team-working robots huddle together to boost comms
• Cosmic Trojans may sneak comets towards Earth
• Regulation could save genome scanning, not kill it
• E. coli engineered to make convenient 'drop-in' biofuel
• Today on New Scientist: 29 July 2010
• US food waste worth more than offshore drilling
• Satellite quantum communication circles closer
• Galapagos off the Danger List – but why?
• Satellite quantum-communication circles closer
• Spinning black holes could expose exotic particles
• Inside TRAK: a new robot shows us how we think
• Phytoplankton in decline: bye bye food chain?
• Doctor gagged for doubting shaken baby syndrome
• Alzheimer's unlocked: New keys to a cure
• Aurora mission makes detour to moon
• Did planet hunter leak data about other Earths?
• Fall of Berlin Wall was a hot moment for conservation
• Climategate scientist breaks his silence
• Did emotions evolve to push others into cooperation?
• Today on New Scientist: 28 July 2010
• Morph-osaurs: How shape-shifting dinosaurs deceived us
• Do raw emotions give us strategic advantages?
• Experiments in body art: Crowdsourcing a tattoo
• Genome Nobelist: The hard numbers of population growth
• Another Gulf oil leak hits Louisiana waters
• Zoologger: Horror lizard squirts tears of blood
• Apple, trackpads, and the long death of the mouse
• Shields up! Force fields could protect Mars missions
• Time to go atomic on space station
• Smart glass helps pioneering solar sail to steer
• Today on New Scientist: 27 July 2010
• Climategate data sets to be made public
• Biodiesel from algae may not be as green as it seems
• Mapping the mountain of human DNA
• How Wikileaks became a whistleblowers' haven
• Not-so-secret seven hold keys to the internet
• Laughter's secrets: Faking it - the results
• Anti-vaccination website poses public health risk
• Master stroke: A formula for record-breaking rowing?
• Locked-in people could control wheelchairs by sniffing
• Why IVF pioneers were denied public money
• Quark discoverer: Decoherence, language and complexes
• Controlling a wheelchair not to be sniffed at
• Green machine: Aircon that doesn't warm the planet
• Ageing spacecraft makes best-ever map of Mars
• We humans can mind-meld too
• What comes after the Large Hadron Collider?
• Today on New Scientist: 26 July 2010
• Art on a chip: Accidental beauty at the nanoscale
• Hire out your spare brainpower, says internet optimist
• Social networks: The great tipping point test
• Perfecting synthetic sounds for animated worlds
• All power to the wind - it cuts your electricity bills
• Social web: The great tipping point test
• Bellyflopping frogs shed light on evolution
• Ways to snoop 'private' web sessions identified
• Sneaky dogs take food quietly to avoid getting caught
• Camera app puts you in the footsteps of history
• Heart problem no problem for fliers
• 'Sleep control' cells allow blind mice to see
• Innovation: A real live Grand Prix in your living room
• Today on New Scientist: 23 July 2010
• Will a second attempt at IVF be worth the effort?
• Too soon to blame Toyota drivers for throttle problems
• This week's top stories [23 July 2010]
• Toyota: too soon to blame drivers for problems
• Single gene could be key to a baby's first breath
• Every black hole may hold a hidden universe
• Fishing skews sex ratios in fish
• Dinosaur clawprints are all over hunt site
• Laughter's secrets: How to make a computer laugh
• 'Buckyballs' spotted in interstellar space
• Triple-slit experiment confirms reality is quantum
• Serotonin cell discoveries mean rethink of depression
• Teenage drivers: why whales smash into boats
• Today on New Scientist: 22 July 2010
• Record-breaking heat does not 'prove' global warming
• Speeding star traced back to Milky Way's heart
• How does a bowhead whale smell? Quite well, actually
• BP can't fake photos – can it plug the oil leak?
• Die young, live fast: The evolution of an underclass
• Micro plane perches to feed on power lines
• Laughter's secrets: Contagious chortling
• Astronaut for hire: Space tourism will help science
• Today on New Scientist: 21 July 2010
• Baby boomer marmots fatten up with climate change
• Old faithful Tevatron collider leads race to Higgs
• Stingy aliens may call us on cheap rates only
• Gulf of Mexico becomes an accidental laboratory
• An evil atmosphere is forming around geoengineering
• Vaginal gel could slow spread of HIV
• The discovery of energy
• International AIDS meeting: reports of success
• Biggest star ever found may be ticking antimatter bomb
• Twitter mood maps reveal emotional states of America
• Zoologger: Secret to long life found… in a baby dragon
• O2h no! Is our oxygen running out?
• PC giant warns of hardware trojan
• Business, science and art meet in consciousness doc
• Laughter's secrets: The best medicine?
• Skull tells tale of the lost primates of the Caribbean
• Laughter's secrets: GSOH not required
• Fascinating frogs hopping to extinction
• How a changing diet rules a growing baby's guts
• Senate to NASA: Build massive rocket now!
• Today on New Scientist: 20 July 2010
• Inception: peering into the science of dreams
• A psychologist inside the mind of suicide bombers
• Blood spatter model to help crime scene investigation
• Male fetuses ignore their stressed-out mothers
• Laughter's secrets: The sound of a happy ape
• Killer worms and the musical sun: best of web video
• Veggieworld: Why eating greens won't save the planet
• Enlist malaria-resistant mosquitoes to stop its spread
• Briefing: New ways to diagnose Alzheimer's earlier
• Ecstasy may help trauma victims
• Today on New Scientist: 19 July 2010
• Malaria, the killer that won't go away
• Navy laser roasts incoming drones in mid-air
• Green machine: A salty solution for power generation
• Out with pink and blue: Don't foster the gender divide
• SpaceShipTwo makes first crewed flight
• Artificial gut frees sewage-eating robot from humans
• Why we listen to sad music when we're sad
• The secrets of laughter
• Geoengineering fix won't suit everyone
• Fish certification scheme shows its true colours
• Depression makes the world look dull
• Cholesterol screening for US children could save lives
• Brain implants evolved to use less energy
• Innovation: Google may know your desires before you do
• Today on New Scientist: 16 July 2010
• Single star count ups odds of ET
• Parasite parade: Meet nature's intimate aliens
• Deep space X-ray flash is most powerful ever recorded
• Innovation: Find what you want before you even want it
• Comet tail confirmed on alien planet
• Want to get off to sleep? Ask your astrocytes nicely
• This week's top stories [16 July 2010]
• TED Global: Where ideas get it on
• Ultimate eclipse photo: Captured
• Silicon chip speed record broken on a lead-coated track
• 'Cuddle chemical' eases symptoms of schizophrenia
• Can you take eggs from a dying woman?
• Chew on this: thank cooking for your big brain
• For insects, press print
• Bit of a crybaby? Blame your serotonin levels
• Air pollution could increase risk of suicide
• NASA seeks rover that goes all night
• Super goby helps salvage ocean dead zone
• Today on New Scientist: 15 July 2010
• Grow-your-own approach to wiring 3D chips
• Quantum entanglement holds together life's blueprint
• Russian spooks could claim web chat for themselves
• Cheap drones could replace search-and-rescue choppers
• Timber piracy down - but we're not out of the woods
• Final ruling on controversial diabetes drug
• Gulf turtle evacuees could get lost at sea
• Fluorescent felines meet pre-plucked chickens
• Why the UK government should not cut charity research
• Let there be night, for wildlife's sake
• Why Facebook friends are worth keeping
• Smoke-detector isotope to power space probes
• Today on New Scientist: 14 July 2010
• Gorillas learn to play fair by playing tag
• Heart of darkness could explain sun mysteries
• Artificial lungs breathe new hope for transplants
• Will BP's new cap fit?
• Pope's astronomer: 'Science helps me be a priest'
• Climate scientists respond to 'climategate' report
• Drivers to blame for out-of-control Toyotas?
• Picture puzzles separate human from machine
• Altered animals: Creatures with bonus features
• Zoologger: Eggs with an 'eat me' sign
• Higgs discovery rumour unfounded
• Today on New Scientist: 13 July 2010
• Huge undersea volcano found off Indonesia
• Deepwater wellhead gets new top hat
• You can't fight violence with violence
• Bumpology: Men go through pregnancy too
• Reconstructed: Archimedes's flaming steam cannon
• Obama announces plan to fight HIV
• Rule out nothing in the investigation of cancer
• The madness and love that built the periodic table
• Alternative nuclear fuel is surprisingly reactive
• Mummies of the world gather in Los Angeles
• Crunching cancer with numbers
• Carbon heritage comes to coal-mining dynasty's pile
• Chilled genes are hot hope for new vaccines
• Today on New Scientist: 12 July 2010
• Invisible weapons to fight fake drugs
• A backstage pass to the circus of super-long life
• Warning sounded over British dogfighting drone
• Pioneer aquanaut: How not to clean up an oil spill
• Mongooses who can, teach
• Can you teach yourself synaesthesia?
• Green machine: A new push for pond scum power
• Ultimate eclipse photo: Scoping out Easter Island
• Geo-tags reveal celeb secrets
• Higgs boson: is a result imminent?
• Alpha, beta, gamma: The language of brainwaves
• Law of hurricane power discovered
• Ad system that can spot an online shopper
• Smart TV remote could censor shows for kids
• Animated 3D models extracted from single-camera video
• Oxygen therapy slows mouse wrinkles
• Today on New Scientist: 9 July 2010
• Stabilisers will let deep-sea wind turbines stand tall
• Nanoparticle bandages could detect and treat infection
• Innovation: Shrewd search engines know what you want
• Dolphins make their last stand in the Mediterranean
• Google should answer some searching questions
• UK science minister: research must be saved from cuts
• This week's top stories [09 July 2010]
• The long quest for the origins of mass
• Gene switches sexual desires of female mice
• Soaring Arctic temperatures - a warning from history
• Signs of hope in the Gulf: the final fix?
• Dolphin tracking in a giant Greek bathtub
• Antibody cuts brain damage in strokes
• First piloted solar-powered night flight
• Today on New Scientist: 8 July 2010
• Wanted: little levers to probe the quantum divide
• Tyrannosaurs: history's most fearsome… scavengers?
• Debate over gender disorder drug
• Fireflies' flashy mates have to be in sync
• Football results influence voters
• Ban mephedrone-like legal high, says UK drug advisor
• Glooped-up desk toy probes weird wet collisions
• Darwinian algorithm cuts the need for surgery
• The ancients got it right – sometimes
• Can a gene test tell you whether you'll live to 100?
• US cellphone expansion could deafen radio astronomers
• 'Brain recycling' puts kids' writing in a twist
• Hard-to-see fruit fly embryos brought to life in 3D
• Sea otters worth $700 million in carbon credits
• Humungous bubbles blown from small black hole
• Bird's eye views of what industry does to land
• SkyTruth founder: Remote sensing for the people
• Incredible shrinking proton raises eyebrows
• Star wars: a new hope for arms control in space
• How Planck's pain could be the LHC's gain
• Warning: NASA game may encourage bad behaviour
• Today on New Scientist: 7 July 2010
• The evolution of life, on a wall
• Climategate inquiry: no deceit, too little cooperation
• Apocalypse, but not right now
• Trains, planes and ships: smuggling nukes into the US
• Climate change could drive crocs out of the water
• On the origin of species – by means of pheromones
• Solid-state systems could sequence a genome for $100
• Prehistoric humans may have pushed climate change
• Search engines learn how to watch and listen to video
• Secrets of backboned life found on undersea mountains
• Zoologger: How did the giraffe get its long neck?
• Prawns on Prozac, whatever next? Crabs on cocaine?
• Right whales yell over the ocean din
• Today on New Scientist: 6 July 2010
• Zodiacal light: zombie comets to blame
• Why people indulge in cannibalism and love modern art
• Bumpology: What you can teach a fetus
• Virtual prisons: how e-maps are curtailing our freedom
• Climate change report is 'reliable but flawed'
• Innovation: The tech refresher Russia's spies needed
• Curious liaisons: Nature's weirdest sex lives
• Winning on home turf drives desire for future fights
• Green machine: The dream of green cars meets reality
• Today on New Scientist: 5 July 2010
• Warm climates boost bird beak size
• The climate scandal that never was
• Microwave universe: Planck's first hi-res image
• It's too late to worry that the aliens will find us
• Rio hopes of conservation cash were never met
• If you've got great genes, it pays to be extrovert
• iPads go live, hydrogen hits the road and CSI: Pig
• Decoding the ancient Egyptians' stone sky map
• CSI: Pig, iPads go live and hydrogen hits the road
• From sea to sky: Submarines that fly
• Sense of touch influences our decisions
• Gamma rays may betray clumps of dark matter
• Natural killer cells are at root of hair-loss disease
• 'Giant hand' pushed up coast of Scotland
• DNA tests to reveal ancestral villages
• Half-eaten dwarf planet reveals chemical secrets
• Today on New Scientist: 2 July 2010
• How the moon got its whiskers
• Russian spy ring hid secret messages on the web
• Why men are attracted to women with small feet
• Injured brains speak through art
• Supernovae don't make the biggest atoms
• Classical music moves the heart in vegetative patients
• This week's top stories [02 July 2010]
• How plants get by when pollinators vanish
• Casimir effect put to work as a nano-switch
• To protect plants, replace conservation parks
• Ancient African lake fertilises the Amazon
• Unknown first world war veterans laid to rest
• Reclusive mathematician turns down $1 million prize
• Make every animal experiment count
• New animal experiment guidelines issued for UK
• USB coffee-cup warmer could be stealing your data
• Dear diary, I am sick to death... David Livingstone
• Tibetans adapted to high life at record-breaking rate
• Today on New Scientist: 1 July 2010
• Home birth increases risk of baby's death
• Water droplets create multilayered display
• X-games in space: Record-smashing probes
• Turbo-boosting plants won't save us from climate change
• Plant nurseries in clover after finding four-leaf gene
• Cosmic bubble made cold spot in big bang afterglow
• When Egyptian plunder made Enlightenment propaganda
• Gulf oil spill: Are dispersants not so bad after all?
• Ultimate eclipse photo: Easter Island, here I come
• Evolvability: How to cash in on the genetic lottery
• Fossilised cell blobs could be oldest multicellular life
• Artificial life: let the people decide
• Nicotine and pigs' trotters: the latest CSI toolkit
• US mulls clampdown on farmyard antibiotics
• Ancient monster whale more fearsome than Moby Dick
• Today on New Scientist: 30 June 2010
• Superhuman performance could betray sport drug cheats
• Instant Expert: General relativity
• Ghostly, flowing supersolid? No, it's quantum plastic
• Early stages of crater birth captured on camera
• US obesity keeps on rising
• Zoo plans to bring rare animals back from the dead
• US Patent Office: now open for business methods?
• Andrew Carnie: An artist wired for science
• Zoologger: The toughest fish on Earth… and in space
• Climate control: Is CO2 really in charge?
• How the UK parliament undermines science
• Link found between infectious disease and IQ
• Share information to boost cellphone performance
• Bumpology: Fed up of the booze and cigs police
• Today on New Scientist: 29 June 2010
• 'Climategate' jibes fly over El Niño impact on warming
• How an angler's dream became an ecological nightmare
• The first ever iPad music performance
• Europe's science-free plan for gene-modified crops
• Google: How do we solve a problem like China?
• Obama declares war on space junk
• Gamers gone good
• Closet delay means shuttles set to fly on into 2011
• Ovulation gives women's brains a boost
• Desperate measures: The lure of an autism cure
• Self-folding sheet offers lazy way to origami
• Islamic science: The revival begins here
• Asteroid hunters part-blinded by the military
• On the trail of Tutankhamen's penis
• Drone alone: how airliners may lose their pilots
• Today on New Scientist: 28 June 2010
• Gulf oil spill poses unique health challenges
• Green machine: Tackling the plastic menace
• Bid to introduce commercial whaling quotas fails
• Gorilla psychologists: Weird stuff in plain sight
• Six intuitions you shouldn't trust
• Robb Fraley: Monsanto is a champion of healthy eating
• Flores 'hobbits' weren't malformed humans
• Schrödinger's kit: Tools that are in two places at once
• For US healthcare, the only way is up
• Stellar debris created the Honeycomb nebula
• Ice shelf was kept intact by underwater ridge
• Capacitors roll up for power on the nanoscale
• The ups and downs of speech that we all understand
• Tutankhamen 'killed by sickle-cell disease'
• Pterosaurs and bod-pods: Scientists let loose
• Prophetic visions of a world of living technology
• Innovation: Smarter books aim to win back the kids
• Why losing a loved one can be lethal
• Today on New Scientist: 25 June 2010
• Fear must be conquered, not banished
• Dinosaur bones made a handy food supplement
• This week's top stories [25 June 2010]
• Lizard-like robot can 'swim' through sand
• Is Facebook taking over the world?
• Frozen antiprotons bring antimatter within reach
• The sculpture that eats time
• 24-week fetuses cannot feel pain
• Climate change is leaving us with extra space junk
• Genome at 10: The hunt for the 'dark matter'
• Lung-on-a-chip points to alternative to animal tests
• Today on New Scientist: 24 June 2010
• Element 114 on the brink of recognition
• Chronic fatigue syndrome: suspicion is back on virus
• Hot electrons could double solar cell efficiency
• Vital fruit and berry collection set for destruction
• The use and abuse of universities
• Genome at 10: Information overload
• The end of the human race is nigh, maybe
• Quiz: A question of science
• You needn't be a queen bee to give birth to one
• Artistic agenda: The state of eco-art
• Skipping along with the heavyweights of time
• Oil containment cap removed after robot collision
• Genome at 10: Meet your ancestors
• Blinded eyes restored to sight by stem cells
• Mystery glitch? Blame it on the sun
• Wanna build a quantum computer? Try silicon wafers
• Brain origins of 'blindsight' revealed
• Today on New Scientist: 23 June 2010
• Faulty internal clock linked to diabetes
• Smartphone add-on will bring eye tests to the masses
• Google faces global music over data sniffing
• Zoologger: Vultures use twigs to gather wool for nests
• Floating nurseries hit by Deepwater Horizon spill
• Jesse Ausubel: Let there be (no) light
• Electron 'invisible ink' promises purer nanocrystals
• Genome at 10: Faster, cheaper... worse
• Desktop cosmos: Small is beautiful for big physics
• What will happen to the green and pleasant land?
• Genome at 10: A dizzying journey into complexity
• Chicks count from left to right - just like us
• Sterile neutrino back from the dead
• Today on New Scientist: 22 June 2010
• Hollow victory for Monsanto in alfalfa court case
• Lose whaling loopholes, consider quotas
• Bumpology: Why can't my baby sleep when I do?
• Pelican fossil poses evolutionary puzzle
• UK science: Cuts of up to 25 per cent
• Genome at 10: Medicine's slow revolution
• Two ways of retelling Botswana's fight against AIDS
• The fruit fly formerly known as Drosophila
• Weakened flu virus proves ideal vaccine
• Stem cell society to 'smoke out the charlatans'
• Touchscreen made from biggest graphene sheet
• Genome at 10: The project few wanted
• Drastic measures save plastic treasures
• Hawking speaks on God, the big bang and novel physics
• Innovation: Microsoft's Kinect isn't just for games
• Today on New Scientist: 21 June 2010
• Chimpanzees kill to win new territory
• New Scientist TV - Best of the web
• Green machine: Bacteria will keep CO2 safely buried
• Blogs and tweets could predict the future
• Liar, liar: Why deception is our way of life
• New Scientist TV - Best of the web round-up
• Bonobos have a secret
• Unknown genome: What we still don't know about our DNA
• Protozoan swimming style identifies water toxins
• British public 'relaxed' about synthetic life
• Genetic on-off switch key to evolution of complex life
• How the brain deals you a poor hand
• Clouds add depth to computer landscapes
• Free-falling atoms will put relativity to the test
• Why spiderweb glue never lets go
• Today on New Scientist: 18 June 2010
• Take the political heat out of climate scepticism
• Thundercloud gamma rays hint at origins of lightning
• Second well on the way to cap Deepwater Horizon
• This week's top stories [18 June 2010]
• Young stars found at record-breaking distances
• Rats have an innate concept of space - do humans?
• How does a fish change its stripe? With Italian design
• Corals living on edge could escape climate change
• Death revives warnings about rogue stem cell clinics
• China plans to put out its coalfield fires
• Important stem cell lines could be denied funding
• Cheap camera used to measure oxygen levels
• Stings, wings and hairy eyes: honeybee close-ups
• Death revives warnings about rogue stem-cell clinics
• Today on New Scientist: 17 June 2010
• Scientists on soapboxes: Taking it to the people
• If there's life on Mars, it could be right-handed
• 18th-century painters give photography new perspective
• Congress to NASA: build powerful moon rocket ASAP
• Clean-up of oil spill may cause long-term damage
• How to turn politicians on to science
• Oddball animal behaviour to amuse and disgust
• Top scientists show us their wish lists
• Vuvuzelas don't spread swine flu shock
• Wonderfuel: Welcome to the age of unconventional gas
• How dangerous is my cellphone? Check the label
• Doubts over safety tests on Gulf oil dispersants
• Today on New Scientist: 16 June 2010
• First replicating creature spawned in life simulator
• David King: No cause for climate despair
• Brian Greene: Putting emotion back into science
• Anti-neutrino's odd behaviour points to new physics
• Space shuttle's rudder could cut aircraft noise
• In search of the gamer's fix
• UK budget: Ring-fence science to save the economy
• Family values: Why wolves belong together
• Male voices reveal owner's strength
• Zoologger: The biggest living thing with teeth
• Is it time to say goodbye cool world?
• Today on New Scientist: 15 June 2010
• Bumpology: Choosing the sex of your child
• Pulses of darkness let digital data travel farther
• Green machine: Recycled batteries boost electric cars
• 'Godless communists' embrace creationism
• What makes good doctors go bad?
• Phone sensor predicts when thoroughbreds will go lame
• Thank the Soviets for Afghan mineral bounty
• David de Rothschild: At sea in a soda-bottle boat
• FDA clamps down on personal genomics
• Unpeeling the truth about human skin
• Sea snail venom provides potent pain relief
• Aspirin and dental floss: Homespun high-energy physics
• Want to find your mind? Learn to direct your dreams
• Intensive farming 'massively slowed' global warming
• Computerised critics could find the music you'll like
• Today on New Scientist: 14 June 2010
• What makes the sound of vuvuzelas so annoying?
• US animal researchers face criminal charges
• Refashioned rat livers could boost transplants
• Innovation: 19th-century tech makes a smarter iPhone
• Hayabusa: The falcon has landed - what's it caught?
• Extreme tactics in the battle to resume whaling
• Birds as you've never seen them before
• What's wrong with the sun?
• Carbon nanotubes create underwater sonar speakers
• I'm smiling, so I know you're happy
• Stress detector can hear it in your voice
• Today's cures may be tomorrow's quacks
• Did wobbly cosmic strings create huge explosions?
• Today on New Scientist: 11 June 2010
• Has Jupiter sent cosmology down a false trail?
• How endangered are the Gulf's brown pelicans?
• Has Jupiter sent cosmology down a false trail?
• The fantasy fish of Samuel Fallours
• Hayabusa asteroid probe faces moment of truth
• Radiation-soaking metamaterial puts black in the shade
• BP: The cap fits, but 20,000 barrels escape every day
• This week's top stories [11 June 2010]
• Behind the mummy: the real King Tutankhamun
• UK science: first cut in a strategic area
• Obesity through the ages
• Protected forests burn more
• World's first plastic antibody works in mice
• Did a 'sleeper' field awake to expand the universe?
• US pollsters argue over public view on climate change
• Himalayan ice is stable, but Asia faces drought
• Flexible nanocircuits can be drawn with heat
• Today on New Scientist: 10 June 2010
• Matt Ridley: Optimism without limits
• Bulldog bats 'honk' when they meet a stranger
• Life on Titan? Maybe - but only a lander will tell us
• Myriad genes reveal autism's diversity
• Don't waste lab animals
• When showmanship gets in the way of selling science
• Samuel Fallours and his fantasy fish
• Bursting bubbles beget tiny copies of themselves
• Paper trail: Inside the stem cell wars
• Today on New Scientist: 9 June 2010
• BP ordered changes on day of Gulf oil disaster
• Sci-fi universes featuring both magic and science
• Unconscious purchasing urges revealed by brain scans
• Gulf leak: biggest spill may not be biggest disaster
• Deter quantum hackers by hiding the photon keys
• Hone your eco instinct
• Thumbs up for gesture-based computing
• Deeper impact: Did mega-meteors rattle our planet?
• Zoologger: Globetrotters of the animal kingdom
• Heston Blumenthal: Food's future is jellyfish and chips
• NASA offers to take your face into space
• Today on New Scientist: 8 June 2010
• Lloyd's: ditch oil, invest in renewable energy
• Say red to see it
• Farmed to death: The cost of civilisation
• Green machine: It's your eco-friendly funeral
• Global biodiversity estimate revised down
• Snake populations plummet
• Gulf oil leak causing upheaval in marine ecology
• Game over for stem-cell clinic
• Innovation: Invisibility cloaks and how to use them
• Long haul: How butterflies and moths go the distance
• Bernard Beckett: Converting from atheism
• Bumpology: Pregnant at the cheese and wine party
• US doctors accused of performing torture experiments
• Children of lesbian parents do better than their peers
• Genome scan customers sent the wrong results
• Science in parliament: Where's the opposition?
• Later menopause for women with polycystic ovaries
• Biblical bee-keepers picked the best bees
• Today on New Scientist: 7 June 2010
• BP buys 'oil spill' sponsored links for search engines
• Gut bacteria may contribute to autism
• Farmed to death
• Cory Doctorow: My computer says no
• Swine flu experts and big pharma: no conspiracy
• Immortal avatars: Back up your brain, never die
• Laser detectors could nail TNT
• Trying to quit smoking? The devil is in the drink
• Ancient oceans belched stagnant CO2 into the skies
• Space taxi reaches orbit in first flight test
• Deepwater Horizon oil spill - third cap lucky?
• Today on New Scientist: 4 June 2010
• This week's top stories [04 June 2010]
• All you need to know about the hurricane season
• Distant gas blob threatens to shake nature's constants
• Stem cells turn into seek-and-destroy cancer missiles
• How religion made Jews genetically distinct
• Forget noisy blimps… say hello to the Airfish
• Tortoises on the slow road to oblivion
• Feeling the pressure: The World Cup's altitude factor
• Hints of life found on Saturn moon
• Fractal haze may have warmed the early Earth
• What does the hottest matter ever made sound like?
• Hubble identifies Jupiter's attacker
• Mystery seafaring ancestor found in the Philippines
• Today on New Scientist: 3 June 2010
• Budget airline to test in-flight ash detection system
• Cancer guardian found playing a role in sex
• We need to fix peer review now
• First moment of blood flow seen in embryo video
• Giant glowing bubbles found around Milky Way
• New Scientist TV - June 2010
• A sea change in Earth's prehistory
• Memo reveals Copenhagen climate talks blame game
• Eat less, live longer?
• Early humans had taste for aquatic diet
• Shape-shifting islands defy sea-level rise
• Binge drinking rots teen brains
• Would the real Indiana Jones please stand up?
• Bumpology: Is my baby making me forgetful?
• Today on New Scientist: 2 June 2010
• Out of the shadows: our unknown immune system
• Entangled photons available on tap
• Bumpology: Is my fetus making me forgetful?
• Maya man: No future for archaeology without ethics
• Green machine: Cars could run on sunlight and CO2
• Woods of wisdom: Words around trees, beautifully woven
• How climate scientists can repair their reputation
• Mouse vaccine raises prospect of cancer prevention
• Dengue fever strikes US
• Rise of the replicators
• DNA logic gates herald injectable computers
• Impossible figures brought to life in virtual worlds
• Forensic astronomer solves Walt Whitman mystery
• Zoologger: Judge Dredd worm traps prey with riot foam
• Today on New Scientist: 1 June 2010
• BP's three-pronged attack on Deepwater Horizon leak
• How acupuncture eases pain - maybe
• First 'chameleon particle' spotted after changing type
• From biology to the Bible, from kindness to madness
• Asteroid strike may have frozen Antarctica
• Matter: The next generation
• Innovation: Methane capture gives more bang for the buck
• Language lessons: You are what you speak
• Genius of Britain doesn't stretch to TV scheduling
• 'Precision missile' to block bitter tastes
• Drug could get into the autistic mind
• Innovation: Bringing biogas to book
• Tacit knowledge: you don't know how much you know
• Stellar explosion sends shrapnel our way
• How phones ring a bell in your head
• Webcam knows how to snub shoulder surfers
• Did early hunters cause climate change?
• Peaceful monkeys chill out before the feeding frenzy
• First student-built interplanetary mission goes silent
• Airborne telescope makes its first observations
• Today on New Scientist: 28 May 2010
• Teenagers who died didn't take Miaow Miaow
• How short can a planet's year be?
• Facebook must heed the human element
• Libel reform is on track in UK
• Learn all of science in less than half an hour
• Fear and loathing on the Gulf coast
• What's that smell? Oh it's the blue light
• This week's top stories [28 May 2010]
• Snails on speed shed light on human memory
• Drug defeats deadly Ebola virus infection
• How the camera has made us all voyeurs
• First global effort to fight alcohol abuse takes off
• DNA replication... without life
• Inhale lung chemo to limit organ damage
• Aircraft smashes record for longest 'scramjet' flight
• Undersea cauldrons replicated life's ingredients
• Today on New Scientist: 27 May 2010
• Life's precursors cooked up in undersea cauldrons
• Sailing ships could harvest fuel from the oceans
• Rebuilt immune system shakes off OCD
• Arizona man is first to take artificial heart home
• Bacteria help to clean up Deepwater Horizon spill
• BP stops oil flow into Gulf of Mexico
• Exchange meat for sex? No thank you
• Ash in aircraft engines: How much is too much?
• Cosmic hit-and-runs create failed stars
• Autism-MMR doctor is not giving up
• Mathematical mystery tour
• Eat bacteria to boost brain power
• The taste of tiny: Putting nanofoods on the menu
• Icelandic volcano's ash blanket was electric
• How science is shaping up in the new Parliament
• Today on New Scientist: 26 May 2010
• Special report: Where next for synthetic life?
• Watch the Gulf of Mexico oil spill in real time
• Biofuels learn to eat less
• Mysterious fossil is first ancestor of the squid
• Shadows open window into the autistic mind
• 'Light from sound' could spot cancers and terrorists
• Shape-shifting 'tube robot' could aid heart surgery
• The many-worlds physicist couldn't cope with this one
• Giant airship to carry science back to 1930s
• Swine flu hoax? Get real
• Muon whose army? A tiny particle's big moment
• Zoologger: Flashmobbing locusts have redesigned brains
• Mathemagical visions: a Gathering for Gardner album
• Today on New Scientist: 25 May 2010
• Did faulty cement prime Deepwater Horizon for blowout?
• Bumpology: What does an amniotic cocktail taste like?
• Phoenix's wings have been fatally clipped
• Is there any way to defend against a ballistic missile?
• Dementia: Sing me the news, and I'll remember it
• Innovation: Slipping into the wireless white space
• Just what we need: sarcasm software
• Sing me the news, and I'll remember it
• Saving the world, one hit point at a time
• Crystal balls reveal how the brain recalls the past
• Green machine: Hitting the lights in wasteful offices
• Darwinian spacecraft engine to last twice as long
• Today on New Scientist: 24 May 2010
• UK budget: Science wobbles, university places topple
• Banned: doctor who linked MMR vaccine with autism
• The wisdom of herds: How social mood moves the world
• Sound-blasting chips for on-the-spot forensics
• The history of ice on Earth
• Is Icelandic volcano winding down at last?
• Breakthrough in quest to boost rice yields
• Martin Gardner: Exposing fads and fallacies
• Magic numbers: A meeting of mathemagical tricksters
• Tracing the fuzzy boundaries of science
• Living in denial: Questioning science isn't blasphemy
• 'Human Lego' may one day build artificial organs
• Deep images reveal the shady past of cannibal galaxies
• Living in denial: The truth is our only weapon
• Diamonds travel at freeway speeds inside Earth
• Meltdown: Why ice ages don't last forever
• Remove HIV's invisibility cloak to defeat it
• Handbrakes and nine lives: keeping Falcon 9 crew safe
• Art from ice: Who will understand it?
• This week's top stories [21 May 2010]
• Lotus leaves give up the secret of frost freedom
• Computer solves 400-piece jigsaw to claim world record
• Could domestication save the bluefin from extinction?
• Replica butterfly flies just like the real thing
• Do you care what happens to a baby's blood sample?
• If Earth had two moons: Reimagining the solar system
• Living in denial: Unleashing a lie
• Levitating glass bead proves Einstein wrong
• I, microbe: Sequencing the bugs in our bodies
• New supernova class may undermine dark matter search
• Immaculate creation: birth of the first synthetic cell
• Today on New Scientist: 20 May 2010
• Heartbeats tapped for power generator implant
• UK government plans: science hardly gets a mention
• Illusions contest: After-image twist
• Living in denial: How corporations manufacture doubt
• Wanted: hard facts on how volcanic ash affects jets
• Hunting for scraps from galactic cannibal feasts
• Deadly bubble jet sank South Korea's warship
• Illusions contest: Non-glossy gloss
• LHCsound: Listening to the God particle
• Omega-3: Fishy claims for fish oil
• Big bang, part 2: the second inflation
• Today on New Scientist: 19 May 2010
• Mining garbage for tomorrow's metals
• Friendly bacteria could evict MRSA in nasal turf wars
• Malaria in retreat despite warmer climate
• CSI 100 million years BC: oldest mammalian hair found
• FDA eyes up personal genome scans
• Illusions contest: Stretching out in the tub
• Student DNA scans prove controversial
• The ant way to success
• Smallpox finding prompts HIV 'whodunnit'
• Zoologger: Smart camo lets glow-in-the-dark shark hide
• Illusions contest: The fat face thin illusion
• Living in denial: Why sensible people reject the truth
• Quantum snooper could make positive ID from one photon
• Sleeping newborns are data sponges
• A physicist finds God in cosmic harmonies
• Hurricanes cleaned up lead-laden New Orleans
• Did exploding stars shatter life's mirror?
• Why did the octopus grow a shell?
• Genetic light switches show that fMRI = brain activity
• Proof at last for Boltzmann's 140-year-old gas equation
• Proof at last for Bolztmann's 140-year-old gas equation
• Today on New Scientist: 18 May 2010
• Iran's nuclear fuel swap may not prevent sanctions
• Illusions contest: The steerable spiral
• Drawing autism: Art from the spectrum
• 'Tough times' ahead, warns new UK science minister
• New deep-sea cables needed to protect global economy
• Why deep-water oil spills do their damage deep down
• History of social network use reveals your identity
• How we get others to do what we want
• Bumpology: My fetus is smarter than an earthworm
• Illusions contest: Six ways to see two curves
• Living in denial: When a sceptic isn't a sceptic
• Don't hang up: cellphones don't cause tumours (probably)
• Awaken 'sleeping' eggs to boost fertility
• Shuttle Atlantis draws near to its final days
• Today on New Scientist: 17 May 2010
• Don't hang up – cellphones don't cause brain tumours (probably)
• Pinocchio frog and dwarf wallaby: New species found
• Google to quit sniffing Wi-Fi data
• Mysterious ball lightning may be a hallucination
• Hang on, don't hang up: still no reason to fear cellphones
• What the climate bill means for the US way of life
• Quantum space monster leaps from a gravity well
• Oil spills: what to do when all else fails
• Bat fellatio causes a scandal in academia
• Flab rats: Unfit animals are bad for experiments
• Innovation: Teaching robots some manners
• Where we're at with geoengineering
• Illusions contest: Illusion-defying contours
• We need to protect blue-sky research
• Special report: Living in denial
• Rocket-assisted pills pack a punch to the gut
• Infrared cameras could stop road tunnel fires
• Guess how much oil is spilling into the Gulf of Mexico
• High five! Physicists create record 'fat' photon
• Today on New Scientist: 14 May 2010
• Pests bite back at genetically modified cotton
• Fat lips evolve at record speed
• Bonding hormone helps men recognise emotions
• Don't believe your eyes: This year's best illusions
• The real world of Second Life
• This week's top stories [14 May 2010]
• Will UK civil service scupper civil liberties reform?
• Artificial skin graft promises to make you sweat
• Birds do it, bees do it – can the UK's leaders do it?
• The real Avatar: body transfer turns men into girls
• Wanted: lunarphile crater counters
• Why can't movie superheroes save the world?
• Venus orbiter to fly close to super-rotating wind
• Modern cars vulnerable to malicious hacks
• Monkeys' art of war has lessons for human conflict
• First interview: David Willetts, new UK science minister
• Today on New Scientist: 13 May 2010
• Lost lizards validate grim extinction predictions
• Briefing: Computer traders blamed for Wall Street crash
• Virtual skirt and legs turn men into girls
• Art meets science: Catch up with the state of the art
• Zap testes with ultrasound for temporary 'vasectomy'
• Welcome to the family, Homo sapiens neanderthalensis
• Weed resistance could mean herbicide is futile
• Ultrasound 'snip' among offbeat Gates funding winners
• New UK science minister: 'two brains' Willetts
• Art meets science: Speaking a lingua digica
• UK election: Did candidates with the right face win?
• Neil Armstrong criticises new space plan in Congress
• Neil Armstrong says new space plan would keep US grounded
• Massive black hole thrown from galaxy
• Pyramids are the best shape for packing
• Maiden voyage for first true space sail
• Cancer's sweet tooth becomes a target
• Mirror neurons seen behaving normally in autism
• Today on New Scientist: 12 May 2010
• Bertrand Piccard: Flying around the world on sunlight
• Art meets science: Physicist in a cultural landscape
• Zoologger: Attack of the self-sacrificing child clones
• Baby vaccine contaminated with pig virus
• Nanotube transistor will help us bond with machines
• Neanderthals not the only apes humans bred with
• Bumpology: Ultrasound reveals breastfeeding mechanics
• Dead brides in bathtubs and fallible forensics
• Art meets science: Aesthetics, politics and metaphysics
• Time for scientists to go into politics
• Jupiter loses a stripe
• Today on New Scientist: 11 May 2010
• Plenty of wave energy to be harvested close to shore
• Witness brain scan won't reveal whether the face fits
• Art meets science: A curator who wants to open windows
• 'Impossible motion' trick wins Illusion Contest
• Green machine: Cementing greener construction
• Earth, 2300: Too hot for humans
• Crumbling labs could clip NASA's wings
• Dictionary definition of 'siphon' wrong for 99 years
• Trig shots: The secret of perfect pool
• Stray grey whale navigates the North-West Passage
• Sun sets on 2010 biodiversity targets
• Art meets science: Reuniting the severed cultures
• The deep roots of genetic disorders uncovered
• Soft tissue remnants discovered in Archaeopteryx fossil
• Today on New Scientist: 10 May 2010
• Newton's tree joins list of odd items to fly to space
• Oil industry failed to heed blowout warnings
• Engrossingly gross: A paean to parasites
• Is Halley's comet an alien interloper?
• Art meets science: When worlds collaborate
• The imperfect universe: Goodbye, theory of everything
• War on drugs goes literal: biowarfare on poppies
• Innovation: Why labs love gaming hardware
• Web science: Exploring the network without guesswork
• Harmonious minds: The hunt for universal music
• Eye-squint-cheek-bulge means 'ouch'
• Dents in Earth's gravitational field due to plumes
• Bahamas islands were giant labs for lizard experiment
• Quantum wonders: Nobody understands
• Become a wage slave to software
• Turbocharge stem cells to repair bone
• Face-saving software rescues bad snaps
• Quantum wonders: Superfluids and supersolids
• Quantum wonders: The field that isn't there
• Cell social network reveals rogue cancer switches
• Even silent videos excite the listening brain
• Artificial muscle material springs forth
• Quantum wonders: Spooky action at a distance
• Cosmic rays help make small galaxies invisible
• Today on New Scientist: 7 May 2010
• Worst cancer risk: Environmental toxins or bad habits?
• Quantum wonders: The Elitzur-Vaidman bomb-tester
• UK election: The Science Party's democracy experiment
• Cuddly robots aim to make social networks child-safe
• Baffling quasar alignment hints at cosmic strings
• This week's top stories [07 May 2010]
• Hand-washing wipes emotional baggage from decisions
• Survey finds $20 billion of hidden Aussie gold
• Economic recovery needs psychological recovery
• UK election: Science is the loser
• Bugs will give us free power while cleaning our sewage
• Quantum wonders: Something for nothing
• Big stars and dark horses: Herschel's first observations
• Gene switch rejuvenates failing mouse brains
• First cancer vaccine approved for use in people
• Today on New Scientist: 6 May 2010
• Cosmic 'dandruff' may have brought carbon to Earth
• Quantum wonders: The Hamlet effect
• Evolution gave flawed eye better vision
• Neanderthal genome reveals interbreeding with humans
• Shark's nasal plumbing gives it a nose for blood
• Scramjet with stamina ready for hypersonic test
• UK election: Science was on the agenda this time
• Did we evolve a special ability for catching cheats?
• Optical fibre cells transform our weird retinas
• Trauma leaves its mark on immune system genes
• Quantum wonders: Corpuscles and buckyballs
• Light shows, ray guns and blades: the laser is 50
• Is water the key to cheaper nanoelectronics?
• Today on New Scientist: 5 May 2010
• Designing leaves for a warmer, crowded world
• UK election: Lib Dems' plans for the STFC
• Seven wonders of the quantum world
• Rumbles hint that Mount Fuji is getting angry
• Earth's twisted heart changes the length of the day
• Republicans won't be nudged into cutting home energy
• We're all bursting with predictability
• Overfishing began with the Victorians
• New Scientist TV - May 2010
• UK election: Courting the science vote
• Cellular 'battery' is new source of stroke defence
• Zoologger: The most kick-ass fish in the sea
• UN peacekeepers stage great ape escape in Congo
• UK election: what the parties say about engineering
• Today on New Scientist: 4 May 2010
• Green machine: Generating more light than heat
• Elusive tetraquark spotted in a data forest
• Bumpology: Boxing clever with the kung-fu fetus
• In search of the sound of silence
• Deepwater Horizon: scrutiny falls on blowout preventer
• Fetuses armed to fight viruses long before birth
• The advantages of autism
• Ernst Fehr: How I found what's wrong with economics
• Army of smartphone chips could emulate the human brain
• What would it take to put a walking robot on the moon?
• Dark matter claims thrown into doubt by new data
• Darwin dynasty's ill health blamed on inbreeding
• Engineering safer repairs for brain blood vessels
• To be the best, learn from the rest
• Resurrected: woolly mammoth blood protein
• Laser creates clouds over Germany
• What type of killer whale was Willy?
• Killing cancer may be a game of whack-a-mole
• Out-of-control balloon grounds further NASA flights
• It's raining males, if you're a buffalo
• Record-breaking current found deep in Southern Ocean
• Today on New Scientist: 30 April 2010
• The worst environmental disaster in American history?
• 'Mirror gene' clue to brain's right-to-left links
• Top 10 greatest science fiction detective novels
• Oil slick fight continues with robots and fire
• This week's top stories [30 April 2010]
• UK election: Verdict on the final debate
• UK election: Who cares about science?
• Innovation: The Wi-Fi database that shamed Google
• Southpaws: The evolution of handedness
• The artistic choices lurking within Hubble images
• Jerry Zucker: Taking scientists to the movies
• First genetic discrimination claim since US ban
• Jerry Zucker: Taking scientists to the movies
• Melting icebergs boost sea-level rise
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