“Science Scientists propose one-way trips to Mars - Star-Democrat” plus 7 more |
- Science Scientists propose one-way trips to Mars - Star-Democrat
- Science links: 1st asteroid sample returned to Earth; creating an invisibility cloak - Everything Alabama Blog
- Florida universities get $10 million for engineering, health and science - St. Petersburg Times
- Embryonic Stem Cell Culturing Grows From Art To Science - Medical News Today
- How politics will spin science - MSNBC Cosmiclog
- Science phenom for Texan of the Year? - Dallas Morning Views Blog
- Climate worries in Oregon and beyond scary enough without science fiction - Oregonian
- T-Ray Science, Inc. Licenses Lung Cancer Detection Technology from the BC Cancer Agency - msnbc.com
Science Scientists propose one-way trips to Mars - Star-Democrat Posted: 16 Nov 2010 06:17 AM PST PULLMAN, Wash. (AP) It's usually cheaper to fly one way, even to Mars. Two scientists are suggesting that colonization of the red planet could happen faster and more economically if astronauts behaved like the first settlers to come to North America not ... |
Posted: 16 Nov 2010 12:15 PM PST Science news from around the Web: Space.com reports a Japanese spacecraft has successfully returned the first-ever sample of asteroid material to Earth. The Hayabusa probe landed twice on the surface of Itokawa in 2005 and picked up 1,500 grains that ... |
Florida universities get $10 million for engineering, health and science - St. Petersburg Times Posted: 16 Nov 2010 08:40 AM PST Florida's university system awarded $10 million in grants Monday to boost research and innovation, with nearly a quarter of the money going to the University of Florida. The University of South Florida will receive nine grants totaling $1.48 million, the ... |
Embryonic Stem Cell Culturing Grows From Art To Science - Medical News Today Posted: 15 Nov 2010 04:59 AM PST Growing human embryonic stem cells in the lab is no small feat. Culturing the finicky, shape-shifting cells is labor intensive and, in some ways, more art than exact science. Now, however, a team of researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison ... |
How politics will spin science - MSNBC Cosmiclog Posted: 03 Nov 2010 04:36 PM PDT "I'm not looking forward to seeing that," said Chris Mooney, who wrote "The Republican War on Science" in 2005. But based on some of the comments made during the campaign, House Republicans might well go on the offensive on climate policy. Here's a quick ... |
Science phenom for Texan of the Year? - Dallas Morning Views Blog Posted: 16 Nov 2010 06:38 AM PST A reader went to bat for a young science phenom who's right under our noses in Plano, a person we've written about in our newspaper. In nominating the precocious kid for Texan of the Year, reader Lisa Kivett (Ozoski) said: I have been following the teen ... |
Climate worries in Oregon and beyond scary enough without science fiction - Oregonian Posted: 16 Nov 2010 09:02 AM PST Had anyone told me David Mitchell 's "Cloud Atlas" contained science fiction before I started reading, I would have shelved it. No, thank you. But I got sucked in, read all 509 pages and am still haunted by the science fiction sections with their ... |
T-Ray Science, Inc. Licenses Lung Cancer Detection Technology from the BC Cancer Agency - msnbc.com Posted: 16 Nov 2010 07:00 AM PST T-Ray Science, Inc. (TSX VENTURE: THZ) (the "Company" or "T-Ray") announced today that it has entered into an exclusive licensing agreement with the BC Cancer Agency for rights to a device for the early detection of lung cancer. T-Ray previously announced ... |
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