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Food and climate change: an invisible problem

The next time you're about to bite into a juicy steak, consider the impact your dinner has on global warming.… 1 Comment

Mouse cells can regulate genes from fish

Every cell in your body contains every gene in your genome.… Post the First Comment

Hopkins instrument maps Martian surface composition

In 2007, the National Aeronautic and Space Administration (NASA) began the task of observing our closest planetary neighbor, Mars, with the help of one serious piece of machinery: the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO).… Post the First Comment

Genetic method helps

Proteins are one of the essential building blocks of biological systems, but with as many as 100,000 proteins in the human body alone, isolating, purifying and characterizing them is no small feat.… Post the First Comment


Chicken-sized dinosaur fossil found in Canada

Paleontologists at the University of Calgary in Alberta, Canada, have announced the discovery of a new dinosaur. The 70-million-year-old dinosaur is the smallest ever found in North America. Called Albertonykus borealis, the slender bird-like creature was approximately the size of a chicken and is believed to have fed on wood-burrowing termites. Post a comment

Ancient fossils offer insight into bird evolution

A 50-million-year-old skull of an ancient goose discovered in England is giving new insight into a unique ancient line of birds. Post a comment

Hormone therapy mimics stomach stapling

Scientists at the Hopkins Medical School are one step closer to finding a less invasive alternative to bariatric surgery. Earlier this month, Aravind Arepally and his colleagues successfully suppressed the production of the hunger-inducing hormone, ghrelin, in pigs by damaging the main vessel that carries blood to the top of the stomach, where ghrelin is produced. Post a comment

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