Humans

  1. 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.

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  2. Anthropology

    Cultivating Revolutions

    New studies suggest that farmers spread from the Middle East throughout Europe beginning around 10,000 years ago in a multitude of small migrations that rapidly changed the continent's social and cultural landscape.

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  3. Humans

    From the January 26, 1935, issue

    A giant turbine flywheel, high-altitude plane flights, and high-energy cosmic rays.

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  4. Archaeology

    Chaco’s Past

    Explore the intersection of modern science and ancient cultures at a Web site about New Mexico’s Chaco Canyon, launched by the Exploratorium in San Francisco. The site includes a look at connections between celestial alignments of prehistoric buildings in the canyon and recent solar research. It also contains a teacher’s guide to classroom activities for […]

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  5. 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.

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  6. Health & Medicine

    Good Exposure: Contact with babies might lessen MS risk

    People who grow up with younger siblings close to them in age are less likely to develop multiple sclerosis later in life than are people without such siblings.

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  7. Health & Medicine

    ‘Harmless’ Alga Indicted for Mussel Poisoning

    A common algal species turns out to be a serious food-poisoning agent.

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  8. Health & Medicine

    Urine test signals pregnancy problem

    A simple urine test can warn women that they have an increased risk of preeclampsia, a dangerous complication of pregnancy.

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  9. Humans

    Letters from the January 29, 2005, issue of Science News

    Check it out In “Profiles in Melancholy, Resilience: Abused kids react to genetics, adult support” (SN: 11/20/04, p. 323), you report on a study in which it was found that female monkeys raised in a stressful situation drink alcohol to excess only if they possess just the short serotonin-transporter gene. If a positive correlation were […]

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  10. Health & Medicine

    One in a Million

    A 15-year-old girl in Wisconsin has survived a rabies infection without receiving the rabies vaccine, a first in medical history.

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  11. Humans

    Letters from the January 22, 2005, issue of Science News

    Timely comments The researchers featured in “Summer births linked to schizophrenia” (SN: 11/6/04, p. 301) suggest that a higher incidence of schizophrenia may be due to summer-related infections “or other seasonal factors.” June and July births would have been in early gestation during late fall and winter, when there is increased incidence of depression among […]

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  12. Humans

    From the January 19, 1935, issue

    Unusual twin girls, recording brain waves, and making heavy hydrogen.

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