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An illustrated tour of Egyptian tombs recounts the history and culture of ancient burial rites. Thames & Hudson, 2008, 368 p., $50.Published: Friday, July 4th, 2008 -
July 19 Randy Olson’s new mock-umentary Sizzle: A Global Warming Comedy premieres in Hollywood. Visit www.sizzlethemovie.com August 6–14 The 33rd International Geological Congress will be held in Oslo. Visit www.33igc.org October 31 The Aztec World opens at The Field Museum in Chicago. Visit www.fieldmuseum.org/exhibits/temporary_exhib2.htmlPublished: Friday, July 4th, 2008
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RUSSIANS TEST ACCELERATOR — Russian scientists reported the first results of experiments with their atom-smasher, the world’s largest, to the 1958 Annual International Conference on High Energy Physics in Geneva, Switzerland. Their studies showed the hard core of a proton, a fundamental particle of the atomic nucleus and a building block for all matter, shrinks at high energies. Using their atomic accelerator at close to its full power of ten billion electron volts, they bombarded a target of protons with a beam of protons…. None of the Russians in the 19-man delegation would comme...Published: Friday, July 4th, 2008
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For the record We read with interest your article on superatoms (“Small, but super,” SN: 6/21/08, p. 14) and would like to add a note on the experimental discovery. In the mid-1970s the late Walter Knight decided to investigate small metallic particles with a molecular beam apparatus. When Walt de Heer joined the group in 1979, Knight gave him the freedom to redesign the apparatus. De Heer built a new cluster source and a quadrupole mass analyzer with a range from 1–10,000 amu; clusters were ionized using a broadband UV arc lamp — all features that later proved to be essential f...Published: Friday, July 4th, 2008
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As a child, Seymour Papert fell in love with gears. Papert, now considered a pioneer in artificial intelligence, describes this love in very grown-up, scientific terms: “I remember quite vividly my excitement at discovering that a system could be lawful and completely comprehensible without being rigidly deterministic.” So Papert and other scientists recount in this collection of essays that, in their personal approach, provide an innovative way to talk about science. A sociologist and psychologist by training, Turkle is a scholar in MIT’s Program in Science, Technology and Society. F...Published: Friday, June 20th, 2008 -
People cry when they watch sad movies or wince when they see athletes fall. This sense of shared experience is thought to be at the core of human society. How empathy physically happens, however, wasn’t known until neuroscientists in Italy stumbled upon a possible explanation 15 years ago. Iacoboni, one of those pioneers at the University of Parma, describes how he and his colleagues initially sought to find which neurons fired when a monkey moved its hands. They attached tiny electrodes to individual cells in the monkeys’ brains, and the monitor buzzed when the monkeys snatched a peanut...Published: Friday, June 20th, 2008 -
Miller, a Brown University biology professor and outspoken opponent of intelligent design, examines the arguments, passion and motivations of those who reject Darwin’s theory in the larger context of American culture, ending with an exploration of how the ongoing debate over evolution is threatening public understanding of scientific thought. Viking, 2008, 244 p., $25.95Published: Friday, June 20th, 2008 -
A baby bonobo named Lucy tells children just how similar she is to them. Blue Bark Press, 2008, 33 p., $19.95 The book can also be ordered at www.bonobokids.orgPublished: Friday, June 20th, 2008 -
Take a journey to the far corners of the Earth to learn about the emergence of amphibians and reptiles from the primeval water millions of years ago as well as their current plight as some of the species most at risk for extinction. Princeton Univ. Press, 2008, 288 p., $29.95Published: Friday, June 20th, 2008 -
A scientist and ethicist team up to reveal how decades of animal rights extremism has impacted scientific advancement and examines cases in which activists used terrorist tactics to threaten medical researchers’ lives and work. Palgrave Macmillan, 2008, 174 p., $34.95Published: Friday, June 20th, 2008 -
Home / SN Bookshelf / BOOK LIST | A Field Guide to Poison Ivy, Poison Oak, and Poison Sumac: Prevention and RemediesCritical to keeping any naturalist, gardener or wanderer of woods rash- and itch-free, this updated pocket-sized guide helps readers identify, avoid and, when all else fails, wade through the many myths, lore and home remedies that have grown up about these noxious plants. FalconGuides/Globe Pequot Press, 2008, 84 p., $14.95Published: Friday, June 20th, 2008 -
DEVICE PAGES DOCTORS — A pocket radio that whistles to let you know somebody is trying to reach you by telephone is part of a page-you-anywhere telephone system undergoing tests in the Allentown-Bethlehem, Pa., area. Doctors, lawyers and other persons who must maintain immediate and economical contact with their offices can be signaled anywhere in the two-city area, C. R. Kraus, Bell Telephone Company of Pennsylvania, told scientists at the American Institute of Electrical Engineers meeting in Buffalo, N. Y. The system … was described as an improvement over similar services now in use or p...Published: Friday, June 20th, 2008
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Get the real life In the article “Scientists get a second life” (SN: 5/24/08, p. 20), I take exception to Joanna Scott’s statement that “Second Life is real life.” In fairness, one could debate what she means by “life,” but the statement is just too strong to ignore. As technical director at a major theater, I spend part of each day making certain that the crews, performers and audiences are safe from the real-life, negative consequences of physics. To do this I use the senses of sight, hearing, touch and smell. (Taste isn’t often involved. Who wants to lick a hundred years o...Published: Friday, June 20th, 2008
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July 9–10 New Energy Symposium in New York. Visit www.neny.org/nes/2008/home July 22–25 Smithsonian’s Franzini Family Science Circus explores gravity, inertia and balance with hula hoops and balls. Visit discoverytheater.org August 16–20 Human Proteome Organisation’s Seventh Annual World Congress to be held in Amsterdam. Visit hupo2008.nlPublished: Friday, June 20th, 2008
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New Shock Treatment — Neither electric stimulation nor convulsion may be necessary components in the electroshock treatment of certain types of mental illness…. A group of 97 mental patients … were assigned at random to one of five treatment groups: 1. conventional electroshock therapy (EST); 2. a combination of EST and the drug, anectine; 3. EST and truth serum (pentothal); 4. pentothal alone, and 5. laughing gas (nitrous oxide) alone…. All types of treatment led to marked improvement in the patient as measured by psychiatric evaluations and psychological tests. There were no statisti...Published: Friday, June 6th, 2008
