| Tuesday November 18, 2008 |
| Brutal lives of Stone Age Britons 03:32AM EST (BBC Science/Technical) |
| | ... at the local and regional level rather than large-scale warfare involving large sections of the country. "We could also be seeing raiding parties, cattle rustling, somebody suspecting the other tribe across the hill is practising witchcraft," the University of Central Lancashire forensic ... | |
| Monday November 17, 2008 |
| Entertainment | Australia's hope for Luhrmann epic 12:34PM EST (BBC News) |
| | ... and I won't give it away. The film brings together some instantly recognisable Australian talent. Hugh Jackman plays the male lead, a rough-hewn cattle drover. Nicole Kidman plays the object of his desire, a feisty English aristocrat, Lady Sarah Ashley. There are parts for Bryan Brown ... | |
| Sunday November 16, 2008 |
| World | Africa | Rains only add to Ethiopian hardships 12:23PM EST (BBC News) |
| | ... launched a $426m appeal for the 15 million people they say need food aid in the region. Salade's family had little to start with and they lost their cattle in the drought. Then her mother became ill as the rains began and could not breast-feed her. Her father wept as they stood over ... | |
| Wednesday November 12, 2008 |
| That Burger You're Eating Is Mostly Corn 06:18PM EST (Scientific American) |
| | ... plants. That telltale signature persists as the corn travels through the complex system that turns it into feed, which is consumed and processed by cattle to grow tissue. It continues after the animals are slaughtered and the meat is cooked. The result: 93 percent of the tissue that ... | |
| Monday November 10, 2008 |
| The price of our oil addiction - CNN.com 09:38AM EST (CNN) |
| | ... of our transportation is fueled by oil; 90 percent of all goods involve oil in some way; and 95 percent of our food products require oil. (To raise one cow and deliver it to market requires more than 250 gallons of oil.) Globally, the world consumes more than 80 million barrels every ... | |
| Tuesday November 04, 2008 |
| Birds of a Feather: Commercial Producers Play Chicken with Avian Flu: ... 06:15PM EST (Scientific American) |
| Monday November 03, 2008 |
| Earliest known shaman grave site found: study 06:15PM EST (Scientific American) |
| Frozen mice cloned - are woolly mammoths next? 06:15PM EST (Scientific American) |
| Magazine | How dangerous is drum making? 05:36PM EST (BBC News) |
| An Ancient Healer Reborn 05:27PM EST (Science News) |
| Sunday November 02, 2008 |
| China vows to wipe out tainted animal feed 06:14PM EST (Scientific American) |
| Wednesday October 29, 2008 |
| Farm Chemicals Can Indirectly Hammer Frogs 05:40PM EST (Science News) |
| Africa | Profile: General Laurent Nkunda 11:39AM EST (BBC News) |
| Africa | Profile: General Laurent Nkunda 11:37AM EST (BBC News) |
| Saturday October 25, 2008 |
| UK | England | Cumbria | Floods strand hundreds of runners 03:05PM EST (BBC News) |
| Tuesday October 07, 2008 |
| Global financial crisis may help Amazon rainforest 07:04PM EST (Scientific American) |
| Friday September 26, 2008 |
| Let's Get Vertical 06:30PM EST (Science News) |
| Tuesday September 23, 2008 |
| China vows export crackdown amid milk crisis 06:58PM EST (Scientific American) |
| Thursday September 18, 2008 |
| Seedy but Speedy: Fungus Spews Spores at 55 Mph 06:57PM EST (Scientific American) |
| FDA issues rules for genetically modified animals 06:57PM EST (Scientific American) |
| Tuesday September 16, 2008 |
| Will Central Africa's Forest Wildlife Be Eaten into Extinction?: ... 06:56PM EST (Scientific American) |
| Monday September 15, 2008 |
| Fuel's Errand: "Alternative" Fuel Hunt by State 06:56PM EST (Scientific American) |
| Saturday September 13, 2008 |
| Gene mutation underlies some mad cow disease: study 06:56PM EST (Scientific American) |
| Thursday September 11, 2008 |
| Old-Growth Forests Help Combat Climate Change 06:55PM EST (Scientific American) |
| Tuesday September 02, 2008 |
| Clones' offspring may be in U.S. food supply: government: Scientific ... 06:53PM EST (Scientific American) |
| Monday August 25, 2008 |
| Moo North: Cattle and Deer May Sense Earth's Magnetic Field: ... 06:51PM EST (Scientific American) |
| Friday August 22, 2008 |
| FOR KIDS: Yummy Bugs 07:17PM EST (Science News) |
| Monday August 18, 2008 |
| How RFID Tags Could Be Used to Track Unsuspecting People: Scientific ... 06:50PM EST (Scientific American) |
| Thursday August 14, 2008 |
| Saharan Surprise 07:05PM EST (Science News) |
| Sunday August 03, 2008 |
| Bruised South Korean government takes on "infodemics" 06:29PM EST (Scientific American) |
| Tuesday July 15, 2008 |
| USDA Alerts Consumers of Markets Stocking Bad Meat 06:16PM EST (Scientific American) |
| Monday July 14, 2008 |
| The Two Faces Of Prion Proteins 07:22PM EST (Science News) |
| Saturday June 07, 2008 |
| News Bytes of the Week--Imagine there's no evolution: Yoko says oh no ... 06:02PM EST (Scientific American) |
| Thursday May 01, 2008 |
| Itâs The Meat Not The Miles 04:11PM EST (Science News) |
| Monday April 28, 2008 |
| A Portrait Of The Brain By Adam Zeman 11:54AM EST (Science News) |
| Sunday April 13, 2008 |
| Growth in ringback tones energizes mobile market 05:12PM EST (Scientific American) |
| Bangladesh introduces improved stove to save fuel 05:12PM EST (Scientific American) |
| Monday April 07, 2008 |
| No quick end for cloning product moratorium: USDA 05:09PM EST (Scientific American) |
| Wednesday April 02, 2008 |
| Scientists make human-cow embryos 05:08PM EST (Scientific American) |
| Friday February 29, 2008 |
| Robotics Prof Sees Threat in Military Robots 03:27PM EST (Scientific American) |
| Sunday February 24, 2008 |
| How long can humans stay awake? 03:25PM EST (Scientific American) |
| Wednesday January 16, 2008 |
| EU urges governments to order bluetongue vaccine 03:01PM EST (Scientific American) |
| Friday January 11, 2008 |
| Cloned meat and dairy products step closer to EU supermarkets: ... 03:00PM EST (Scientific American) |
| Tuesday December 18, 2007 |
| Canada says no risks from new mad cow case 02:28PM EST (Scientific American) |