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Science News - The New York Times
The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20090408181428/http://www.nytimes.com/pages/science/index.html

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Science

With offshore oil drilling platforms in the distance, children played in the surf early this year in Santa Barbara County, Calif.
Michael A. Mariant/Associated Press

With offshore oil drilling platforms in the distance, children played in the surf early this year in Santa Barbara County, Calif.

Six months after it dropped its opposition to offshore oil drilling, the Santa Barbara County Board of Supervisors reverted to its traditional stance against drilling in federal waters.

Space Tourist Returns From Space Station

A Russian spacecraft carrying a crew of three, including the U.S. billionaire Charles Simonyi, landed safely in Kazakhstan on Wednesday, officials said.

Oil Giants Loath to Follow Obama’s Green Lead

The Obama administration wants to spend $150 billion to diversify energy sources by encouraging more renewable sources, but oil giants are hanging back.

  • Times Topics: Oil and Gasoline
Science Times: April 7, 2009
Findings

Public Policy That Makes Test Subjects of Us All

The effects of reducing salt intake are unclear, but that won’t stop New York City.

Mind

When All You Have Left Is Your Pride

Keeping up appearances, psychologists say, is about much more than appearance.

  • Comment Q&A;: 'Questioning Pride.' Post your questions here.

Answering Baseball’s What-Ifs

For the science of baseball strategy, one game teaches precious little but a thousand seasons can take a while. Thank goodness for quad-core processors.

From Developing Limbs, Insights That May Explain Much Else

Future treatments for injuries and birth defects may be possible.

DNA Test Outperforms Pap Smear

Gynecologists hope that a new test for cervical cancer will replace Pap smears in countries that can afford it.

Scratching Relieves Itch by Quieting Nerve Cells

The reason scratching helps relieve an itch has long been a biological mystery, but a new study may have some clues as to how it works.

House Dust Yields Clue to Asthma: Roaches

Dust bunnies from real homes suggest a cause for allergies in poor children.

Cases

A Roller Coaster to Acceptance of a Son’s Autism

When told their son’s autism was “untreatable,” two parents stepped into action.

Radiologist Adds a Human Touch: Photos

A doctor makes a personal connection to scans and X-rays.

Multimedia

Interactive: Quiz: Test Your Estimation Abilities

How many times a year does the average American teenager say the word “like”?

Slide Show: Inside Art

An artist-turned-medical-student is using CT scanners to peer into the meat and guts of cultural icons like the Big Mac, Barbie and the iPhone.

Audio Slide Show: A Slow Comeback for the Right Whale

Cornelia Dean describes how conservationists are working to sustain and increase North Atlantic right whale populations.

Audio Slide Show: Inside Ward 2

Twenty women and girls suffering from fistulas, an internal injury from prolonged labor, went to Dodoma, Tanzania, for surgery to try to repair the damage.

Interactive Feature: On Darwin’s ‘On the Origin of Species’

Evolutionary biologists and historians of science comment on Charles Darwin’s “On the Origin of Species.”

Observatory

Experiment Shows Molecules Can Walk, but Can They Dance?

In efforts to create motors and other machines on the scale of molecules the devices have to walk before they can run.

Q & A

Of Time and the River

Why do bubbles form in a glass of water? Is “old” water still safe to drink?

Brain Power

Brain Researchers Open Door to Editing Memory

An influx of money and talent into neuroscience has led to an experimental drug that could block certain memories.

Podcast: Science Times

Subscribe

David Corcoran, a science editor, explores some of the topics addressed in this week’s Science Times.

Columns
Personal Health

Flying Healthy, From Takeoff Past Landing

Tips to help you avoid getting sick on your next flight.

Really?

The Claim: Birth Complications Are More Likely With Boys.

Is the old wives’ tale true? Are boys more likely to cause a difficult pregnancy?

Visual Science

A New Look at Race and Natural Selection

A team of geneticists has identified many fingerprints of natural selection in the human genome.

Talk to the Newsroom:
Deputy Science Editor for Health

Barbara Strauch, who coordinates health coverage, answered questions.