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Posted Apr 22, 2008 at 03:38AM by David T.
Listed in:
Science
Tags:
Oregon,
Pacific Ocean
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Do you know of any kid who has dipped his feet in the Pacific Ocean lately? It may be a strange question to ask, but a study indicates that 73% of kids these days have never done so. Even curious is the fact that video games and other media have again taken flak for kids' being supposedly out of touch with nature. More on this topic in the full article after the jump. |
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Posted Apr 06, 2008 at 02:43PM by Glen D.
Listed in:
Science
Tags:
Denmark,
Oregon,
organic,
DNA,
anthropology,
University of Copenhagen
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The average person will probably have nothing in mind about his own solid waste except to get rid of it by flushing it. Thank goodness they didn't have johns 14,000 years ago or we might have less clues about our ancestors. Recently discovered in Oregon is the oldest native American DNA, and it's all because someone's feces lasted so long. Full story after the jump. |
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Posted Mar 20, 2008 at 02:34PM by Glen D.
Listed in:
Science
Tags:
Oregon
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The Federal government has given permission to Washington state and Oregon to issue death sentences to a common killer: Sea lions. While they may seem cute, feeding frenzies orchestrated by these marine mammals are contributing heavily to the dwindling population of migratory Pacific Northwestern salmon. Find out more in the full article up ahead. |
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Posted Jan 12, 2008 at 12:55PM by Isaac C.
Listed in:
Science
Tags:
Manhattan,
New York,
Oregon,
DNA
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Cloning has received its fair share of controversy and glowing cats, but it does have its advantages. One of these advantages is the ability to preserve. That is the idea behind New York City's project to clone "historical" trees from Central Park. Details in the full article. |
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Posted Nov 13, 2007 at 05:10AM by David T.
Listed in:
Science
Tags:
Oregon,
Shoukhrat Mitalipov
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First it was a sheep; now it's a monkey. Thanks to a technical
breakthrough pioneered by Dr. Shoukhrat Mitalipov, a Russian-born
scientist at the Oregon National Primate Research Centre in Beaverton, scientists have been able to clone dozens of monkey embryos from adult
monkeys.More monkey business after the jump! |
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Posted Sep 07, 2007 at 09:26PM by Isaac C.
Listed in:
PlayStation 3
Tags:
Sony,
Oregon,
CNN
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Remember little Matty Lovo Jr. who saved himself and his dad last month when he took control of a runaway truck? You know, the little boy hero who asked for a PlayStation 3 live on CNN after the incident. Well, eventually Sony got wind of the 9-year-old's story and decided to give him one.Matty's dad, Matthew Lovo Sr., was given a lot of offers from folks who wanted to pitch in and give the boy his PS3 but declined while thanking the community. Eventually though, Sony offered to give a console as a gift, and Lovo Sr. agreed. Matty Jr. was given the console on KGW in Oregon last Wednesday. Kids may say the darndest things, but sometimes it just pays off. Big time. |
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Posted Aug 10, 2007 at 05:53PM by Gino D.
Listed in:
PlayStation 3
Tags:
Oregon,
CNN
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In Portland, Oregon, a nine year old finds himself in the most unusual role of playing the hero - and this time, it's no game. Little tyke Matty Lovo Jr. was able to take control of a runaway truck when his father, Matt Lovo, conked out cold on the wheel. We're talking a 100,000 pound truck carrying lumber down the road here - definitely not your everyday thing that a nine year old would find himself driving, if at all. The story goes that Matt had just gone unconscious, and at first, Matty thought his father was faking it. So, he went behind the wheel and tried to wake him up. Upon realizing the danger they were in - at that time, they had already drifted over to the wrong side of the road! - he decided to take matters in his own hands. Heroism is an instinct, even with little kids now. Matty seems to think so. Kyra Phillips of CNN was able to have a chat with the young hero and his father, recounting how the whole ordeal went about. Matty was able to get the truck back onto the right side of the road and managed to use the C.B. radio to call for help. Luckily, another truck driver was able to give Matty some instructions to turn the key and switch off the engine. Soon enough, the truck coasted over to a stop, where someone was finally able to get the father and son out of the truck. Here's the interesting bit, though. Part of CNN's segment of the report has Kyra Phillips interviewing the father and son: Phillips: So, Matty, do you consider yourself a hero? And why not? Kids these days grow up so fast. One day they're saving lives, then next they want PS3s. |
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Posted Jul 27, 2007 at 09:03PM by Isaac C.
Listed in:
Science
Tags:
Immunity,
Oregon
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An article was posted last time about how women are more vulnerable to alcohol than men. Now a new study from Oregon Health and Science University has gathered evidence that suggests that women are also more vulnerable to alcohol withdrawal.Using mice as their subjects, scientists first identified alcohol-related gene pathways and then subjected these mice to a series of alcohol-related tests (lucky mice). We all know that an alcohol is a poison that kills slowly. One of the scarier things it does is cell death in the brain. What the researchers found upon studying the mice was that during withdrawal, the males' genes just clear up while the females experienced cell death. This suggests that females are literally more susceptible to brain damage from alcohol. They also found that during consumption, testosterone rises in females and drops in males. Scientists are now trying to see whether testosterone may play a part in alcohol damage immunity. They aren't ruling out the possibility that the males just experience cell death at a later date though. Ironically, last October a study on rats revealed that alcohol improves memory. |
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Posted Jun 13, 2007 at 02:27PM by Ryan C.
Listed in:
Science
Tags:
Oregon
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If you have a male war veteran in your family, you would do well to know that they're at double the rate of committing suicide than civilians. This alarming fact came from a study recently published in the July issue of the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health.The study itself was written by health researches hailing from both Portland and Oregon universities. Mark Kaplan, lead author and professor in the School of Community Health at Portland State University, revealed his findings: We clearly demonstrated that independent of when they served in the military, veterans were all equally at risk for suicide. What’s more, we showed that veterans were at a greater risk of dying of suicide when compared to the non-veteran population. He also cited impaired functional status or disabilities which the veteran may have been afflicted with during his tour of duty. This definitely adds to the risk of suicide among male veterans. And it's not just broad generalization at work here, either. Instead of relying on Vietnam-era veterans or clinical populations, the researchers actually evaluated a sample of the general population, using a representative data set from 104,026 veterans nationwide. Other conclusions derived from the study are:
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Posted Jun 11, 2007 at 06:02PM by Glen D.
Listed in:
Science
Tags:
Oregon,
DNA,
Armillara
Page 1
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Beneath the land that surrounds Oregon's Blue Mountain lurks a creature of colossal proportions, able to kill entire forests at a whim and making dinosaurs, blue whales and woolly mammoths look like gnats along the way. It's threatening to consume another hapless forest in time and what are we doing about it? Absolutely nothing.The creature described is called Armillaria and it's a huge fungus the size of 1,600 football fields. It's subterranean in nature and feeds off the local vegetation by attaching tentacle-like structures on to roots and draining life away. For almost a decade, it was disputed whether the Armillaria is a group of fungi or one huge creature. With the advent of DNA identification technology, it was discovered that it is, indeed, just a single creature. Scientists have considered eliminating it to preserve forests, but were stumped on how to do it. There's just not enough weed whacker out there to kill it, so a live-and-let-live policy was adopted. The organism is estimated to be some 8,000 years old and is believed to be capable of growing some more. If this happens, fir forests surrounding the area could be in trouble. The good thing is that the humongous fungus grows very slowly, so we might still devise a plot to stop it before a full-blown catastrophe happens. |
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