Day 10: Nature’s booty

I wish I remembered which science conference that was. There was a small presentation room, with a handful of speakers who projected their slides onto a big screen, as usual. But hardly anyone was in the audience; the sessions in rooms down the hall were much more crowded.  The title, something about quantifying nature’s value [...]

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Day 8: Grand Canyon still awash in politics

The Colorado River in Grand Canyon remains flooded with controversy, more than a decade after federal policies were established to regulate flows out of Glen Canyon Dam. I was tipped off to the latest round of legal battles by a blog post in Arizona Geology, “Science ignored in Grand Canyon flows.” In the short item, author and state [...]

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Day 7: Medical scans threatened by anti-nuke fears?

Doctors are sounding the alarm about a shortage of radioactive materials used to guide surgery and examine medical conditions like heart disease and cancer.
The shortage is fallout from worldwide efforts to restrict the production of nuclear bombs. As more reactors are abandoned around the globe in anti-proliferation efforts, supplies for medical radionuclides are also drying up. But one Canadian [...]

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Day 3(b): The social butterfly gene

On my way to becoming a science writer, I earned a master’s degree in biology. My thesis was a genetics project, and I conducted my experiments among a group of dedicated future geneticists led by an already accomplished — indeed, famous — one. Each week, we would gather for lab meetings, where we gave reports [...]

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Day 2(b), Scientists: Kill bullying with kindness

School bullies eating your lunch?  Science may have found a solution.
A team of researchers from the US and London has been testing a school-wide intervention that focuses on bystanders — including teachers — as much as the bullies or victims. And the method is showing early promise. The study was released this evening by the Journal of [...]

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