24/7 News Coverage
February 06, 2019
SPACE MEDICINE
Engineers harvest heart's energy to power life-saving devices



Hanover NH (SPX) Feb 05, 2019
The heart's motion is so powerful that it can recharge devices that save our lives, according to new research from Dartmouth College. Using a dime-sized invention developed by engineers at the Thayer School of Engineering at Dartmouth, the kinetic energy of the heart can be converted into electricity to power a wide-range of implantable devices, according to the study funded by the National Institutes of Health. Millions of people rely on pacemakers, defibrillators and other live-saving impl ... read more

SPACE MEDICINE
Simply shining light on dinosaur metal compound kills cancer cells
Warwick UK (SPX) Feb 05, 2019
A new compound based on Iridium, a rare metal which landed in the Gulf of Mexico 66 M years ago, hooked onto albumin, a protein in blood, can attack the nucleus of cancerous cells when switched on b ... more
EPIDEMICS
Protecting those on the frontline from Ebola
Charleston SC (SPX) Feb 04, 2019
In a world where we can travel the globe by jet, diseases that were once thought to plague faraway places can now strike close to home. The U.S. had to learn this the hard way. In 2014, a pati ... more
EPIDEMICS
Researchers develop new approach for vanquishing superbugs
Cleveland OH (SPX) Feb 01, 2019
A scientific team from Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine and Cleveland Clinic has developed a new way to identify second-line antibiotics that may be effective in killing germs alre ... more
OIL AND GAS
Venezuela opposition warns military against preventing entry of aid
Caracas (AFP) Feb 5, 2019
Venezuela's armed forces would be crossing a "red line" if they were to block humanitarian aid from entering the country, the opposition dominated National Assembly said on Tuesday. ... more


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EPIDEMICS
China disciplines 80 officials linked to major vaccine scandal
Beijing (AFP) Feb 2, 2019
China's corruption watchdog on Saturday said it had disciplined more than 80 officials linked to a vaccine scandal last year that inflamed public fears over the safety of domestically produced drugs. ... more
CARBON WORLDS
Unlocking graphene's superconducting powers with a twist and a squeeze
New York NY (SPX) Jan 25, 2019
Graphene has been heralded as a wonder material. Not only is it the strongest, thinnest material ever discovered, its exceptional ability to conduct heat and electricity paves the way for innovation ... more
SPACE MEDICINE
Environmental protection in outer space
Frankfurt, Germany (SPX) Jan 25, 2019
On earth, environmental protection has the primary goal of ensuring the availability of clean water and clean air for human beings in the future. Human interests usually take also precedent when it ... more
SPACE MEDICINE
Artificial skin could give superhuman perception
Storrs CT (SPX) Jan 29, 2019
A new type of sensor could lead to artificial skin that someday helps burn victims 'feel' and safeguards the rest of us, University of Connecticut researchers suggest in a paper in Advanced Material ... more
FROTH AND BUBBLE
Microplastic contamination found in common source of groundwater, researchers report
Champaign IL (SPX) Jan 28, 2019
Microplastics contaminate the world's surface waters, yet scientists have only just begun to explore their presence in groundwater systems. A new study is the first to report microplastics in fractu ... more
24/7 Disaster News Coverage
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CHIP TECH
Novel strategy enables tiny semiconductor particles for wide-ranging applications
Singapore (SPX) Jan 28, 2019
Two-dimensional (2D) transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) nanomaterials such as molybdenite (MoS2), which possess a similar structure as graphene, have been donned the materials of the future for ... more
MOON DAILY
Moving on the Moon
Paris (ESA) Jan 25, 2019
Europe is preparing to go forward to the Moon, but how will astronauts move once they get there? Despite the Apollo missions, little is known about what lunar gravity may mean for our bodies. ESA's ... more
SPACE MEDICINE
Brain condition related to long-term spaceflights needs more attention, data
Charleston SC (SPX) Jan 25, 2019
More people today are poised to explore space than ever before; those who do will experience the effects of microgravity on the human body. Recognizing the need for more data related to those effect ... more
SPACE MEDICINE
Prolonged spaceflight could weaken astronauts' immune systems
Tucson AZ (SPX) Jan 24, 2019
NASA hopes to send humans to Mars by 2030 on a round-trip mission that could take up to three years - far longer than any human has ever traveled in space. Such long-term spaceflights could adversel ... more
SPACE MEDICINE
China clones gene-edited monkeys to aid disorder research
Shanghai (AFP) Jan 24, 2019
Chinese scientists announced Thursday they had cloned five monkeys from a single animal that was genetically engineered to have a sleep disorder, saying it could aid research into human psychological problems. ... more


Superpowered salamander may hold the key to human regeneration

TECH SPACE
A new method developed to produce precursors for high-strength carbon fibers processing
Nizhny Novgorod, Russia (SPX) Jan 23, 2019
Carbon fiber is an important structural material of the 21st century. Due to its high strength, which is not inferior to metal alloys, in combination with low specific weight and high oxidative stab ... more
INTERN DAILY



SPACE MEDICINE
China's second gene-edited foetus is 12-14 weeks old: scientist
Beijing (AFP) Jan 22, 2019
The second woman carrying a gene-edited foetus in China could now be 12 to 14 weeks into her pregnancy, according to a US physician in close contact with the researcher who claimed to have created the world's first genetically-modified babies last year. ... more
SPACE MEDICINE
Second woman carrying gene-edited baby in China
Beijing (AFP) Jan 21, 2019
A researcher who claimed to have created the world's first genetically-edited babies will face a Chinese police investigation, state media said Monday, as authorities confirmed that a second woman fell pregnant during the experiment. ... more
SPACE MEDICINE
How to rapidly image entire brains at nanoscale resolution
Chevy Chase MD (SPX) Jan 18, 2019
Eric Betzig didn't expect the experiment to work. Two scientists, Ruixuan Gao and Shoh Asano, wanted to use his team's microscope on brain samples expanded to four times their usual size - blown up ... more
SPACE MEDICINE
NYSCF scientists make strides in creation of clinical-grade bone
New York NY (SPX) Jan 17, 2019
A team of scientists from the New York Stem Cell Foundation (NYSCF) Research Institute reported Friday in Stem Cell Research and Therapy that they have made valuable progress toward creating clinica ... more
SPACE MEDICINE
Aging Faster in Space to Age Better on Earth
Houston TX (SPX) Jan 16, 2019
A new investigation heading to the International Space Station will provide space-flown samples to scientists from academia, industry and government agencies, who have agreed to share their data and ... more
24/7 Nuclear News Coverage
24/7 War News Coverage
24/7 War News Coverage



US sends 3,750 more troops to Mexico border: Pentagon
Washington (AFP) Feb 4, 2019
The United States will send an additional 3,750 troops to its frontier with Mexico, the Pentagon said Sunday, as President Donald Trump doubled down on his call for a wall to boost border security. Soldiers were originally deployed to the border under an order President Donald Trump gave before midterm elections in November as "caravans" of migrants made their way to the border to seek asylu ... more
+ Brazilian indigenous community threatened in aftermath of dam burst
+ 14 dead, seven missing in Bolivian landslides
+ Study reveals wildlife is abundant in Chernobyl
+ Chinese chemical firm 'misled' investigators over deadly blast
+ Refugees struggle for work amid Greek jobs drought
+ Mexican president declares 'drug war' over
+ Probe over Brazil dam disaster puts heat on mining company Vale
Magnetic north pole leaves Canada, on fast new path
Washington (AFP) Feb 5, 2019
The position of the Earth's magnetic North Pole - used in navigation systems such as smartphones - is moving far faster than it has, sending scientists scrambling to put out a new model this week. The magnetic North is the point at which the planet's magnetic field points vertically down. The World Magnetic Model is critical to sea and military navigation - as well as our ubiquitous s ... more
+ Kite-blown Antarctic explorers make most southerly Galileo positioning fix
+ NOAA releases early update for World Magnetic Model
+ BeiDou achieves real-time transmission of deep-sea data
+ China to launch 10 BeiDou satellites in 2019
+ Magnetic North's erratic behavior forces update to global navigation system
+ US Air Force contracts Lockheed Martin to continue GPS ground control supprt
+ GPS-denied navigation on small unmanned helicopters


A taste for fat may have made us human
New Haven CT (SPX) Feb 06, 2019
Long before human ancestors began hunting large mammals for meat, a fatty diet provided them with the nutrition to develop bigger brains, posits a new paper in Current Anthropology. The paper argues that our early ancestors acquired a taste for fat by eating marrow scavenged from the skeletal remains of large animals that had been killed and eaten by other predators. The argument challenge ... more
+ The Caucasus: Complex interplay of genes and cultures
+ European colonisation of the Americas killed 10 percent of world population and caused global cooling
+ Ancient skull provides earliest evidence of modern humans in Mongolia
+ Humans colonized diverse environments in Southeast Asia and Oceania during the Pleistocene
+ Human mutation rate has slowed recently
+ All too human
+ A surprisingly early replacement of Neanderthals by modern humans in southern Spain
Ice Age survivors or stranded travellers? A new subterranean species discovered in Canada
Washington DC (SPX) Feb 06, 2019
The discovery of a new to science species of rare and primitive arthropod from the depths of a cave that was covered by a thick ice sheet until recently is certain to raise questions. In their study, published in the open-access journal Subterranean Biology, entomologist Alberto Sendra and local caver Craig Wagnell describe a new species of cave-dwelling, insect-like campodeid dipluran from the ... more
+ Leaves are nature's most sophisticated environment sensors
+ Porcine pickle: Hong Kongers divided over city's emboldened wild boars
+ Invasive species with charisma are harder to eradicate
+ A small fish provides insight into the genetic basis of evolution
+ Thai forest rangers train to tackle wildlife crime
+ Ivory and pangolin scales smuggling bust in Uganda
+ Thai court dismisses case against suspected wildlife trafficking kingpin
Daily Newsletters - Space - Military - Environment - Energy

Protecting those on the frontline from Ebola
Charleston SC (SPX) Feb 04, 2019
In a world where we can travel the globe by jet, diseases that were once thought to plague faraway places can now strike close to home. The U.S. had to learn this the hard way. In 2014, a patient harboring Ebola returned home to Dallas, Texas from Liberia. Within 15 days of this person's arrival, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) had confirmed two secondary cases in nurs ... more
+ Researchers develop new approach for vanquishing superbugs
+ China disciplines 80 officials linked to major vaccine scandal
+ Hong Kong scientists claim 'broad-spectrum' antiviral breakthrough
+ Chinese children given expired polio vaccines in latest scare
+ Danish malaria vaccine passes test in humans
+ An ancient strain of plague may have led to the decline of Neolithic Europeans
+ China confirms first swine fever cases in Beijing
Chinese 'underground' bishop gains official recognition: state media
Beijing (AFP) Feb 2, 2019
A bishop from China's "underground" Catholic church is slated to step up as the official state-backed clergyman for a diocese in central China, state-run media reported, amid a thaw in relations between Beijing and the Holy See. China's estimated 10 million Catholics are legally supposed to attend only churches governed by a state-controlled body with clergy appointed by the Communist Party. ... more
+ Muse: Myanmar's militia-run, billion-dollar gateway to China
+ Followed, harassed: foreign reporters say China work conditions worsen
+ US urges release of Chinese lawyer jailed for subversion
+ China executes man who killed 15 people in car attack
+ Chinese rights lawyer jailed for 'subversion'; Activist jailed for five years
+ Canadian drug trafficker has likely appealed China death sentence: lawyer
+ Australian detained in China receives consular visit: official


New president to inherit a Mexico plagued with grisly violence
Mexico City (AFP) Aug 7, 2018
In the middle of the street, corpses riddled with bullets. Underground, thousands of bodies heaped in clandestine graves. And in the mountains, drug gangs locked in armed conflict with the military. These grim scenes have increasingly become the norm in Mexico, a country gripped by violence stemming from its war on drugs which since 2006 has seen more than 200,000 murders and 30,000 people g ... more
Daily Newsletters - Space - Military - Environment - Energy

Top general not consulted before Trump's Syria pull-out decision
Washington (AFP) Feb 5, 2019
The top general overseeing US military actions in the Middle East said Tuesday that President Donald Trump did not consult him ahead of the decision to pull US troops from Syria. Trump last month claimed the Islamic State group had been defeated in Syria and said all US troops were "coming back now." The president had long questioned America's multiple and seemingly interminable wars, bu ... more
+ Germany ups investment in NATO battalion in Lithuania
+ US spies elevate China rivalry to war of ideologies
+ NATO door opens for Macedonia
+ Air Force sends two B-52 bombers over East China Sea
+ Trump deepens public row with his 'naive' intelligence services
+ NATO chief says Trump's funding gripes having 'real results'
+ Army preps troop, equipment rotation in Europe for Atlantic Resolve
New squeezing record at GEO600 gravitational-wave detector
Hannover, Germany (SPX) Dec 17, 2018
The detection of Einstein's gravitational waves relies on highly precise laser measurements of small length changes. The kilometer-size detectors of the international network (GEO600, LIGO, Virgo) are so sensitive that they are fundamentally limited by tiny quantum mechanical effects. These cause a background noise which overlaps with gravitational-wave signals. This noise is always presen ... more
+ Mini-detectors for the gigantic
+ Portsmouth researchers make vital contribution to new gravitational wave discoveries
+ Four New Gravitational Wave Detections Announced
+ Universal laws in impact dynamics of dust agglomerates under microgravity conditions
+ Griffith precision measurement takes it to the limit
+ Gravitational waves could shed light on dark matter
+ In five -10 years, gravitational waves could accurately measure universe's expansion


Merkel says more security needed on Chinese firms
Tokyo (AFP) Feb 5, 2019
German Chancellor Angela Merkel called on Tuesday for safeguards to ensure Chinese firms do not hand over private data to Beijing amid mounting security concerns over equipment made by telecoms giant Huawei. Speaking at Keio University in Tokyo, Merkel said there was a "big debate" in Germany about using Huawei equipment, with growing calls to prevent the firm building 5G networks around the ... more
+ Don't let Huawei help set up 5G, US warns EU nations
+ Norway intelligence service issues Huawei warning
+ Czechs exclude Huawei from tender amid security concerns
+ Information wars endanger civilization, say 'Doomsday' experts
+ China condemns US 'smear' in Huawei case as tensions boil
+ Huawei charm offensive runs into buzzsaw of US charges
+ Huawei ban blamed as new Australian mobile network axed
Prince of IS-ravaged Yazidis buried in Iraq
Sheikhan, Irak (AFP) Feb 5, 2019
Some prayed while others cried as a dozen men surrounded by a sea of mourners carefully lowered the coffin of the Yazidi spiritual leader into a freshly dug grave on Tuesday. Prince Tahseen Said Ali, the longtime head of the world's Yazidi minority brutally targeted by Islamic State group jihadists in Iraq, died in Germany at the end of January aged 85. For many he was a "symbol" and a " ... more
+ Photographers in Iraq's Mosul snap dark days, bright futures
+ Yazidis bid last farewell to spiritual leader in Iraq
+ Trump comments spark Iraqi demands for US exit
+ Assassination of Iraqi writer provokes indignation
+ Four police dead in back-to-back bomb blasts in Iraq
+ King of Spain visits Iraq, first in 40 years: diplomat
+ Its treasures ruined by IS, Mosul museum hosts modern art
Daily Newsletters - Space - Military - Environment - Energy

Kabul must be involved in peace talks: US general
Washington (AFP) Feb 5, 2019
The Afghan government must be involved in talks between the US and the Taliban if a push for a peace deal is to be successful, a top general said Tuesday. A months-long drive by the US to engage with the Taliban has ostensibly been aimed at convincing them to talk to Kabul, but the Taliban see President Ashraf Ghani and his government as US-backed puppets. "Ultimately, we need to get to ... more
+ Protest in New York over fate of China's Uighurs
+ Rights groups urge UN to probe China crackdown in Xinjiang
+ Erik Prince-linked FSG signs preliminary Xinjiang training deal
+ Trump pushes withdrawal from 'endless' Afghanistan, Syria wars
+ Taliban to meet Afghan opposition in Moscow: official
+ Baghdad to summon Turkey envoy over death of Kurdish protester
+ Kabul control slips in Afghanistan amid US talks with Taliban
China not 'walking the walk' on methane emissions
Washington DC (SPX) Jan 30, 2019
Chinese regulations on coal mining have not curbed the nation's growing methane emissions over the past five years as intended, says new research from a team led by Carnegie's Scot Miller and Anna Michalak. Their findings are published in Nature Communications. China is the world's largest producer and consumer of coal, which is used to generate more than 70 percent of its electricity. It ... more
+ Torn over coal, German village struggles to heal
+ Germany's RWE warns of 'significant' job losses over coal exit
+ China failing to curb methane emissions, study finds
+ Germany should phase out coal use by 2038: commission
+ Death toll in China mining accident rises to 21
+ Trump officially taps former coal lobbyist to lead EPA
+ Spain to see exploitation end in all coal mines


Insecticides blamed for honeybee deaths in California almond groves
Washington (UPI) Feb 5, 2019
Researchers have identified a culprit for the dramatic honey bee die offs among the almond groves of California's Central Valley. Experiments showed a mixture of insecticide and fungicides, harmless in isolation, combined to form a deadly chemical cocktail. "Fungicides, often needed for crop protection, are routinely used during almond bloom, but in many cases growers were also a ... more
+ Mites, not a virus, are the main threat to bees, study finds
+ 'Radical rethink' needed to tackle obesity, hunger, climate: report
+ Weather at key growth stages predicts Midwest corn yield and grain quality
+ Cattle urine's planet-warming power can be curtailed with land restoration
+ Plants can smell, now researchers know how
+ Farm manure boosts greenhouse gas emissions even in winter
+ Ecological benefits of part-night lighting revealed
Frequent Visitor: Asteroid Larger Than Statue of Liberty Approaches Earth
Pasadena CA (JPL) Feb 06, 2019
What astronomers may describe as an exciting sighting, some may find frightening, as a huge and heavy alien body will come comparatively close to Earth in the early hours of 6 February. Dubbed by NASA Asteroid 2013 RV9, the minor planet is expected to swing by Earth at 6.30am GMT (UTC) on Wednesday. The distance between the asteroid and Earth will constitute around 6,842,740 km, which is a ... more
+ Ancient asteroid impacts played a role in creation of Earth's future continents
+ Simulating meteorite impacts in the lab
+ ESA plans mission to smallest asteroid ever visited
+ Locations on the surface of Ryugu have been named
+ Japanese company seeks to pioneer artificial meteor showers
+ Luxembourg and Belgium join forces to develop space resources
+ Lucy has 1000 days to launch day
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