Science Express Notification for 24 August 2015

New Science/AAAS Webinar
Characterizing cell morphology using imaging flow cytometry
Wednesday, September 2, 2015, at 12 noon Eastern, 9 a.m. Pacific, 5 p.m. UK (BST), 6 p.m. Central Europe (CEST)
In this webinar, we will explore how characterizing cell morphology can be applied to understanding and diagnosing diseases, such as blood disorders. One technology, imaging flow cytometry, combines the visual analysis capabilities of microscopy with flow cytometry to provide a powerful tool for such applications.
Register TODAY: webinar.sciencemag.org
Produced by the Science/AAAS Custom Publishing Office and sponsored by EMD Millipore.

Science/AAAS Science

Science Express
 

08/24/15 Volume 349, Issue 6250

New Science Express articles have been made available:


Research Article

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Clues to Saturn’s underground ocean mystery, a new electric storage material & Soviet-era driftwood

 

Latest News and Headlines

21 August 2015

 

 

 

The cancer therapy breakthrough that gives President Carter hope
 

 
 

 

 

Top stories: ‘Superpredator’ humans, ending chimpanzee research, and smashing the superconductivity record
 

 
 

 

 

Podcast: ‘Superpredator’ humans, Neolithic massacres, and more
 

 
 

 

 

New electric storage material could put more zip in your Tesla
 

 
 

 

 

Saturn’s moon has a fluffy heart
 

 
 

 

 

Soviet-era timber litters Arctic shores
 

 
 

 

 

Designer material clears hurdle for turning carbon dioxide into fuel
 

 
 

 

 

Tiny fountain of atoms sparks big insights into dark energy
 

 
 

 

 

Threats impacting forest health
 

 
 

 

 

Feature: Revealing the hidden dangers of dietary supplements
 

 
 

 

 

‘Superpredator’ humans are hunting other animals out of existence
 

 
 

 

 

Special issue: Forest health in a changing world
 

 
 

 

 

Identifying the gene switch that turns fat cells bad
 

 
 

 

 

 

 
 

 

   

 

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Editor’s picks: 10 years after Katrina, refined hurricane forecasting; hummingbird sip secrets; farmer warfare; obesity’s genetic switch; and more

Science News Editor’s Picks

08/23/15

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Katrina’s legacy: Refining hurricane forecasting

By Thomas Sumner

Ten years following Hurricane Katrina’s formation, the storm’s devastating legacy in New Orleans and beyond continues to drive storm forecast improvements. Read More

Science Stats

Carbon cuts could save U.S. farmers billions of dollars

By Thomas Sumner

Reducing carbon emissions could save U.S. agriculture industry billions of dollars annually by curtailing droughts. Read More

News

Hummingbird tongues may work like micropumps

By Susan Milius

Hummingbird tongues work as elastic micropumps instead of simple thin tubes, researchers say in latest round of a scientific debate. Read More

News

Bones revive a 7,000-year-old massacre

By Bruce Bower

Bones suggest Central Europe’s first farmers had an extremely violent streak.  Read More

Say What?

’Vomiting device’ sounds gross but it helps study infections

By Sarah Schwartz

Scientists created a “vomiting device” to study how norovirus spreads through the air.  Read More

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Science News Weekly Alert


Science/AAAS News from Science

Weekly Headlines
 

21 August 2015

This week’s news from Science and ScienceInsider

21 August 2015 | HEALTH
Former U.S. President tries to hold off metastatic cancer with an antibody that unleashes the immune system on malignancies
21 August 2015 | SCIENTIFIC COMMUNITY
This week’s top Science news
21 August 2015 | SCIENTIFIC COMMUNITY
Listen to a roundup of some of our favorite stories from the week
21 August 2015 | CHEMISTRY
Material could be less expensive than other cutting-edge options
21 August 2015 | SPACE
Rubble-filled core could solve the mystery of Enceladus’s underground ocean
21 August 2015 |
21 August 2015 |
21 August 2015 |
21 August 2015 | PLANTS ANIMALS
Driftwood on Iceland and other Arctic islands is younger than once thought
20 August 2015 | CHEMISTRY
New discovery makes key ingredient for renewable hydrocarbons
20 August 2015 | PHYSICS
Hypothesis on what’s stretching the universe takes a hit in tabletop experiment
20 August 2015 | PLANTS ANIMALS
Major threats impacting forest health around the globe
20 August 2015 | HEALTH
Revealing the hidden dangers of dietary supplements
20 August 2015 | PLANTS ANIMALS
People kill other species at up to 14 times the rate of other predators
20 August 2015 | PLANTS ANIMALS
The importance of forest health in maintaining a healthy planet
19 August 2015 | BIOLOGY
Study of obesity gene uncovers control switch for storing or burning energy
19 August 2015 |
19 August 2015 | HEALTH
Scaled-down model shows that virus particles can be aerosolized by barfing
19 August 2015 | HEALTH
Weight loss may reduce the cancer-promoting changes seen in breast tissue
19 August 2015 | ASIA/PACIFIC
Flawed assumptions about Chinese coal led to overestimation of carbon output, new study claims


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Latest from Science News for Students: Organic food starts to prove its worth

Latest from Science News For Students

08/22/2015

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Food & Nutrition, Environment & Pollution

Organic food starts to prove its worth

By Rachel Cernansky,

Organic food often comes with a higher price. But research is showing that food grown this way can be better for the environment — and possibly for us. Read More

Ancient Times, Technology & Engineering

Jamestown: Unearthed graves tell tales of colony leaders

By Bruce Bower,

The newly uncovered 400-year-old remains of four leaders of the Jamestown settlement in Virginia reveal details of the notable’s lives — and deaths. Read More

Body & Health, Science & Society

Vaping can lead to teen smoking, new study finds

By Meghan Rosen, Janet Raloff,

A study in L.A. high school students finds that those who vape are much more likely than those who don’t to eventually take up smoking cigarettes. Read More

Body & Health, Brain & Behavior

Explainer: The nico-teen brain

By Teresa Shipley Feldhausen,

Both e-cigarettes and tobacco products can release large amounts of nicotine during use. Nicotine is the chemical that makes tobacco addictive — and the teen brain is especially vulnerable to it. Read More

Light & Radiation, Astronomy

Fade to black? The universe is in decline

By Ilima Loomis,

One of the largest sky surveys ever made has found that the universe is in decline. And after losing even more energy over the next 100 billion years, it will be dark, empty and boring. Read More

Agriculture, Pollution, Weather & Climate

Carbon ‘sponge’ found beneath desert

By Thomas Sumner,

Watering farmlands in arid parts of the world could have long-term climate benefits, a new study concludes. Read More

Inside Student Science

Eureka! Lab

Scientists Say: Loci »
Some everyday objects change everything »
Scientists Say: Allele »
Read More »
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