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February 5th, 2000
issue

  • In an effort to help preserve biodiversity, negotiators from 130 nations crafted rules of conduct for international trade in living, genetically engineered organisms. (p. 84)
  • A map of a now-flooded region charts the path that Asians may have taken to first reach the Americas. (p. 85)
  • Whirling clouds of atoms may swallow light the way black holes do, possibly giving scientists a way to test the general theory of relativity in the lab, not just in outer space. (p. 86)
  • Japanese researchers have confirmed that some patients with type 1 diabetes have a novel form of the disease that's not caused by immune cells attacking the pancreas. (p. 86)
  • Injecting into fish eggs an estrogen-mimicking form of the pesticide DDT transforms genetically male medaka fish into apparent females able to lay eggs that produce young. (p. 87)
  • After decades of work, scientists crack two problems of how bees navigate: reading bee odometers and mapping training flights. (p. 87)
  • Increasing numbers of people with less-than-perfect vision can now wear contact lenses, thanks to innovations in lens design and materials. (p. 88)
  • Astronomers propose that 150 billion corpses of sunlike stars may blanket the visible disk of the galaxy. (p. 91)
  • A brain region linked to face recognition may foster expertise at identifying items in any category a person strives to master. (p. 91)
  • Cell connections in a part of the brain's frontal lobe appear to dwindle in people with schizophrenia. (p. 91)
  • In the past 20 years, researchers studying sound communication in ants have discovered a sort of ant-ernet, zinging with messages about lost relatives, great food, free rides for hitchhikers, caterpillars in search of ant partners, and impending doom. (p. 92)
  • An elliptical stem gives daffodils an unusual liveliness in the wind compared with tulips. (p. 95)
  • Male butterflies live longer in Madeira, where females are available year-round, than in Sweden, where females mature in one burst. (p. 95)
  • A Harvard researcher calculates that roads directly influence the ecology of a fifth of U.S. land area. (p. 95)
  • The X chromosome's gastrin-releasing peptide receptor gene is turned on by nicotine to produce a protein that promotes lung cancer, a combination of factors that could explain why women are more susceptible to the disease than men are. (p. 95)
  • The recently discovered protein angiopoietin-1 appears to protect blood vessels from leaking, a finding with implications for research into diseases that involve swelling, such as arthritis and asthma. (p. 95)
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Undeclared
Comment By Guest Columnists Oct 10th 2008
Julie Rehmeyer
Math Trek By Julie Rehmeyer
The U.S. News & World Report rankings of colleges and universities are largely arbitrary, according to a new mathematical analysis. Oct 3rd 2008
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Natural History of the Point Reyes Peninsula by Jules G. Evens
Univ. of California, 2008, 366 p., $24.95
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