Ben Harder

All Stories by Ben Harder

  1. Earth

    Adding mussel to environmental assessments

    Researchers have developed a new technique, using mussel shells, that could aid in autopsies of aquatic ecosystems that perished for unknown reasons.

  2. Health & Medicine

    Ketone diet could help in Parkinson’s

    A strict low-carb diet long used to treat some people with epilepsy has been tailored so that it might fight Parkinson's disease.

  3. Health & Medicine

    Against the Migraine

    Migraines may be among the problems that stem from a common but rarely diagnosed heart defect, and researchers have discovered that repairing the defect cures some of the headaches.

  4. Earth

    Subway air does extra damage

    Airborne particles in subterranean transit stations may be more damaging to human cells than are particles from street-level air.

  5. Earth

    Natural or Synthetic? Test reveals origin of chemicals in blubber

    Natural compounds that are chemically akin to certain industrial chemicals wend their way up marine food chains and accumulate in whale blubber.

  6. Agriculture

    Illegal cigarettes pack toxic punch

    Tobacco used in counterfeit cigarettes is apparently grown using metal-laced fertilizers, making the fake products even more harmful than the real things.

  7. Health & Medicine

    When Ebola Looms: Human outbreaks follow animal infections

    A network of organizations in an African region prone to Ebola epidemics has identified the virus in wild-animal remains prior to two recent human outbreaks, suggesting that animal carcasses may provide timely clues that could prevent the disease from spreading to people.

  8. Health & Medicine

    Dangerous Practices

    Pharmaceutical companies' overaggressive marketing of risky drugs, compounded by conflicts of interest among physicians and government agencies, is hurting public safety, some researchers assert.

  9. Humans

    The Heights of School Science: Select student research rises to the top

    Forty high school students have each earned a slot in the final round of the 2005 Intel Science Talent Search.

  10. Whalebones show damage from diving

    Long-lived sperm whales typically develop bone damage not previously observed in marine mammals but found in some human divers who surface quickly or dive frequently.

  11. Earth

    Air pollution trims fetal growth

    Pregnant women who breathe polluted air deliver babies that are typically slightly smaller than those born to other mothers.

  12. Earth

    Living in a Fog: Secondhand smoke may dull kids’ wits

    Millions of U.S. children may have reading deficits because of exposure to secondhand tobacco smoke.