2015年5月24日 星期日

2015-05-25 Pakistan Science


Mashable
   
5 major threats to biodiversity, and how we can help curb them   
Mashable
That's why biodiversity is important. The wide variety of species on Earth, whether they're plants, animals or microscopic organisms, are vital to keep the world's many ecosystems healthy, balanced and thriving — growing plants we can eat, trees we can ...

Celebrate International Day of Biological Diversity with The Great Nature Project   Science Times
Day for Biological Diversity observed   The News International
Biodiversity for Sustainable Development   AllAfrica.com
Trinidad Guardian   
Nagaland Post   
Scoop.co.nz (press release)   
all 71 news articles »   


ABC Online
   
WWF marks Turtle Day   
The Nation
LAHORE - WWF-Pakistan celebrated Turtle Day to increase knowledge of freshwater and marine turtles among people and encourage human action to help them survive. In Pakistan, there are two species of land tortoises, five species of marine turtles and ...

Scientists race against time to stop mystery disease wiping out Bellinger River ...   ABC Online
Turtle on edge of extinction after sudden attack by mystery disease   The Guardian

all 4 news articles »   


io9
   
A Stunning, Multi-Wavelength Image Of The Solar Atmosphere   
io9
The Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA) instrument aboard NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) images the solar atmosphere in multiple wavelengths to link changes in the surface to interior changes. Its data includes images of the sun in 10 ...

NASA reveals huge coronal loops on the sun's surface in stunning detail   Daily Times

all 2 news articles »   


The Nation
   
425m-year-old parasite found attached to host   
The Nation
Researchers have discovered the 425-million-year-old remains of a new species of parasite - still clamped to the host animal it invaded. The international team found the fossil at a site in Herefordshire. Prof David Siveter, from the University of Leicester, said it ...

Researchers discover 425 million years old parasite   NYC Today

all 2 news articles »   


The Nation
   
Spiders strum on leaves for love   
The Nation
Alexander Sweger and Prof George Uetz from the University of Cincinnati recorded the percussive courtship display of the so-called purring wolf spider Gladicosa gulosa. They played the male spiders' call to females, revealing that they used leaves to ...

Common Spiders Serenade Potential Mates WIth Music Says Study   Tech Times
Spiders strum on leaves to woo potential mates with love tunes   Market Business News
Spiders use music to woo partners   Telegraph.co.uk

all 9 news articles »   


Grand Forks Herald
   
Mind-controlled prosthetic limbs allow precise, smooth movement   
Grand Forks Herald
Patient Erik Sorto takes a drink in this handout photo taken April 2015, provided by Lance Hayashida/Caltech. REUTERS/Spencer Kellis and Christian Klaes, Caltech/Handout via Reuters. Mind-controlled prosthetic limbs allow precise, smooth movement.
Paralyzed Man Drinks Beer with Help of Mind Reading Robot   GOOD Magazine
Brain implant senses 'intent' to move robotic arm   The Sun Daily
New neural implant reads a person's intentions to control robotic arm   Ars Technica (blog)
Design & Trend   
Huffington Post   
all 321 news articles »   


Stuff.co.nz
   
It's finally 2015 - man breaks hoverboard record   
Stuff.co.nz
Catalin Alexandru Duru becomes the first person ever to break the Guinness World Records Title for the Farthest journey by hoverboard. It's finally 2015! This is the year that Marty McFly travelled to in Back to the Future II; this is, for real, the future. Hence ...

Canadian Catalin Duru breaks world record for furthest hoverboard flight   BBC News
Canadian sets record for farthest flight by hoverboard   Toronto Sun
Montreal man sets world record for furthest flight by hoverboard   CTV News
CBC.ca   
HardOCP (press release)   
Guinness World Records   
all 82 news articles »   


Empire State Tribune
   
Rare “Naked” Star has Scientists Awed   
Empire State Tribune
Sometimes space may seem scary, even violent. This is what has driven scientists to call a new star discovered by the Hubble Space Telescope as “Nasty 1.” This is because the start is quite different from our own star, the Sun. Nasty 1, unlike most stars, has ...

This Wolf-Rayet Star Is Like Nothing Astronomers Have Ever Seen - The News ...   Gazette Herald
This Wolf-Rayet Star Is Like Nothing Astronomers Have Ever Seen   The News Ledge
Hubble discovers BL**DY NASTY cannibal star 3000 light-years away from Earth   Inferse
The Daily Galaxy (blog)   
all 190 news articles »   

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