(no subject)
Oct. 14th, 2016 11:14 amWild chimpanzee mothers teach young to use tools
Penguin Bloom: how a scruffy magpie saved a family
Observable universe contains two trillion galaxies, 10 times more than previously thought
Superheroes Are Real
DNA-based single-electron electronic devices created
Sleep habits of the animal kingdom (Image)
Intestinal diversity protects against asthma
How brothers became buddies and bros
Oldest known squawk box suggests dinosaurs likely did not sing
Did the Greeks Help Sculpt China's Terra Cotta Warriors?
Vaccinating babies without vaccinating babies
Mars: Inside the High-Risk, High-Stakes Race to the Red Planet
Today's most successful fish weren't always evolutionary standouts
The Secret Lives of Mexican Nuns (Photos)
The Myers-Briggs Personality Test Is Pretty Much Meaningless
Tatooine worlds orbiting two suns often survive violent escapades of aging stars
Court seems favorable to defendant claiming jury race bias
New York’s painter of “cheery street urchins”
What's a slum? In India, Dharavi's thriving informal economy defies the label
How One 19-Year-Old Illinois Man Is Distorting National Polling Averages
Love or hate it: Marmite becomes symbol of Brexit impact
The Massacre at Monkey Hill
Millions of containers, thousands of ships, hundreds of scientists, 30 laws, 15 federal agencies, and we still can’t prevent the next foodborne illness outbreak
Most Afghan women serve sentences in elders' homes, not prisons
The long history of the U.S. interfering with elections elsewhere
New York's oversight agency for the disabled has no record of forwarding abuse or neglect reports to the state Medicaid inspector general, a legally required step that's a key part of cracking down on problem facilities.
New York City Will Stop Putting Teenagers in Solitary Confinement
The prison system seems intent on ensuring that a man convicted of stealing $264 in 1981 dies in jail.
Guards Sympathize With Striking Prisoners: “We See It As A Moral Issue”
They survived Boko Haram. Now many of them are on the brink of starvation.
Study: Human-caused warming burns more Western forests
Trees are much better at creating clouds and cooling the climate than we thought
The numbers are clear: In 2015, work started on more new barriers around the world than at any other point in modern history. There are now 63 borders where walls or fences separate neighboring countries.
Penguin Bloom: how a scruffy magpie saved a family
Observable universe contains two trillion galaxies, 10 times more than previously thought
Superheroes Are Real
DNA-based single-electron electronic devices created
Sleep habits of the animal kingdom (Image)
Intestinal diversity protects against asthma
How brothers became buddies and bros
Oldest known squawk box suggests dinosaurs likely did not sing
Did the Greeks Help Sculpt China's Terra Cotta Warriors?
Vaccinating babies without vaccinating babies
Mars: Inside the High-Risk, High-Stakes Race to the Red Planet
Today's most successful fish weren't always evolutionary standouts
The Secret Lives of Mexican Nuns (Photos)
The Myers-Briggs Personality Test Is Pretty Much Meaningless
Tatooine worlds orbiting two suns often survive violent escapades of aging stars
Court seems favorable to defendant claiming jury race bias
New York’s painter of “cheery street urchins”
What's a slum? In India, Dharavi's thriving informal economy defies the label
How One 19-Year-Old Illinois Man Is Distorting National Polling Averages
Love or hate it: Marmite becomes symbol of Brexit impact
The Massacre at Monkey Hill
Millions of containers, thousands of ships, hundreds of scientists, 30 laws, 15 federal agencies, and we still can’t prevent the next foodborne illness outbreak
Most Afghan women serve sentences in elders' homes, not prisons
The long history of the U.S. interfering with elections elsewhere
New York's oversight agency for the disabled has no record of forwarding abuse or neglect reports to the state Medicaid inspector general, a legally required step that's a key part of cracking down on problem facilities.
New York City Will Stop Putting Teenagers in Solitary Confinement
The prison system seems intent on ensuring that a man convicted of stealing $264 in 1981 dies in jail.
Guards Sympathize With Striking Prisoners: “We See It As A Moral Issue”
They survived Boko Haram. Now many of them are on the brink of starvation.
Study: Human-caused warming burns more Western forests
Trees are much better at creating clouds and cooling the climate than we thought
The numbers are clear: In 2015, work started on more new barriers around the world than at any other point in modern history. There are now 63 borders where walls or fences separate neighboring countries.