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  5. Page 34
Home»Posts tagged with»research (Page 34)

Decades-Old Amber Collection offers New Views of an Ancient World

By Diana Yates | University of Illinois News Bureau on Jul 30, 2014   Featured, Science/Education  

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Scientists are searching through a massive collection of 20-million-year-old amber found in the Dominican Republic more than 50 years ago, and the effort is yielding fresh insights into ancient tropical insects and the world they inhabited. When the collection is fully curated, a task that will take many years, it will be […]

NOAA, Scientists Study Acidification in Prince William Sound

By Monica Allen | NOAA on Jul 23, 2014   At Sea, Featured, Science/Education  

  Scientists from NOAA’s Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory, the University of Alaska and the Alaska Ocean Observing System are teaming up this summer and early fall to use new unmanned tools to study how melting glaciers in Alaska’s Prince William Sound may be intensifying ocean acidification in the sound and on the Gulf of Alaska […]

Fat Damages the Lungs of Heavy Drinkers

By Thomas Jefferson University on Jul 1, 2014   Health  

(PHILADELPHIA) – Heavy drinking damages the body in many ways. In addition to liver failure, alcoholics are at a much greater risk of developing pneumonia and life threatening acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), for which there is no treatment. Researchers suspect that alcoholics are more susceptible to these lung diseases because the immune system in […]

Scientists Chart a Baby Boom–in Southwestern Native Americans from 500 to 1300 A.D.

By National Science Foundation on Jul 1, 2014   Featured, Science/Education  

Scientists have sketched out one of the greatest baby booms in North American history, a centuries-long “growth blip” among southwestern Native Americans between 500 and 1300 A.D. It was a time when the early features of civilization–including farming and food storage–had matured to a level where birth rates likely “exceeded the highest in the world […]

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