Monday, September 30, 2013

FOX News: Junior genius: Winners of the 2013 Google Science Fair

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Junior genius: Winners of the 2013 Google Science Fair
Sep 30th 2013, 18:30

A way to diagnose melanoma cancers early. A metallic exoskeleton glove that assists the movement of the human palm. New ways to warn about oncoming emergency vehicles.

The winners of the 2013 Google Science Awards, announced Sept. 23 at Google headquarters in Mountain View, Calif., have some incredible ideas for how to improve the world around us. And these young geniuses have room to grow: The contest is for students age 13-18.

Eric Chen, the 17-year-old winner in the oldest age group and the Grand Prize Winner, devised a way to quickly sift through thousands of potential flu medicines on his computer before winnowing out the most promising lead.

"The flu isn't this benign virus … flu kills people, and it can kill a lot of people," he told FoxNews.com.

Each of the winners received prizes from Google and its Science Fair partners: European science group CERN, LEGO, National Geographic and Scientific American. Ann Makosinksi,  a 15-year-old Canadian, won in the 15-16 age group for inventing a battery-free flashlight. Fourteen-year-old Viney Kumar from Australia won in the 13-14 age group for a system to signal emergency vehicles. And Elif Bilgin, a 16-year-old from Turkey, won the voter's choice award for her technique for creating bioplastic from banana peel.

"It was a wonderful and amazing feeling. I had like a million things going through my head," Chen said.

Read about all the great ideas at www.googlesciencefair.com/en/2013/

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FOX News: UN's massive new climate report adds little explanation for 'pause' in warming

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UN's massive new climate report adds little explanation for 'pause' in warming
Sep 30th 2013, 19:00

An enormous U.N. report on the scientific data behind global warming was made available Monday, yet it offers little concrete explanation for an earthly oddity: the planet's climate has hit the pause button.

Since 1998, there has been no significant increase in global average surface temperature, and some areas -- notably the Northern Hemisphere -- have actually cooled. The 2,200-page new Technical Report attributes that to a combination of several factors, including natural variability, reduced heating from the sun and the ocean acting like a "heat sink" to suck up extra warmth in the atmosphere.

One problem with that conclusion, according to some climate scientists, is that the U.N.'s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has limited the hiatus to 10-15 years. Anastasios Tsonis, distinguished professor at the University of Wisconsin – Milwaukee, believes the pause will last much longer than that. He points to repeated periods of warming and cooling in the 20th century.

'I know that the models are not adequate ... they don't agree with reality.'

- Anastasios Tsonis, distinguished professor at the University of Wisconsin – Milwaukee

"Each one of those regimes lasts about 30 years … I would assume something like another 15 years of leveling off or cooling," he told Fox News.

That goes well beyond the window the IPCC has acknowledged, which Tsonis and other scientists believe will significantly change the predictions for temperature rise over the next century.

"I know that the models are not adequate," Tsonis told Fox News. "There are a lot of climate models out there. They don't agree with each other – and they don't agree with reality."

In fact, the IPCC's massive, complex new report acknowledges that none of the models predicted the hiatus. The authors write that it could be due to climate models over-predicting the response to increasing greenhouse gases, or a failure to account for water vapor in the upper atmosphere.

The bottom line – no one saw it coming.

"Almost all historical simulations do not reproduce the observed recent warming hiatus," the report states.

Tsonis was pleased that the IPCC acknowledged that natural variability may have played a part in the stall in upward temperature trends. But he said the report's authors totally ignored groundbreaking research he presented six and four years ago that fully explained such "pauses." He attributes them to an intricate interaction of oceanic and atmospheric modes which either warm or cool the planet on a time scale of decades.

Judith Curry, chair of the School of Earth And Atmospheric Sciences at Georgia Tech, says the IPCC is taking a huge credibility hit over the hiatus – and its pronouncement that it is 95 percent certain that human activity is responsible for most global warming.

"I'm not happy with the IPCC," she told Fox News. "I think it has torqued the science in an unfortunate direction."

That torquing, she suggests, is because the money in climate science (the funding, that is) is tied to embellishing the IPCC narrative, especially the impacts of global warming. She is critical of the IPCC's leadership as well, in particular its chairman, Rajendra Pachauri.

"They have explicit policy agendas," Curry told Fox News. "Their proclamations are very alarmist and very imperative as to what we should be doing. And this does not inspire confidence in the final product."

Other scientists argue passionately against such talk.

Penn State's Michael Mann – who authored the famous "hockey stick" graph showing a stunning rise in temperatures in the late 20th century – believes this latest IPCC report only confirms what he has been arguing for years. That the Earth is warming, and humans are to blame.

"We cannot explain the warming through natural causes," he told Fox News. "It can only be explained by the increased greenhouse gas concentrations from human fossil fuel burning."

Mann goes so far as to say that if you remove the "noise" from the recent pause in temperature rise, human activity is to blame for 100 percent of the global warming.

Tsonis strongly disagrees. He acknowledges that human activity is likely having an impact on climate, but adds "Nobody has ever proven for 100 percent that the long-term warming is man-made. In my educated guess I will think something like less than 30 percent."

Judith Curry believes the approach the IPCC takes to climate change is fundamentally flawed. Consensus-seeking, she says, introduces bias into the science.

"They don't challenge it and say, well, how might this be wrong?" she told Fox News. "What are all the different reasons or ways this could be wrong? And once you start looking at it that way, you come up with a lot of different answers."

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FOX News: Slimy Japanese giant salamanders can bite off your finger

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Slimy Japanese giant salamanders can bite off your finger
Sep 30th 2013, 18:00

The Japanese giant salamander can grow up to 5 feet long, weigh 80 pounds and can easily bite off a large chunk of your finger in a split second. The slimy, mottled amphibians have remained virtually unchanged for millions of years.

Once hunted for food, the salamanders are protected as a national treasure in Japan and efforts are underway to breed the threatened species in captivity, according to National Geographic.

The salamanders are rarely seen, coming out only at night to lurk in cool streams around mountains and foothills.

"Knowing how giant salamanders go about breeding and what conditions are necessary for that to happen comes in useful when considering how best to protect them in the wild," Tim Johnson, a Tokyo-based salamander enthusiast who has observed these creatures in the mountains told National Geographic. "The way rivers have been modified in recent decades has made it difficult, and sometimes impossible, for them to migrate upstream to breed."

After many attempts to breed, a male named Daigoro and a female called Sachiko finally managed to conceive and 500 eggs were fertilized.

While their parents may find their newborns cute once they arrive, the rest of the world won't. Japanese giant salamanders are included in our list of the world's 31 ugliest creatures.

Click here to see the rest of nature's horrors.

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FOX News: Breaking Bad: The science behind 5 grisly moments

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Breaking Bad: The science behind 5 grisly moments
Sep 30th 2013, 13:33

This weekend was the series finale of AMC's massively popular crime drama Breaking Bad, concerning the tragic fall of high school science teacher tuned meth kingpin Walter White (Bryan Cranston). A critical and commercial success, Breaking Bad is also one of the most grisly and graphic shows on TV. The show's violence can be gory, but it's never gratuitous. The violence is designed to provide a visceral gut punch to complement the series' heavy themes and high emotions.

Here is a look at the science behind some of the show's most grisly moments.

  • 1Here's the breakdown

    AMC

    Breaking Bad has a reputation for taking its science seriously. Walter White often relies on his knowledge of chemistry to get himself out of jams, and/or dig himself in further, as the case may be. With the series finale on the horizon, we spoke about the show's brand of gruesome science with Doug Young, professor of chemistry at the College of William and Mary, and an expert in bio-organic and medicinal chemistry.

    "For me as a scientist, a lot of shows are hard to watch, because of the inaccuracies," Young said. "But I think Breaking Bad does a pretty good job with the science." A longtime fan, Young agreed to take a look at five of the show's most iconic and grisly character deaths, and discuss the science behind the trauma.

  • 2Gus Fring loses face

    AMC

    In one of the series' most jaw-dropping sequences, villainous drug lord Gus Fring is dispatched by way of a remote control bomb in a hospital room. After the bomb detonates, Fring is seen from the side calmly exiting the room and adjusting his tie. Then the camera pans and we see that the other side of his face has been literally blown off. After a few beats, Gus drops dead.

    Young says that, in this scene, Gus is clearly being depicted as experiencing acute stress reaction, more commonly knows as "going into shock." Shock can cause people to ignore pain and fall into a dissociative state, but that the show is probably sacrificing science for dramatic effect in this particular instance.

    "With the shock response, you get a lot of adrenaline and other hormones," Young says. "Everyone reacts to stress or trauma in different ways and a lot of biological events go on. But that injury is pretty substantial. I'm pretty sure that calmly walking out of the room would not be possible."

  • 3Emilio gets an acid bath

    AMC

    In another famously gruesome scene, our (anti-) heroes attempt to dispose of a corpse -- that of rival dealer Emilio Koyama -- by dissolving the body with acid in a bath tub. But the strategy turns into a housekeeping nightmare when the acid eats through the tub, and the floor beneath, dropping a gumbo of bloody goo into the hallway below.

    The acid used in this scene is not likely to eat through a bathtub or floor, or even a dead body, Young says. "I looked this one up, and I think what they used was hydroflouric acid. That's not a particularly strong acid. I think the reason they used it in the show is that it would react with the calcium in the bones. If you really wanted to dissolve a body, you would probably use a strong base like lye. That degrades all your proteins and fats. But I think its more dramatic to say you're using acid."

  • 4Walter lets Jane choke

    AMC

    Walter's descent to the dark side continues when he allows Jesse's addict girlfriend Jane to asphyxiate on her own vomit as she lies passed out in bed. Although Walt could have easily turned Jane to the side, or otherwise helped her through the overdose episode, he chooses to let her die and make it look like an accident.

    Young says that death in this instance is pretty straightforward, and basically the same as choking on any kind of foreign object or substance. When people choke to death on their own vomit, it's often because they're too inebriated for even unconscious survival reactions to kick in. "The vomit basically just gets stuck in your windpipe and cuts off your air supply," he says. "It just pools -- this is gross -- but it just pools in your mouth and back down the windpipe. And you just die. That's why you should sleep on your side."

  • 5Max takes a hit

    AMC

    In one particularly traumatic flashback sequence, we learn that Gus Fring's first partner, Max Arciniega, was killed by the Juarez Cartel. At a poolside meeting, Max is shot in the head by Hector Salamanca and left to slowly bleed out into the pool as Gus is forced to watch.

    Young says the scene rings true in terms of how a body would bleed out after a gunshot wound to the head. The average adult male has about 8 to 10 pints of blood in the body, or a little more than a gallon.

    "The time it takes to bleed out depends on the wound," Young says. "If you hit an artery, the heart is going to push the blood out a lot faster and you'll bleed out quickly. It would also take longer for a head wound, because those are mostly small capillaries that are spread out. Those are small, thin vessels that just don't have a ton of volume in terms of blood."

  • 6Tortuga crosses the desert

    AMC

    When drug runner Tortuga (Danny Trejo) -- the name means "Tortoise" -- runs afoul of the Juarez Cartel in Season Two, it leads to another famously gruesome Breaking Bad moment. As DEA agents wait in the desert for a drug deal to go down, a tortoise crawls over with Tortuga's severed head mounted on its back. In a later flashback scene, we see that Tortuga was beheaded with a machete by cartel hitmen, which raises a question that's puzzled science for centuries: In the case of sudden decapitation, does the victim retain consciousness after the head is severed?

    Young says it may be impossible to ever know for sure, since decapitated individuals can't report their experience. And human decapitation experiments are, understandably, frowned upon in the non-mad scientist community. But from a chemical point of view, it's certainly possible that a person could retain some awareness after decapitation. "You still have a little blood and oxygen in the brain, so those neural synapses can still fire," Young says. "It wouldn't last very long, since you'd be quickly depleted of blood and oxygen."

    Young adds that the question really has been around for centuries: "Now, I don't know if this is an urban legend, but there's a famous chemist, Lavosier. He was instrumental in constructing the periodic table. In the 1700s in France, he was beheaded. The story is that he wanted to treat his death as one final experiment. So he told his friend that, after he got the guillotine, he was going to blink as many time as he could if he was still conscious. And apparently he blinked 17 times."

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    FOX News: SpaceX launches next-gen Falcon 9 rocket on big test flight

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    SpaceX launches next-gen Falcon 9 rocket on big test flight
    Sep 30th 2013, 12:00

    The private spaceflight company SpaceX launched the first of its new-and-improved Falcon 9 rockets from the California coast Sunday, an ambitious test flight that also marked the company's first flight from the West Coast.

    The unmanned next-generation Falcon 9 rocket blasted off from SpaceX's launch pad at Vandenberg Air Force Base in California at 12 p.m. EDT (1600 GMT) carrying a Canadian satellite to track space weather into orbit along with three small satellites.

    "It was an amazing flight," SpaceX's Falcon 9 product manager John Insprucker said in a launch webcast. "There's tons of data coming back and it looks like it was a picture-perfect flight. Everything was looking good right down the middle of the track." [See launch photos for SpaceX's next-generation Falcon 9 rocket]

    A large crowd of SpaceX employees was seen cheering at the company's headquarters and rocket factory in Hawthorne, Calif., as the upgraded Falcon 9 rocket soared toward orbit.

    Reusable rocket test and firsts
    Sunday's launch marked the sixth Falcon 9 rocket launch for (short for Space Exploration Technologies), which was founded in 2002 by billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk. But it was SpaceX's first flight to include major upgrades to the 22-story rocket, which is designed to launch the planned crew-carrying Dragon space capsule.

    One of those upgrades included an innovative addition to the Falcon 9's first stage, which SpaceX designed to restart after separating from the second stage to see if it could perform maneuvers during re-entry as part of a reusability test. SpaceX officials said the plan called for two first-stage engine maneuvers before the booster splashed down in the Pacific Ocean, but success was not guaranteed.

    In several interviews, Musk said that the odds of success for the reusability test were low, a view which SpaceX officials echoed to reporters [Exclusive Video: Elon Musk's Reusable Rocket Vision]

    "It is important to note that this is not a priority for this flight and SpaceX does not expect success with this first test," SpaceX spokeswoman Hannah Post told SPACE.com.

    SpaceX has been working to develop technology for a completely reusable rocket launch system. In McGregor, Texas, it has launched a novel reusable Grasshopper rocket prototype on several vertical launch and landing test flights.

    Sunday's launch was also the first time SpaceX launched a satellite into orbit instead of the company's Dragon space capsule. During the launch webcast, the Falcon 9 rocket's first stage appeared to separate smoothly from the second stage and fall away as planned. The second stage then ignited on schedule as the huge satellite payload fairing, which is large enough to house a school bus, separated to expose Canada's CASSIOPE space weather-tracking satellite.

    Built by the Canadian Space Agency, the 1,060-pound satellite will study how solar particles from the sun interact with Earth's atmosphere during space weather events. It includes special cameras to observe the auroras at the Earth's pole created by this interaction, CSA officials have said.

    SpaceX's new, improved Falcon 9 rocket
    SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket is a two-stage launch vehicle that stands 224.4 feet tall and is powered by nine Merlin engines also developed by the company. The booster is designed to launch satellites into orbit, as well as manned and unmanned versions of SpaceX's Dragon space capsule.

    SpaceX has a $1.6 billion contract with NASA to use launch cargo missions to the International Space Station using Falcon 9 rockets and Dragon space capsules. The company is also building a manned version of the Dragon in a bid to launch astronauts into orbit for NASA.

    The Falcon 9 rocket improvements being tested during today's launch included a set of nine brand-new Merlin 1D engines arranged in a novel circular pattern — which SpaceX calls the "Octaweb" — that together can generate 1.5 million pounds of thrust in a vacuum, a 50 percent increase over previous Falcon 9 engines, SpaceX spokeswoman Hannah Post told SPACE.com.

    "The new layout also provides individual protection for each engine, and further protects other engines in case of an engine failure," SpaceX officials explained in a mission description. "With this design, Falcon 9 is also prepared for reusability — the Octaweb will be able to survive the first stage's return to Earth post-launch."

    The new Falcon 9 rocket carries more fuel for those engines, is equipped with a triple-redundant avionics system, as well as a more durable first stage to help the booster better withstand its re-entry into Earth's atmosphere, she added.

    Today's Falcon 9 launch was also carried three smaller satellites into orbit with the CASSIOPE spacecraft. According to SpaceX, the Falcon 9 is carrying the following small spacecraft:

    Polar Orbiting Passive Atmospheric Calibration Spheres (POPACS):A privately funded CubeSat mission to measure the effects of solar flares and coronal mass ejections on the density of Earth's upper atmosphere.

    Drag & Atmospheric Neutral Density Explorer (DANDE):A 110-pound spherical spacecraft developed by students at the University of Colorado at Boulder. The goal of the DANDE mission is to provide an improved understanding of the satellite drag environment in the lower-thermosphere.

    CUSat:A technology demonstrator developed by Cornell University. CUSat will use a new, relative GPS algorithm called Carrier-phase Differential GPS (CDGPS) that will provide accuracy to the millimeter level.

    SpaceX's Falcon 9 launch took place on a big day for commercial spaceflight. The rocket launched into orbit just hours after Orbital Sciences Corporation's commercial Cygnus spacecraft arrived at the International Space Station, capping its own test flight. Like SpaceX, the Dulles, Va.-based Orbital Sciences has a contract with NASA for unmanned cargo delivery flights. Orbital's contract is a $1.9 billion deal for eight delivery flights using the Cygnus spacecraft.

    With Sunday's successful launch test, SpaceX will turn its attention to its next launch. The company has at least three more Falcon 9 rocket flights planned for 2013, all of which will launch satellites into orbit for customers using the company's launch pad in Cape Canaveral, Fla.

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    Sunday, September 29, 2013

    FOX News: MIT, Harvard scientists accidentally create real-life lightsaber

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    MIT, Harvard scientists accidentally create real-life lightsaber
    Sep 29th 2013, 19:09

    The force is clearly with them.

    In a reported first, researchers at Harvard and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have developed a newfangled technology that theoretically could be used to construct an actual lightsaber.

    Until now, photons, or the mass-less particles that constitute light, were thought to not interact, but rather simply pass through each other, just two beams of luminescence during a laser-light show.

    "The physics of what's happening in these molecules is similar to what we see in the movies."

    - Mikhail Lukin, Harvard physics professor

    But according to the Harvard Gazette, scientists at the Harvard-MIT Center for Ultracold Atoms have improbably coaxed photons into hardened molecules you could, in fact, whack against each other in, say, a Bespin-based duel-to-the-death resulting in one person, sadly, losing a hand.

    As a lightsaber-wielding Darth Vader once notably noted, "Don't make me destroy you . . ."

    "It's not an inapt analogy to compare this to lightsabers," Harvard professor of physics Mikhail Lukin told the Gazette.

    "When these photons interact with each other, they're pushing against and deflecting each other. The physics of what's happening in these molecules is similar to what we see in the movies."

    Added MIT Professor of Physics Vladan Vuletic in an interview with WBZ-TV, "It has long been a dream to have photons of light beams interact with one another. . .We use laser beams and shine them in from six sides and these laser beams actually cool the atoms.

    "Maybe a characteristic of a lightsaber is that you have these two light beams and they don't go through each other as you might expect; they just kind of bounce off each other."

    However, don't expect the new technology to soon result in a real-life, proverbial "elegant weapon for a more civilized age," as exiled Jedi Obi-Wan Kenobe once put it.

    Instead, the science behind the recent breakthrough will likely lead researchers to realizing the till-now coveted concept of quantum computing.

    "What it will be useful for we don't know yet," Lukin reportedly said. "But it's a new state of matter, so we are hopeful that new applications may emerge as we continue to investigate these photonic molecules' properties."

    Now, if science would only allow the would-be smugglers out there to get their hands on a trusty blaster.

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    FOX News: Swedish researchers develop medicine to protect bees from deadly diseases

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    Swedish researchers develop medicine to protect bees from deadly diseases
    Sep 29th 2013, 15:17

    Stockholm –  Researchers in Sweden said Friday they had developed a new medicine to protect bees from diseases that kill entire populations of the insect in the US and Europe.

    A team of microbiologists at Lund University have patented the treatment, known as SymBeeotic -- made from lactic acid bacteria from the stomachs of healthy bees -- which they described as a major "boost" to bees' immune system and are hopeful that it could slow down the rate at which bees are dying.

    "The bacteria in this product is active against both American and European foulbrood disease," Dr Alejandra Vasquez, who co-developed the product, told AFP. Foulbrood is the fatal bacterial disease which threatens bees.

    "We hope that beekeepers will see this as a good preventative medicine so that they can avoid using antibiotics."

    The researchers, who worked on the medicine for nearly ten years, planned to launch it at an annual conference of beekeepers in Russia on Saturday.

    In a statement from the university, co-researcher Dr Tobias Olofsson said it was "the only existing product that boosts bees' natural immune system", as resistance to antibiotics grows.

    Pesticides, parasites, stress and poor nutrition are believed to be some of the factors causing a deterioration of the immune systems of bees around the world, making them more susceptible to disease.

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    FOX News: NASA's new commercial supply ship reaches space station

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    NASA's new commercial supply ship reaches space station
    Sep 29th 2013, 11:26

    CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. –  NASA's newest delivery service has finally made it to the International Space Station.

    After a week's delay, Orbital Science Corp.'s Cygnus cargo ship pulled up at the orbiting lab Sunday morning. The space station astronauts used their robot arm to grab it. The capsule is making its debut on this test flight, and contains more than a half-ton of food, clothes and other supplies for the six astronauts.

    It marks a major accomplishment 260 miles up. Only one other private company has ever made such a high-flying shipment.

    Orbital Sciences launched the Cygnus capsule from Virginia on Sept. 18. It was supposed to reach the space station four days later, but got held up by inaccurate navigation data. A software patch fixed everything.

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    FOX News: Ancient Greek site threatened amid celebration

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    Ancient Greek site threatened amid celebration
    Sep 29th 2013, 12:49

    While world leaders and top athletes lit the Olympic flame with pageantry drawn from antiquity, another important ancient site of athletic prowess sat overlooked and endangered.

    Some 125 miles east of Ancient Olympia where the flame lighting for the 2014 Winter Games in Sochi went off without a hitch Sunday, the Nemea stadium and its humbler games are in danger of closing to the public because of crisis-hit Greece's harsh budget cuts, according to a renowned American archaeologist who led excavations there for decades.

    Stephen G. Miller, professor emeritus of classical archaeology at the University of California, Berkeley, arrived at Nemea in 1973, when the ancient site still lay buried beneath a highway and vineyards used by raisin farmers. Excavations there unearthed the temple and stadium, one of the four major sites where Ancient Greek games were held: Olympia, Delphi, Isthmia and Nemea.

    The 71-year-old has held a revival of the Nemean games every four years since 1996, a lower-key, more egalitarian affair than the Olympics, in which athletes sporting white tunics engage in a no-prize competition with a relatively small but dedicated following.

    "The idea is that anyone can feel like an ancient Greek athlete for 10 minutes," he said, in a midweek interview at Nemea, standing at the stadium's entrance tunnel, where graffiti from ancient athletes is still visible. "The thing I'm worried about is that this place is going to have to be closed."

    Seven of the site's 10-member staff at Nemea have not have their contracts renewed. If they lose their final challenge in court next month, Miller said, the site will close. Staff shortages last year forced Nemea to close on weekends for 10 weeks.

    "It's sad for me that it's come to this. There should be people crawling all over this place."

    Greece is suffering through its sixth year of recession, a financial crisis that has seen a surge in unemployment and poverty. Forced to make deeper cuts, the government has launched a program of mass state job cuts and involuntary transfers that have already made an impact on services from Athens to rural Greece.

    Nemea, near the southern city of Corinth, is steeped in ancient history. The 2,300-year-old Temple of Zeus stands next to the ancient track and a museum built at the site.

    "The treasure of Greece is its antiquities and the young archaeologists trained to look after those antiquities. Instead of making the investments that would have yielded archaeology an income producing venture, it's always been shoved off to the side," Miller said. "There's no hotel here, no restaurant, no shop."

    Miller, who lives in Nemea and is popular in the nearby town, greets friends in accented but precise Greek. The road leading to the ancient site at Nemea has his name on it.

    "My life's work is right here," he said. "For me, this is very personal."

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    FOX News: Number of confirmed alien planets nears 1,000

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    Number of confirmed alien planets nears 1,000
    Sep 29th 2013, 11:00

    Just two decades after discovering the first world beyond our solar system, astronomers are closing in on alien planet No. 1,000.

    Four of the five main databases that catalog the discoveries of exoplanets now list more than 900 confirmed alien worlds, and two of them peg the tally at 986 as of Sept. 26. So the 1,000th exoplanet may be announced in a matter of days or weeks, depending on which list you prefer.

    That's a lot of progress since 1992, when researchers detected two planets orbiting a rotating neutron star, or pulsar, about 1,000 light-years from Earth. Confirmation of the first alien world circling a "normal" star like our sun did not come until 1995. [The Strangest Alien Planets (Gallery)]

    And the discoveries will keep pouring in, as astronomers continue to hone their techniques and sift through the data returned by instruments on the ground and in space.

    The biggest numbers in the near future should come from NASA's Kepler space telescope, which racked up many finds before being hobbled in May of this year when the second of its four orientation-maintaining reaction wheels failed.

    Kepler has identified 3,588 planet candidates to date. Just 151 of these worlds have been confirmed so far, but mission scientists have said they expect at least 90 percent will end up being the real deal.

    But even these numbers, as impressive as they are, represent just the tip of our Milky Way galaxy's immense planetary iceberg. Kepler studied a tiny patch of sky, after all, and it only spotted planets that happened to cross their stars' faces from the instrument's perspective.

    Many more planets are thus out there, zipping undetected around their parent stars. Indeed, a team of researchers estimated last year that every Milky Way star hosts, on average, 1.6 worlds — meaning that our galaxy perhaps harbors 160 billion planets.

    And those are just the worlds with obvious parent stars. In 2011, a different research team calculated that "rogue planets" (which cruise through space unbound to a star) may outnumber "normal" exoplanets by 50 percent or so.

    Nailing down the numbers is of obvious interest, but what astronomers really want is a better understanding of the nature and diversity of alien worlds.

    And it's becoming more and more apparent that this diversity is stunning. Scientists have found exoplanets as light and airy as Styrofoam, for example, and others as dense as iron. They've also discovered a number of worlds that appear to orbit in their stars' habitable zone — that just-right range of distances that could support the existence of liquid water and thus, perhaps, life as we know it.

    But the search continues for possibly the biggest exoplanet prize: the first true alien Earth. Kepler was designed to determine how frequently Earth-like exoplanets occur throughout the Milky Way, and mission scientists have expressed confidence that they can still achieve that primay goal. So some Earth analogs likely lurk in Kepler's data, just waiting to be pulled out.

    The five chief exoplanet-discovery databases, and their current tallies, are: the Extrasolar Planets Encyclopedia (986); the Exoplanets Catalog, run by the University of Puerto Rico at Arecibo's Planetary Habitability Laboratory (986); the NASA Exoplanet Archive (905); the Exoplanet Orbit Database (732); and the Open Exoplanet Catalog (948).

    The Planetary Habitability Lab keeps track of all five databases, whose different numbers highlight the uncertainties involved in exoplanet detection and confirmation.

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    Saturday, September 28, 2013

    FOX News: Rats! Diet of Easter islanders revealed

    FOX News
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    Rats! Diet of Easter islanders revealed
    Sep 28th 2013, 11:00

    The inhabitants of Easter Island consumed a diet that was lacking in seafood and was, literally, quite ratty.

    The island, also called Rapa Nui, first settled around A.D. 1200, is famous for its more than 1,000 "walking" Moai statues, most of which originally faced inland. Located in the South Pacific, Rapa Nui is the most isolated inhabited landmass on Earth; the closest inhabitants are located on the Pitcairn Islands about 1,200 miles to the west.

    To determine the diet of its past inhabitants, researchers analyzed the nitrogen and carbon isotopes, or atoms of an element with different numbers of neutrons, from the teeth (specifically the dentin) of 41 individuals whose skeletons had been previously excavated on the island. To get an idea of what the islanders ate before dying, the researchers then compared the isotope values with those of animal bones excavated from the island. [Photos of Walking Easter Island Statues]

    Additionally, the researchers were able to radiocarbon date 26 of the teeth remains, allowing them to plot how the diet on the island changed over time. Radiocarbon dating works by measuring the decay of carbon-14 allowing a date range to be assigned to each individual; it's a method commonly used in archaeology on organic material. The research was published recently online in the American Journal of Physical Anthropology.

    'Because of their geographic location and climate conditions, there just weren't as many marine products for them to get.'

    - Amy Commendador, of the Idaho Museum of Natural History

    The researchers found that throughout time, the people on the island consumed a diet that was mainly terrestrial. In fact, in the first few centuries of the island's history (up to about A.D. 1650) some individuals used Polynesian rats (also known as kiore) as their main source of protein. The rat is somewhat smaller than European rats and, according to ethnographic accounts, tasty to eat.

    "Our results indicate that contrary to previous zooarchaeological studies, diet was predominantly terrestrial throughout the entire sequence of occupation, with reliance on rats, chickens and C3 plants," the researchers write in their journal article, noting that the resources from C3 plants (or those that use typical photosynthesis to make sugars) would have included yams, sweet potatoes and bananas.

    Rats, not fish
    The islanders' use of rats was not surprising to the researchers. Archaeological excavations show the presence of the Polynesian rat across the Pacific. The Polynesian form commonly travels with humans on ocean voyages and, like any other rat, multiplies rapidly when it arrives on a new island. In some cases, the rats were probably transported intentionally to be used as food, something supported by ethnographic accounts stating that, in some areas of Polynesia, rats were being consumed at the time of European contact. Additionally, previous research has suggested the rats were at least partly responsible for the deforestation of Rapa Nui.

    What was more surprising to the researchers was the lack of seafood in the diet of the islanders. "Traditionally, from Polynesian cultures you have a heavy predominance of using marine products, especially in the early phase of colonization," said Amy Commendador, of the Idaho Museum of Natural History at Idaho State University, in an interview with LiveScience.

    One reason for the lack of seafood may have to do with the island's location and topography, Commendador said. The northern end contains steep cliffs and would be difficult to fish from. Additionally, the island's southerly latitude makes it somewhat cooler and may affect fishing. "Because of their geographic location and climate conditions, there just weren't as many marine products for them to get," Commendador said.

    Rats should not be underestimated in their value as a resource, study co-author John Dudgeon, also at Idaho State University, told LiveScience. They could eat anything and multiply rapidly within a few generations. For the people who lived on Rapa Nui, "it was probably easier to go get a rat than it was to go get a fish," Dudgeon said.

    Fish elites?
    Though the study results showed the islanders' diet was mainly terrestrial, a few individuals, dating after A.D. 1600, appeared to have been eating more fish than the others. [The 7 Perfect Survival Foods]

    These fish eaters may have lived on a part of the island where the fishing was easier, Commendador suggested. Another possibility the team raises in their paper is that access to marine resources varied due to the social and political constraints people faced. For the islanders, eating fish might have been a mark of "higher status" individuals, an elite person who was allowed more plentiful access to seafood.

    Statues facing inland
    One curious coincidence is that most of the Moai, the statues erected by the islanders, face inland rather than out to sea. Now, this new research suggests the people of the island also turned inland, rather than to the sea, to get their food.

    Commendador and Dudgeon don't think any direct relationship between the Moai statues and the islanders diet exists. Previous research has suggested the statues were positioned facing inland due to ancestor worship, so that the statues could watch over their descendents.

    Another, more speculative, idea is that by having the statues facing inland, the islanders were also "saying we're turning inwards and not turning outward," Dudgeon said. While this probably doesn't relate to the islanders' decision to eat rats rather than fish, it shows the mindset the people of Rapa Nui may have developed before the arrival of Europeans. Their lifestyle as well as their diet may have become focused on the land rather than the sea.

    Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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