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Archive by category: Quotes of the day

November 20, 2009

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Quotes of the day - November 20, 2009

“Our engineers are exploring how we might contribute to this effort by developing a global forest platform that would enable anyone in the world, including tropical nations, to monitor deforestation and draw attention to it.”
Philipp Schindler, of Google UK, says his company may build a programme to allow internet users to identify illegal logging via satellite photos (Times).

“From the beginning, this case was marked by a fundamentally unfair and unconstitutional trial plan that allowed the jury to rely on findings by a prior jury.”
Murray Garnick, associate general counsel for Altria, says the company will appeal a $300 million damages award against its Philip Morris company to a former smoker in Florida who suffers from emphysema (Bloomberg).

“No new safety issue has been identified from reports issued to date.”
Marie-Paule Kieny, of the World Health Organisation, says H1N1 vaccination is not to blame for 41 deaths (Reuters).

“Dismantling this institution, which is a huge economic driver for the state, is a stupendously stupid thing to do, but that’s the path the Legislature has embarked on.”
Richard Mathies, dean of the College of Chemistry at Berkeley, takes issue with cuts to California’s education budget (LA Times).

November 19, 2009

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Quotes of the day - November 19, 2009

“I’m here in solidarity with people across the state of California that are being subjugated to these outrageous fee increases. It’s completely unjust to put the burden on students.”
Kyle Tramberly, a junior at UC San Diego, is one of those protesting over fee increases in the UC system. Earlier today some students stormed UCLA’s Campbell Hall and blockaded themselves inside (LA Times).

“We knew about SuperCroc, the titan of all crocs, but we didn't have quite an idea of what existed in the shadows of the Cretaceous. We have crocs here [in what was once Gondwana] that ate plants and galloped and ate dinosaurs and were flat as a board.”
Paul Sereno, of the University of Chicago and National Geographic, has unearthed some terrifying prehistoric crocodiles.

“We have no time to waste here. The ecological services must be restored.”
Christian Lambrechts, a United Nations environment programme expert seconded to the Kenyan government, comments on the eviction of thousands of people who were squatting in the country’s Mau forest (Guardian).

November 18, 2009

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Quotes of the day - November 18, 2009

“This is a beautiful study. Some people have been saying this for a long time, but no one has shown this in such a systematic way.”
Stephan Schuster, of Pennsylvania State University in State College, comments on a paper showing penguins are evolving faster than previously thought (Wired).

“I had to send it to about four old flames. They all responded with sarcasm: Yeah yeah, thank you very much.”
Physicist Leon Lederman discusses sending a form letter to well-wishers congratulating him on his 1988 Nobel Prize (Symmetry Breaking).

“We thank the CDC for restoring their dignity and reproductive justice.”
Silvia Henriquez of the National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health, congratulates the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for rescinding the demand that female immigrants are vaccinated against HPV to get a green card (AP).

“Mayor feels couch move as 6.5 magnitude earthquake hits B.C.’s north coast”
The Canadian Press reports the impact of a recent quake.

November 11, 2009

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Quotes of the day - November 11, 2009

“The University Library of the University of California, Santa Cruz, seeks an enterprising, creative, and service-oriented archivist … for the Grateful Dead Archive. This is a potential career status position.”
UCSC cements its left-field reputation in a new job advert.

“At first sight, it seems improbable. Munidopsis andamanica is a species only found in the deep sea and yet it eats ‘terrestrial food’.”
Caroline Hoyoux, of the University of Liège, Belgium, has discovered a deep-sea crab that lives on trees (BBC).

“They’re just like any other small cute bird, and then they throw their wings over their back and make this sound that is totally out of this world.”
Kimberly Bostwick, of Cornell, has worked out that the club-winged manakin ‘sings’ by vibrating its feathers (Times).

“The questions of life’s origins and of whether life exists elsewhere in the universe are very suitable and deserve serious consideration.”
Jose Gabriel Funes, astronomer, priest and director of the Vatican Observatory, discusses a conference at the Vatican on astrobiology (AP).

“This new dinosaur is helping us complete and revise our picture of how the truly giant dinosaurs first got going.”
Adam Yates, of Johannesburg’s Wits University, discusses newly discovered, seven-metre-long Aardonyx Celestae (Reuters).

November 09, 2009

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Quotes of the day - November 09, 2009

“Saudi Arabia does not ban anyone because hajj is a religious event.”
Saudi Arabia’s Health Minister Abdullah al-Rabeeah says no one will be banned from entering the country on the hajj pilgrimage due to swine flu (AP).

“I don’t think the court wants to send as draconian a message as the government is asking for. This man’s been destroyed.”
Dorrance Dickens, attorney for former NASA Chief of Staff Courtney Stadd, comments on Stadd’s sentence of three years probation and six months of home confinement after he helped a client gain millions of space agency funding (Space News).

“The status quo with respect to eastern Atlantic and Mediterranean bluefin is neither sustainable nor acceptable. Conservation of this species depends on science-based management and effective compliance with the rules on both sides of the ocean.”
Jane Lubchenco, administrator of the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, urges the meeting of the International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas to enforce an end to overfishing of bluefin tuna.

November 04, 2009

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In Quotes: Road to Copenhagen - November 04, 2009

road to copenhagen.jpgIn December this year, parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) will descend on Copenhagen to wrangle over the details of a new global climate deal — a potential successor to the Kyoto Protocol. See Nature’s Road to Copenhagen special for more coverage.

“Icebergs are melting in the Arctic. In Africa, people become refugees because their environment has been destroyed. We need an agreement on one objective: Global warming must not exceed 2 degrees Celsius.”
German Chancellor Angela Merkel urges Congress to act on climate change during a visit to Washington (CNN).

“All of us agreed that it is imperative for us to redouble our efforts in the weeks between now and the Copenhagen meeting to assure that we create a framework for progress in dealing with potential ecological disaster.”
US President Barack Obama comments after meeting Merkel (AFP).

“None whatsoever.”
James Inhofe, Republican Senator and global warming skeptic, comments on what impact Merkel’s speech might have on the US debate (AFP).

“With the strong leadership of the United States we can indeed make an agreement.”
Jose Manuel Barroso, European Commission President, says a meeting with US President Barack Obama has filled him with confidence (BBC).

November 03, 2009

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Quotes of the day - November 03, 2009

“This is something we work with in South Africa: pathetic broadband. We bring the data ourselves in a standard minibus or car.”
David Buckley, astronomy operations manager at the Southern African Large Telescope, explains that his facility lacks a decent connection to the internet, meaning data has to be taken by car to the South African Astronomical Observatory for processing (Guardian).

“Jane has what we call a boxer’s nose. Her snout bends slightly to the left. It was probably broken and healed back crooked.”
Joe Peterson, of Northern Illinois University, says a Tyrannosaurus rex discovered in Montana in 2001 probably fought with others of her kind while she was still young (press release).

“The government has declared the situation an epidemic, but there is absolutely no need to panic.”
Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko comments as Ukraine closes all its schools as a swine flu prevention measure (Associated Press).

“A small fishing vessel capsized off a lighthouse here on Friday morning, apparently under the weight of giant jellyfish tangled in its net.”
The Mainichi Daily News reports that jellyfish have sunk a 10-ton trawler.

November 02, 2009

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Quotes of the day - November 02, 2009

“I hate whale meat.”
Japan’s Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama says he doesn’t like the meat which proves so controversial for his country (Sankei Shimbun, via AFP).

“The CSIRO is currently maintaining they have the right to ban the written version of this paper from publication by myself as a representative of the organisation and by myself as a private citizen.”
Clive Spash, of Australia’s CSIRO science agency, says his employer is trying to gag him (The Australian).

“The fact that there are so many still outstanding life-threatening problems at this plant indicates that they still have a systemic safety problem.”
Jordan Barab, acting assistant secretary of labour for the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, explains why BP has been hit with a huge fine after allegedly failing to deal with faults unearthed after an explosion at its Texas City refinery four years ago (WSJ).

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In quotes: Road to Copenhagen train calls in at Barcelona - November 02, 2009

road to copenhagen.jpgClimate negotiators are in Barcelona, Spain, this week for the last bout of negotiating prior to the two-week Copenhagen meeting. In December this year, parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) will descend on Copenhagen to wrangle over the details of a new global climate deal — a potential successor to the Kyoto Protocol. See Nature’s Road to Copenhagen special for more coverage.

“The clock has almost ticked down to zero and, as always, time will fly. These last five days are critical on the road to success to Copenhagen. They need to be used wisely.”
Yvo de Boer, executive secretary of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, tells the meeting to make progress (AFP).

“A good deal for the climate is still possible. All that is missing is political will, not least from the US, which under President Obama has fallen far behind the rest of the world, and is threatening to undermine a planet-saving agreement in Copenhagen.”
Damon Moglen, of Greenpeace US, comments after his organisation stormed the town’s Sagrada Familia to unveil banners (AFP).

“I feel it [is] very hard to imagine how the US president can receive the Nobel peace prize on December 10 in Oslo only a few hundred kilometres [from Copenhagen] if he has sent an American delegation to Copenhagen with no offer.”
Connie Hedegaard, Denmark’s environment minister, takes aim at America (Guardian).

“Climate change is a ticking time bomb. Global leaders need to act now to stop the needless deaths of millions of children.”
David Mepham, Save the Children’s policy director, says climate change could kill 250,000 children in 2010 and over 400,000 by 2030 (Daily Telegraph).

October 28, 2009

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Quotes of the day – Swine flu special - October 28, 2009

flu.JPGAll Nature’s pandemic flu coverage is collected on our news special page.

“We think it will get easier to find vaccine in the weeks that come. It is likely also … in the future, we will have significant amounts of vaccine that can’t be used.”
Thomas Frieden, director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, says despite a perceived shortage America may actually end up throwing away some of its swine flu vaccine (Reuters).

“Increased demand during a severe pandemic could exceed the capacities of Internet providers’ access networks for residential users and interfere with teleworkers in the securities market and other sectors, according to a DHS study and providers.”
The US Government Accountability Office says H1N1 could crash the internet (large pdf).

“The situation is under control and not significantly different from the usual seasonal flu situation.”
Viktor Maleyev, deputy chief of the Central Research Institute of Epidemiology in Russia, comments on the country’s first swine flu deaths (LA Times).

“Given the extraordinary precautions being taken across the nation to prevent the spread of the H1N1 influenza, the Archdiocese has instituted a series of steps to be followed for the time being during the celebration of the Mass.”
Jonathan Gaspar, of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston, says the church will stop offering consecrated wine at Communion and urge people to avoid physical contact during Mass to avoid the spread of H1N1 (Boston Globe).

October 27, 2009

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Quotes of the day - October 27, 2009

“We disagree about whaling ... but we do not disagree on the importance of safety at sea.”
Dutch prime minister Jan Peter Balkenende says his country will respond to request from the Japanese government to clamp down on anti-whaling group Sea Shepherd, whose ship sails under his country’s flag (AFP).

“This is not a real crater. It is artificial.”
Uldis Nulle, of the Latvian Environment, Geology and Meteorology Center, rubbishes claims that a meteorite was responsible for a 9 metre crater in Latvia. It seems the real culprits are men with shovels (AP).

“Since getting new powers and funding in 2007, FDA has completely overhauled its system … This is a problem that’s being fixed.”
Joshua Sharfstein, principal deputy commissioner of the US Food and Drug Administration, says his agency is fixing problems with follow up of drugs approved in the absence of hard clinical evidence (NY Times).

October 26, 2009

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Quotes of the day - October 26, 2009

“If you ask can I protect the city, the answer is no. Can I reduce the risk? Yes.”
Robert Van Antwerp, chief of the US Army Corps of Engineers, discusses the risk of future flooding in New Orleans (Guardian).

“What is the point of having marine conservation zones to protect fragile species if there is no barrier to damage caused by fishing?”
Melissa Moore, of the Marine Conservation Society, comments on a possible loophole in UK legislation to establish marine conservation zones that could let fishermen continue to catch inside them (Times).

“It would take other work to try and reconstruct the reef so that you can start the process of building up a reef again. That is something that needs to be looked at in detail, but we can definitely store the species and save them in that way.
Simon Harding, of the Zoological Society of London, comments on plans to create a doomsday vault of corals frozen in liquid nitrogen in case the worst comes to the worst for our reefs (BBC).

October 22, 2009

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Quotes of the day - October 22, 2009

“Mr Revkin, why don’t you just go kill yourself, and help the planet by dying.”
Rush Limbaugh makes a rather unpleasant suggestion to New York Times environment writer Andrew Revkin (Media Matters).

“This might be funny, in a sad way, if it weren’t for the fact that my mailbox is already heaped with hate mail. And of course there’s the reality that explosive population growth in certain places, particularly sub-Saharan Africa, could be blunted without a single draconian measure, many experts say, simply by providing access to family planning for millions of women who already want it, but can’t get it — whether or not someone gets a carbon credit in the process.”
Revkin responds.

“I think there is a big difference between demonstrating effectiveness in a rabbit and being able to do this in a larger animal or a human.”
Tony Rutherford, chairman of the British Fertility Society, comments on new research on womb transplants (BBC).

“The Russians have accumulated something like five billion units. We have a big problem of hot air in the system.”
An unnamed diplomat comments on Russia’s stockpile of carbon credits (Euractiv).

October 21, 2009

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Quotes of the day climate special - October 21, 2009

“In this case the figures mentioned are, in our view, likely to be used by non-expert observers to judge progress in reducing CO2 Emissions within the UK. For reasons including those set out in your correspondence with the Secretary of State we regard the quoted figures (and particularly the percentage change) as unsatisfactory in the context of that use.”
Michael Scholar, chairman of the UK Statistics Authority, takes the government to task over their use of statistics on the reduction of carbon emissions.

“It is not just about the issue of climate change in this particular case. We have had a huge number of complaints about the science but also whether the ad itself is scary for children.”
The UK’s Advertising Standards Authority says it is investigating a government advert designed to promote awareness of climate change. (BBC, for more on the ad see: Worst. Climate. Campaign. Ever.)

“Our work suggests that while West Antarctica is still losing significant amounts of ice, the loss appears to be slightly slower than some recent estimates. So the take home message is that Antarctica is contributing to rising sea levels. It is the rate that is unclear.”
Ian Dalziel, of the West Antarctic GPS Network, says new ‘ground truth’ measurements suggest we may have slightly overestimated the rate of ice loss in Antarctica (press release).

“We conclude that, based on these new data, there is no evidence to suggest any correlation between the transit of our solar system through the spiral arms of our Galaxy and the terrestrial climate.”
Researchers writing in the Astrophysical Journal say they have taken down a theory linking climate to spiral arm transit.

October 20, 2009

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Quotes of the day - October 20, 2009

“It is an action we do not take lightly and it’s one we do not take very often. This is a pattern of behaviour that is detrimental to our field and not up to our standards.”
Sean Tipton, a spokesman for the American Society of Reproductive Medicine, explains the decision to expel from the society the doctor who treated ‘Octomum’ Nadya Suleman (LA Times).

“This refinery expansion is clearly going to dump additional pollution on the surrounding communities, and the law requires BP to control it. BP has been playing games with the numbers to try to duck that responsibility, but the jig is up.”
Ann Alexander, senior attorney for the Natural Resources Defense Council, comments on wrangling over a huge oil refinery in the US (Chicago Tribune).

“We found that for older people with minimal experience, performing Internet searches for even a relatively short period of time can change brain activity patterns and enhance function.”
Gary Small, of the Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior at UCLA, has been researching how the internet can change your brain (press release).

“Michael Green has played a leading role in theoretical physics research … since 1993. He is internationally known as a pioneer in string theory which over the last 20 years has become one of the most important and active areas of the field.”
Peter Haynes, Head of the Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics at Cambridge University, explains why Michael Green has been appointed as the new Lucasian professor, replacing Stephen Hawking (press release).

October 19, 2009

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In Quotes: Road to Copenhagen  - October 19, 2009

road to copenhagen.jpgIn December this year, parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) will descend on Copenhagen to wrangle over the details of a new global climate deal — a potential successor to the Kyoto Protocol. See Nature’s Road to Copenhagen special for more coverage.

“We must frankly face the plain fact that our negotiators are not getting to agreement quickly enough. So I believe that leaders must engage directly to break the impasse. … We cannot compromise with the catastrophe of unchecked climate change; so we must compromise with one another.”
UK prime minister Gordon Brown tries to chivvy along world leaders in the run up to Copenhagen (Daily Telegraph).

“Canada will undertake efforts to meet our global responsibilities in a way that balances environmental protection and economic prosperity for Canadians, and is comparable to the level of effort of other industrialized countries.”
Sujata Raisinghani, spokeswoman for Environment Minister Jim Prentice, says Canada hopes to set itself up as an environmental leader at the Copenhagen talks (AFP).

“We should come out of Copenhagen with a deal that will ensure that everyone will survive.”
Maldivian President Mohamed Nasheed comments on the negotiations after emerging from the world’s first underwater cabinet meeting, held on the seafloor to highlight the threat of sea level rise (AFP).

“I am 99.9% sure there will be no harmful creatures. I’m sure there won't be any sharks. The nastiest thing would be a moray eel, but we have checked the reef.”
Nasheed again, with some more immediate concerns before his cabinet meeting (BBC).

“Strong progress has been made in the past few weeks, with Japan, for example, announcing that it will cut its emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases by 25% by 2020 relative to levels in 1990. But there are still major obstacles and some doubt whether a strong global deal can be hammered out in time for the United Nations’s conference on climate change in Copenhagen, now just seven weeks away.”
Nicholas Stern, author of the Stern Review, writes in the Observer.

October 16, 2009

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Quotes of the day - October 16, 2009

“These big acquisitions don’t do a thing for research. I don’t think anyone should be fooled into thinking these big acquisitions have anything to do with innovation or increased research and development capacity.”
Kenneth Kaitin, director of the Tufts Center for the Study of Drug Development, comments on suggestions that Pfizer could cut its research spend by up to $3 billion after merging with Wyeth (Bloomberg).

“At the input end, we need to figure out how the tongue knows what it’s tasting – what are the basic tastes, how are the cells organized, and what are the encoding properties for taste and flavour. At the other end, we need to understand how the cortex takes information from our peripheral senses and transforms it into a percept, an internal representation of the outside world.”
Charles Zuker, of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, has just published a paper explaining how we taste carbonation in drinks (press release).

“Even a small amount of exposure to second-hand smoke can increase in blood clotting, constrict blood vessels and can cause a heart attack. Short-term exposure can make a big difference.”
Neal Benowitz is a researcher at the University of California, San Francisco and a member of a panel from the Institute of Medicine which has just issued a report calling for smoking bans in all restaurants, offices and public buildings (NY Times).

“Although febrile reactions significantly decreased, prophylactic administration of antipyretic drugs at the time of vaccination should not be routinely recommended since antibody responses to several vaccine antigens were reduced.”
Researchers writing in the Lancet say that the children should not be given paracetamol to control fever after vaccinations as the drug may reduce the effectiveness of the vaccine.

October 14, 2009

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Quotes of the day - October 14, 2009

“I came back from England last year and, man, they had me fed up with this stuff.”
Apolinario Chile Pixtun, a Mayan Indian elder, says there is no truth to rumours that the Mayan calendar predicts an apocalypse on 21 December, 2012 (AP).

“Once hospitals have made that multimillion dollar commitment of buying a robot, they want to market it. Patients intuitively perceive minimally-invasive procedures to be better because of the new technology and the wow factor that goes into it.’’
Jim Hu, a surgeon at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in the US, comments on his study suggesting that robot-assisted prostate cancer surgery might produce worse outcomes than traditional surgery (Boston Globe).

“Look at all the paper and trees, he said, that could have been saved if people had not had to write or type out those slashes on paper over the years — not to mention the human labor and time spent typing those two keystrokes countless millions of times in browser address boxes.”
The New York Times notes that Tim Berners-Lee wishes he’d left the // out of web addresses.

“It must be our prediction that all Higgs producing machines shall have bad luck.”
Holger Bech Nielsen, of the Niels Bohr Institute in Copenhagen, outlines the intriguing theory that the LHC is being sabotaged by a time travelling Higgs Boson (NY Times).

October 13, 2009

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Quotes of the day - October 13, 2009

“The availability of personalised bone grafts engineered from the patient’s own stem cells would revolutionise the way we currently treat these defects.”
Gordana Vunjak-Novakovic, of Columbia University, comments on what her team's creation of a new bone from stem cells might mean for people suffering from joint problems (BBC).

“Why should the tobacco company be mucking around in private thoughts? They can see it when it is finished.”
Robert Proctor, history of science professor at Stanford University, explains why the R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company shouldn’t get to see his unfinished book in order to cross examine him as a witness against them in a law suit (The Chronicle of Higher Ed).

“Because they run so fast they create a bubble as their feet hit the water and then they push off from this bubble before it bursts.”
Simon Blakeney, BBC television producer, has been filming the ‘Jesus lizards’ that run on water (film on BBC).

October 12, 2009

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Quotes of the day - October 12, 2009

“I think it’s wonderful.”
US Energy Secretary Steven Chu praises companies that have left the US Chamber of Commerce in protest at the chamber’s stance on climate change (Reuters, for back story see: Chamber of Commerce defends climate stance).

“Of course it’s sad that a key person in the climate negotiations has chosen to resign his position. However, it is a purely administrative matter which I therefore do not have any comments to.”
Connie Hedegaard, Denmark’s Minister for Climate and Energy and incoming president of the Conference of Parties 15 climate conference, comments on the resignation of Denmark’s chief climate negotiator (DR via COP15 blog).

“If you come down from four to three boats then you have to be sure that each of the three submarines is ‘gold-plated’ and can never suffer a serious breakdown In the end, that may not reduce costs very much and may even increase them.”
An unnamed Whitehall official comments on suggestions that the UK may reduce the number of nuclear missile submarines and nuclear warheads it owns or is planning to build by 25% (Financial Times).

“We can’t say anything right now. The picture would be clear after the scientists' statements are recorded.”
Manohar Verma, a police superintendent in Gwalior, India, refuses to comment on allegations that two scientists at the Defence Research and Development Establishment tried to kill a colleague in a ritual human sacrifice (Times of India).

October 07, 2009

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Quotes of the day - October 07, 2009

“According to the researchers’ preliminary inspections, the footprints appear to be the biggest seen so far. The prints are very big, reaching 1.20 to 1.50 metres across, which corresponds to animals exceeding 30 or 40 tonnes in weight and measuring more than 25 metres in length.”
The French National Centre for Scientific Research comments on some huge dinosaur footprints found near Lyon (AFP).

“They are increasingly identified as a stumbling block for the negotiations and it’s up to them to dispel this perception and to show the real leadership we’re expecting from them.”
Fernando Tudela, head of the Mexican delegation to the climate change meeting in Bangkok, says the United States is shaping up as the biggest problem in negotiations (Reuters).

“Thousands of fish have already died. The warning to stay out of the river applies to everyone, including farmers, anglers, dog walkers, boaters and anyone using the river for work or pleasure.”
The UK’s Environment Agency issues a warning after cyanide and sewage leak into the River Trent (Times).

“It seems obvious that it makes sense from a self-interested point of view to accept the Cryonic Wager. If you’re wrong, you’ve wasted a bit of money but you won’t ever be able to regret it. If you’re right, you will certainly live longer, and might well live forever.”
Bioethicist David Shaw, of the University of Glasgow, applies a modified version of Pascal’s Wager to the issue of cryogenic suspension (Bioethics).

October 05, 2009

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Quotes of the day - October 05, 2009

“It has become self-evident and actually clear that the intention of the developed countries is to kill off the Kyoto Protocol.”
Lumumba D’Aping, chair of the G77 plus China climate negotiating group, comments on rich nations’ approach to the current climate negotiations (Reuters).

“As a researcher (or a patient), it’s important to remember that we tend to get what we think we’re going to get. And we need to be aware of that, and be ready to correct for it if we have to.”
Chemist Derek Lowe comments on a new paper in Pain detailing a “particularly neat example” of the ‘nocebo’ effect where those taking placebos in a trial experience some of the side-effects of the real drug.

“The disconnect between what clinicians do and what science has discovered is an unconscionable embarrassment. [There is a] widening gulf between clinical practice and science.”
Walter Mischel, of Columbia University, says psychologists are increasingly out of step with science in their treatment of patients (Newsweek).

“Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz issued here today a royal order relieving Sheikh Dr. Saad bin Nasir bin Abdulaziz Alshithri, member of the Senior Ulema (Islamic Scholars) Commission and the full time member of commission-affiliated Standing Committee of Research and Fatwa, from his job.”
King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia removes a prominent cleric who criticised his university KAUST for allowing researchers of different sex to work together (Saudi Press Agency).

September 28, 2009

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Quotes of the day - September 28, 2009

“From some sources we have learned that it is possible to extend the life of the shuttle beyond 2011. Then the situation would change substantially and it would be possible to work jointly with the Americans, unlike now, when the main burden lies with the Russian side.”
Russian space programme chief Anatoly Perminov says the US may be able to extend the space shuttle programme beyond 2011 in order to service the space station (RIA and Interfax, via Reuters).

“We continue to find new species of fish, primates and mammals, and nowhere else compares to the amount of large mammals that have been discovered in the region. It shows how little we know about species in the region.”
Barney Long, head of the WWF's Asian Species Conservation programme, comments on the discovery of over 160 new species in the Mekong region (CNN).

“Why visit Rome to see ruins or Egypt to see mere piles of stones called pyramids, yet you can go to Bwindi and see your next of kin?”
Uganda’s Minister of Tourism Kahinda Otafiire appeals to tourists to visit and see the country’s gorillas (AP).

September 25, 2009

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Quotes of the day - September 25, 2009

“Palau will declare its territorial waters and extended economic zone to be the first officially recognized sanctuary for sharks. … The purpose of this is to call attention to the world to the killing of sharks for commercial purposes, including to get the fins to make shark fin soups, and then they throw the bodies in the water.”
Palauan President Johnson Toribiong discusses his country’s move to set up the world’s first shark sanctuary (AP).

“Capturing the full energy efficiency potential in the state requires more than simply providing rebates to support the installation of the latest and greatest widget.”
California Public Utilities Commission President Michael R. Peevey comments on the approval of a $3.1 billion energy-efficiency programme (WSJ).

“By verifying the production of element 114, we have removed any doubts about the validity of the Dubna group’s claims. This proves that the most interesting superheavy elements can in fact be made in the laboratory.”
Heino Nitsche, head of the Heavy Element Nuclear and Radiochemistry Group, comments on the creation of element 114 at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, confirming the work of a Russian group.

September 24, 2009

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Quotes of the day - September 24, 2009

“It would only be fair to recognize that no other United States president would have had the courage to say what he said.”
Barack Obama’s recent statements on climate change receive praise from Fidel Castro (AP).

“Once again we have proved that we can do the job precisely. The satellites have been placed in the desired orbit at the exact time.”
G. Madhavan Nair, chairman of the Indian Space Research Organisation, comments on the launch of seven satellites yesterday (AFP).

“The president left on his own accord. There wasn’t a fight.”
Christopher Kennedy, chairman of the board of the University of Illinois, notes the resignation of President B. Joseph White amid an admissions scandal (NY Times).

September 23, 2009

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Quotes of the day - September 23, 2009

"The extensive authorship list and comprehensive acknowledgments would imply that the entire peer group is now supportive of the Rodinia [supercontinent] hypothesis."
Geophysicist John D. Piper of the University of Liverpool, who is not (USA Today).

“I realised if I was playing Superman, they'd put me on wires and fly me.“
Paul Bettany on getting over the intimidation of playing Charles Darwin in the film Creation (Metro).

September 22, 2009

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Quotes of the day - September 22, 2009

“It doesn’t matter to me if a scientist says it may or may not leak. That’s not going to stop it from leaking when push comes to shove.”
Elisa Young, an anti-coal activist living near Mountaineer coal power plant in West Virginia, set to be the first to capture CO2 and bury it on-site (New York Times).

"This place is literally a bird cemetery."
Andre Raine, conservation manager for BirdLife Malta, on an annual illegal hunt of 150 birds of prey and marsh birds on Malta (BBC).

"We have reasons to believe that people, especially children ... will be instantly drawn into interacting with the numerous games and experiments."
Xu Yanhao, curator of Beijing's 102,000 square-metre Science Museum, which contains exhibits on The Beautifulness of Science and The Glory of China and which opened on 20 September (Global Times via Ali Baba).

"An elaborate conjuring trick, designed to make the public think that BA is serious about climate change while it carries on with business as usual."
Greenpeace spokesperson on British Airways' plan for the air travel industry to halve its 2005 emissions by 2050 (BBC).

"Creating devices that integrate with the human body, which is soft and curvilinear and stretchy."
John Rogers, materials scientist at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, on what he's doing with his $500,000 MacArthur Fellowship (Chicago Tribune).

September 21, 2009

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Quotes of the day - September 21, 2009

"In America, electric cars have the same cachet as golf carts."
Jay Leno, on plans to promote electric vehicles by challenging celebrities such as Tom Cruise to race them on Leno's TV show (Wired).

“The Egyptians are really in a mess.”
Galal Amin on Cairo's rubbish-filled streets, since its street-cleaning pigs were slaughtered during the swine flue scare (New York Times).

September 17, 2009

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Quotes of the day - September 17, 2009

"If neg, results can bury."
Bonnie Rossello in a 1997 memo on what GlaxoSmithKline should do with results from studies on whether antidepressant Paxil caused birth defects (Bloomberg).

"Yes, there is a nuanced shift. But this shift is not in our negotiating stand."
India's Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh, conceding that India may declare emissions targets, but would not accept foreign legally binding limits (AFP).

"The quality of research university news releases is quite high. They are rather reliable, but they are completely absent any skepticism or investigative side."
Knight Science Journalism Tracker Charlie Petit on the spread of straight-to-consumer institutional science information services (San Jose Mercury News).

September 16, 2009

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Quotes of the day - September 16, 2009

"The peculiar demands of our granting system have favoured an upper class of skilled scientists who know how to raise money for a big group. They have mastered a glass bead game that rewards not only quality and honesty, but also salesmanship and networking."
Cambridge researcher Peter A. Lawrence, in PLoS Biology, on the costs of funding science in fits and starting grants.

"The higher incidence is mainly because diagnostic techniques and monitoring capability have improved, as well as more and more women are delaying having children."
Anonymous Beijing health officer, quoted in Beijing Daily story on the doubling birth defect rates in the last decade in China.

"The government must find these other two ships."
Silvestro Greco, the head of Calabria's environment agency on the next step in an Italian investigation that revealed a sunken ship containing toxic waste, buried at sea by the Mafia (Al Jazeera).

September 15, 2009

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Quotes of the day - September 15, 2009

"Think about a future where thanks to smart tags we will not have waste anymore," said Mr Ratti. "Everything will be traceable."
Carlo Ratti, of MIT's Trash Track project, which will tag 3,000 pieces of trash from Seattle, New York, and London with GPS trackers and create visualizations so consumers see where their trash ends up (BBC).

"One of the most profound actions I can take personally is to donate my brain to help ensure the safety and welfare of active, retired, and future athletes for decades to come."
American football player Sean Morey of the Arizona Cardinals joins over 150 National Football League players in leaving their brains to science (Fox News).

September 11, 2009

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Quotes of the day - September 11, 2009

“The debt of gratitude he is owed makes it all the more horrifying, therefore, that he was treated so inhumanely. … [W]e’re sorry, you deserved so much better.”
UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown apologises for the mistreatment of mathematician Alan Turing, who was prosectuted for being gay after his work helped break the German Enigma codes in WWII.

“I’m anxious to try green. You get a little bored with blue.”
Paul Karason, who turned blue due to consumption of silver, is seeing the lighter side of his condition (Today).

“The 38-year-old Perth man, who has a weakened immune system, initially responded to the drug but developed a resistant strain of the virus when his illness relapsed.”
The Western Australia Department of Health confirms tamiflu resistant H1N1 has reached the country (Reuters).

“The brains would be ‘freaky observers’, they’d perceive a universe much more chaotic and difficult to define than ours.”
Writer Jim Kakalios has decided to make villains for his comic book out of nothing more than theoretical physics (Bad Astronomy).

September 10, 2009

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Quotes of the day - September 10, 2009

“The ultimate engine of all scientific and technological evolution.”

Alec Jeffreys, the discoverer of DNA fingerprinting, speaking about curiosity driven research and why it must be protected on the 25th anniversary of his blue skies discovery. (Telegraph, Science Business)

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Quotes of the day - September 10, 2009

“The school takes every kids temperature every day.”
Glenn Zhou, a parent of school children in China on the country’s initiative to tackle swine flu. China has said it will vaccinate 65 million people, including school children, by the end of the year. (BBC)

September 03, 2009

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Quotes of the day - September 03, 2009

“This historic settlement will return nearly $1bn to Medicare, Medicaid and other government insurance programmes."
Kathleen Sebelius, secretary of the US Department of Health and Human Services, after Pfizer agreed to pay $2.3 billion to settle allegations brought by federal prosecutors that the company had promoted four of its drugs for unapproved uses. (FT)

“Our per-capita emissions will never exceed the per capita emissions of developed countries.”
Jairam Ramesh, India’s minister of environment and forests, after releasing a report predicting that India’s carbon emissions will triple in the next 20 years. (Dot Earth)

“It is surprising that such a giant galaxy existed when the Universe was only one-sixteenth of its present age, and that it hosted a black hole one billion times more massive than the Sun.”
University of Hawaii astronomer Tomotsugu Goto, who has discovered a giant galaxy surrounding the most distant black hole ever found. The find suggests that both must have formed surprisingly quickly in the early Universe. (press release)

August 25, 2009

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Quotes of the day - August 25, 2009

“This is going to be fairly serious. It’s going to stress every aspect of our health system.”
Harold Varmus, co-chair of the US President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology, comments on his council’s estimates that H1N1 could hospitalize 1.8 million people and kill 90,000 this autumn / winter (Washington Post).

“Between 1999 and 2008, the FDA received 32 reports of serious liver injury in patients taking orlistat. … The FDA’s analysis of these data is ongoing, and no definite association between liver injury and orlistat has been established at this time.”
The US Food and Drug Administration announces it is reviewing data on a possible link between weight loss drug orlistat (Xenical, Alli) and liver damage.

“The prevailing wisdom among people who multitask is that they’re skilled and adept and they handle it really well. We thought maybe these multitaskers are gods, information processing geniuses. Instead they’re lousy at what they’re doing a whole lot of.”
Clifford Nass, of Stanford, comments on his new research showing those who multitask are actually quite bad at multitasking (Bloomberg).

“While many people have been loudly celebrating this year's double commemoration of 200 years since Charles Darwin's birth and 150 years since the publication of On the Origin of Species, another scientific anniversary has crept up relatively quietly, marking an event which arguably changed human thought and the way we see ourselves even more irrevocably.”
The Guardian joins the celebrations for the 400th anniversary of Galileo’s telescope.

August 21, 2009

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Quotes of the day - August 21, 2009

“Shaking hands during an election campaign is key, so this is pretty troubling. It would be bad if I get infected myself and then pass it on to older people with weaker immune systems.”
Democratic Party candidate Denny Tamaki explains why he will not be shaking hands on the campaign trail for Japan’s election (Yomiuri Shimbun, via Reuters).

“We are looking for a device that will help people to pluck the nuts without having to climb; ideally, one that will allow even women and the elderly to harvest the nuts from the ground. Kerala is proud to have broken down caste oppression, but it means young people are just not interested in becoming coconut harvesters these days.”
T. Balakrishnan, the principal secretary for industries in Kerala, explains why his ministry is offering a million rupee prize to anyone who can invent a decent coconut harvesting machine (The Times).

“The brain has different sources of information for almost everything. But all those information sources are kind of relative. They don’t tell you you are moving in the same direction as an hour ago.”
Jan Souman, of the Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics in Tübingen, comments on his research finding that without the Sun or Moon as a guide hikers seem to walk round in circles (NY Times).

August 20, 2009

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Quotes of the day - August 20, 2009

“Plastics in daily use are generally assumed to be quite stable. We found that plastic in the ocean actually decomposes as it is exposed to the rain and sun and other environmental conditions, giving rise to yet another source of global contamination that will continue into the future.”
Katsuhiko Saido, of Nihon University in Chiba, Japan, comments on new research on how plastic waste breaks down at sea (BBC).

“You can just engineer a crime scene. Any biology undergraduate could perform this.”
Dan Frumkin, of Tel Aviv-based company Nucleix, explains the implications of his research on fabrication of DNA evidence (NY Times).

“It was a very effective review. I think we’re ready to go fly.”
Bill Gerstenmaier, NASA’s associate administrator for space operations, explains that the shuttle Discovery has been cleared for take off next Tuesday (AFP).

“The gap between white and black life expectancy narrowed by 0.4 years, from 78.2 years (white population) and 73.2 years (black population) in 2006 to 78.3 years (white population) and 73.7 years (black population) in 2007.”
The latest mortality statistics from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have been released (pdf).

August 19, 2009

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Quotes of the day - August 19, 2009

“Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar is continuing a Bush-era approach of denying protections to species based on an incomplete and selective interpretation of the science. The decision reads like a laundry list of excuses to avoid acting to protect the ashy storm-petrel rather than a solid evaluation of the science.”
Shaye Wolf, of the Center for Biological Diversity, isn’t happy that the US Fish and Wildlife Service has rejected pleas for nine species to be placed on the endangered species list (LA Times).

“There was a problem in the automatic launch sequence that caused the launch to be called off.”
Lee Joo-jin, head of the Korea Aerospace Research Institute, explains why South Korea’s first attempt to launch a satellite was abandoned with 8 minutes on the clock (Xinhua).

“Former CEO Martin Eberhard voluntarily requested that the suit be dropped on Aug. 7, according to his lawyer, Yosef Peretz. Peretz declined to comment further on Tuesday, other than to say that more may become public about the case late in September.”
The San Jose Business Journal reports on the legal case brought by the former head of electric car firm Tesla against the company.

August 17, 2009

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Climate gloom: soundbites from Bonn - August 17, 2009

UN climate talks at Bonn, from 10-14 August, turned out to be a bust on progress towards a meaningful climate treaty at Copenhagen. A doleful selection of quotes gives the flavour of meeting reactions:

“If we don’t have more movement and more consensus than we saw here, we won’t have an agreement.”
Jonathan Pershing, US lead climate negotiator [New York Times].

“The best likely outcome in Copenhagen may be an interim agreement nailing down the basic architecture.”
Elliot Diringer, vice-president of the Pew Center on Global Climate Change in Washington [AFP].

“My fear is that we sign another agreement that doesn’t have any teeth ... we may just get another document that environment ministers nod and say is a great thing, but it doesn’t actually practically achieve much.”
Kevin Conrad, delegate from Papua New Guinea [Bloomberg].

"If we continue at this rate, we're not going to make it. IIt would be incomprehensible if this opportunity were lost.”
Yvo de Boer, executive secretary of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change [AP].

de Boer also pointed out that there were only 15 negotiating days to Copenhagen. "We seem to be afloat on a sea of brackets," he said, referring to the bracketed statements in the negotiating text indicating areas of disagreement [New York Times].

Get your skates on, negotiators! Next up, it's Bangkok from 28 September.

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Quotes of the day - August 17, 2009

“These articles contributed to widespread prescription of hormones to women who did not need them, but who were put at risk of blood clots, breast cancer, and other adverse effects.”
Adriane Fugh-Berman, of Georgetown University Medical Center, comments on the latest pharma industry ghost-writing story (Milwaukee-Wisconsin Journal Sentinel).

“The bottom line is that the authors of the articles in question exercised substantive editorial control over the content of the articles and had the final say, in all respects, over the content - all of which was scientifically accurate.”
Doug Petkus, of Wyeth, puts his side of the argument (Milwaukee-Wisconsin Journal Sentinel).

“We had 11 management levels in research and development and you had to dig down quite a few before you found anyone doing research. We need to reconfigure. We’ve just been tweaking things. We have to change how people think and interact.”
Chris Viehbacher, chief executive of Sanofi-Aventis, explains some of the changes he’s been making (Financial Times, via Pharmagossip).

“Of course there are extra costs. But if we want to preserve Antarctica as pristine as possible, we need to take [on] the costs.”
Fredrik Gröndahl of the Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm, comments on his research highlighting deficiencies in the sewage systems of Antarctic research bases (The Scientist).

August 14, 2009

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Quotes of the day - August 14, 2009

“This is unprecedented in this area of Antarctica. We’ve known that it's been out of balance for some time, but nothing in the natural world is lost at an accelerating exponential rate like this glacier.”
Andrew Shepherd, of Leeds University, comments on his research showing the surface of Pine Island glacier in Antarctica is dropping 16 metres a year (BBC).

“If we can understand this biological pathway, perhaps we can come up with a therapeutic compound. Maybe we can help people sleep less in a safe way.”
Ying-Hui Fu’s research team has identified a gene related to the amount of sleep humans appear to need (Times).

“I don’t know that the program makes a whole lot of environmental sense. There is not a whole lot of justification for the classic car industry to block older vehicles from being traded in.”
Lena Pons, of the Public Citizen group, discusses why cars deemed ‘too old’ cannot be traded in under the cash-for-clunkers programme designed to get the most polluting vehicles off American roads (LA Times).

August 13, 2009

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Quotes of the day - August 13, 2009

“It’s like a message in a bottle cast out into the stars. What’s interesting is not just whether there’s anyone listening, but what the public will say to intelligent life on another planet.”
Wilson da Silva, spokesman for the HelloFromEarth website, explains why the project is enabling people to text messages into space (Daily Telegraph).

“Why do we sometimes bite the insides of our own mouths?”
The latest message on the site.

“Professor Stephen Hawking was a brilliant man and a mediocre student … His work in theoretical physics -- which I will not attempt to explain further here -- has advanced our understanding of the universe.”
US President Barack Obama awards a Medal of Freedom to a very much alive Stephen Hawking.

“Some of Fera’s staff work on long-term wildlife research projects, looking at the relationship between badgers and cattle in the spread of bovine TB. Fera is therefore treating the case seriously, as it may represent infection by Mycobacterium bovis, the organism which causes bovine TB.”
Alison Wilson, head of executive support at the UK’s Food and Environment Research Agency, confirms one of the agency’s scientists may have caught TB from an infected badger (Times).

August 11, 2009

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Quotes of the day - August 11, 2009

"W.C. Fields said: ‘If at first you don’t succeed, try, try, again. Then quit. There’s no use in being a damn fool about it.’ However, as yet I don’t think I am anywhere close to giving up and I don’t think I am behaving like a ‘damn fool’."
Science writer Simon Singh explains why he's continuing the fight in his libel case with the British Chiropractic Association (statement and details at Sense About Science; Nature's previous coverage)

"People such as scientist Stephen Hawking wouldn't have a chance in the UK, where the National Health Service would say the life of this brilliant man, because of his physical handicaps, is essentially worthless"
An editorial in Investor's Business Daily, railing against the UK's health-care system, destroys its own credibility. (Multiple sources - Jay Bookman from the AJC is one. The editorial has now been corrected - by removing the absurd sentence).

August 10, 2009

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Quotes of the day - August 10, 2009

"One of the movie bad-girls, the Baroness — because she’s married to a French baron — forces her physicist husband to activate some nano-bot missiles using a “particle accelerator in France" ... anyway, the scene involves the ninja assassin Storm Shadow slicing up some innocent particle physicists (experimentalists, no doubt)."
Particle physicist grad student Flip Tanedo assesses the role of the Large Hadron Collider in G.I. Joe, the latest big-screen summer blockbuster (US/LHC blogs).

"Suddenly, North America is awash in natural gas."
Rosemary Boulton, president of Canadian company Kitimat LNG, which is building a natural gas export terminal in British Columbia to export gas to Asia (WSJ). A 30 July Nature editorial has more on North America's gas bonanza.


"Today, NASA's investment in advanced concepts and long-term technological solutions to its strategic goals is minimal."

The US National Research Council released a report on Friday recommending that NASA revive its Institute for Advanced Concepts (NIAC), closed in 2007.

August 06, 2009

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Quotes of the day - August 06, 2009

“I can say that as a Chinese, there is no one in the world who hopes more sincerely than we ourselves to see China's emissions peak as early as possible. Because this is in the Chinese national interest, and it is also in the interest of the people of the world.”
Yu Qingtai, China’s special representative for climate change talks, comments on emissions cuts (Financial Times).

“It’s pretty discouraging. It raises serious issues about how widespread this could be.”
Arnold Kriegstein of the University of California, San Francisco, comments on an inquiry opened by the the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis regarding questions over papers published by researchers at its Stem Cell Institute (New Scientist).

“But we can be pretty sure of something: someone in Merck's legal department has had a very bad day of it within the past couple of weeks…”
Chemist Derek Lowe comments on the fact that a patent filed by Merck was released into the world with legal department comments that should have been kept secret (In the Pipeline blog).

August 04, 2009

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Ones that got away - August 04, 2009

"Compared with developed countries, the targets may look mild. But these are utmost, sincere efforts, reflecting Korea's capabilities."
Sang-hyup Kim, secretary to the president for national future and vision at the presidential office in South Korea, comments on his government's decision to choose one of three options for a 2020 carbon emissions target - either slightly above, level with, or below 2005 levels (Reuters India).

"Like grabbing the tail of a tiger, the IPCC has gotten the world’s attention, but now the challenge is to get the tiger to head in the right direction."

Michael MacCracken, a report contributor to the Intergovermental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), adds his views to an article on whether the organisation is losing its Nobel halo (Andy Revkin, New York Times).

"People are going to have to be more careful out here, because it if keeps getting damaged, we're going to lose it."
Laura Thielen, chairwoman of Hawaii's state Board of Land and Natural Resources, justifies its decision to fine tour companies - and to sue the US Navy - when their boats injure coral. One Maui tour company will pay the state more than $400,000 for a sunken boat (AP).

August 03, 2009

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Ones that got away - August 03, 2009

“People who study diet and evolution have pointed out most of the high sugar–containing plants like sugarcane are tropical plants. So in northerly latitudes, you have to be more sensitive to sugar to find calories.”
Dennis Drayna, of US national deafness institute, explains his research showing that those with European relatives are more sensitive to sweet tastes (ScienceNOW).

“It’s astounding. At first, we couldn’t believe the numbers. I think it’s very worrisome.”
Michal Melamed, of the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York, comments on research showing that 7.6 million children and young people in the US are deficient in Vitamin D (Washington Post).

“Bad body odour will affect fellow colleagues in the narrow confines of a space shuttle.”
Shi Bing Bing, a doctor at the 454th Air Force Hospital in Nanjing, explains why one of the rules for would-be Chinese astronauts bans body odour. Others ban bad breath and scars, which “might burst and bleed when spaceships are accelerating” (BBC, Xinhua).

July 31, 2009

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Ones that got away - July 31, 2009

“Have you heard of the ‘Loch Ness Monster’ in Scotland? ‘Nessie,’ for short has been recorded on sonar from a small submarine, described by eyewitnesses, and photographed by others. Nessie appears to be a plesiosaur.”
An excerpt from a Creationist textbook for the International Certificate of Christian Education, which the UK has just granted equivalence to the national standard ‘A-Level’ (TES).

“We are in the midst of a recession and it is vital that people keep their spirits high. This study will help identify the most effective way of putting a smile on someone's face.”
Richard Wiseman, of the University of Hertfordshire, launches an experiment to cheer up the world (Times).

“Have you ever meant to stop by the grocery store on the way home after a bad day at work, and instead just forgot and went straight home? You do the automatic thing instead of doing what you had planned.”
Rui Costa, of the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, comments on his research showing rats revert to habit rather than thinking when they’re stressed (ABC).

July 30, 2009

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Ones that got away - July 30, 2009

“I am driving back from High Wycombe with the cheese now. I may try a bit to see if it has matured at high altitude and then it will probably go into a glass case at our production offices.”
Dom Lane, of Shepton Mallet’s West Country Farmhouse Cheesemakers, tells the BBC about the fate of a cheddar that his group attempted to launch into space.

“The scheme appears a victim of ‘numbyism’ – not under my backyard.”
The Guardian coins a new term for those who object to carbon capture and storage in their neighbourhoods.

“The sky is not falling.”
Sergeant at Arms Terrance Gainer downplays the possible emergence of swine flu at the US Senate (Washington Post).

July 29, 2009

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Ones that got away - July 29, 2009

“The government’s official experts on illegal drugs have been asked to look at whether intelligence-enhancing drugs, such as those used by students to boost performance in exams, should be banned.”
The Guardian reports on the latest in the cognitive enhancers debate in the UK.

“There is no evidence of a difference in nutrient quality between organically and conventionally produced foodstuffs.”
Researchers report on a major meta-analysis of food in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition (related news article from the Times).

“The blood is pale green and rather acrid smelling. I couldn't bring myself to actually taste it fresh but it leaves an acidy, tobacco-like taste on your fingers if you do not wash it off.”
Bill Bateman, of the University of Pretoria in South Africa, has been researching the armoured ground cricket, which defends itself by squirting out toxic blood (BBC).

“It’s an irritant that causes them to try to come up to escape it. It works on other worms, so probably it’ll work on the Palouse.”
Jodi Johnson-Maynard, of the University of Idaho, tells Wired why mustard may help her catch specimens of the giant Palouse earthworm.

“Manufacturing is one of our biggest exports and it is growing, but it will only grow if we keep ahead, using our science based research.”
UK business secretary Lord Mandelson unveils £150m of support for high-tech manufacturing (Daily Mail).

July 23, 2009

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Ones that got away - July 23, 2009

“The premium is not out of whack when you look at the scarcity value of this technology and the appetite for biotech companies right now. It’s a small deal in size but a large deal in terms of the potential scope they gain with this science.”
Reuters talks to journalistic favourite “a source familiar with the deal” about the potential $2.4 billion purchase of Medarex by Bristol-Myers Squibb.

“Procter & Gamble Co. is getting closer to a possible sale of its prescription-drug business, and several parties … are engaged in later-stage discussions, according to people familiar with the matter. The unit could fetch about $3 billion, these people say.”
The Wall Street Journal looks at another possible buy out.

“It is not impossible to build a human brain and we can do it in 10 years.”
Henry Markram, director of the Blue Brain Project, addresses the TED Global conference in Oxford (BBC).

July 22, 2009

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Ones that got away - July 22, 2009

“I thought, being Americans, they might say: ‘Holy chicken s**t look at all that f***ing dust’. I felt that would not be a suitable thing to be quoted in history books until eternity.”
Gary Peach, former employee at Australia’s Tidbinbilla satellite tracking facility, explains what he thought might happen when America landed on the Moon. Peach claims he came up with Armstrong’s “One small step…” lines and passed them on instead (The Age).

“There is good cost control, despite an impact on gross margin from U.S. patent expiries, and a windfall lining up on pandemic antiviral and flu sales which will give Glaxo a strong offset against multiple generic hits in 2009.”
Navid Malik, analyst at Matrix Corporate Capital, looks at GSK’s second-quarter profit, which is up 12 percent (Bloomberg).

“The same regions of the world that lack access to adequate health facilities are, paradoxically, well-served by mobile phone networks. We can take advantage of these mobile networks to bring low-cost, easy-to-use lab equipment out to more remote settings.”
Dan Fletcher, of University of California, Berkeley, explains why he is developing a microscope that attaches to a cellphone for developing world health workers (Canadian Press).

July 21, 2009

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Ones that got away - July 21, 2009

“Copy, the WHC is go for nominal ops.”
Astronaut Robert Thirsk confirms the ‘WHC’ [NASA-speak for ‘toilet’] has been fixed on the International Space Station (Fox News).

“We should be able to design a ‘tailor-made insect’ for ideal biological control using this method.”
Researchers from Nagoya University in Japan report on their work to produce a ‘wingless ladybird’ (Insect Molecular Biology, hat tip: Kyodo News).

“During the past week vacuum leaks have been found in two ‘cold’ sectors of the LHC. … It is now foreseen that the LHC will be closed and ready for beam injection by mid-November.”
Another problem hits the Large Hadron Collider (CERN Bulletin).

July 20, 2009

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Ones that got away - July 20, 2009

“With this project, Portugal and Spain will chart a new atlas of innovation and will make new discoveries.”
Portuguese Prime Minister Jose Socrates announces the opening of a joint Spanish-Portuguese nanotechnology research centre, the first such centre with the status of an international organization, according to Reuters.

“It’s really no different than the pioneering spirit of many in past history, who took the one-way trip across the ocean, or the trip out west across the United States with no intention of ever returning.”
John Olson, NASA’s director of exploration systems integration, tells the Guardian that one-way tickets to space might appear in future.

“When you get a second, if you could put an out-of-service note on the WHC [NASA-speak for ‘toilet’] and advise the crew members that station crew members will have to use the Russian toilet and shuttle crew members on the shuttle until further notice.”
Hal Getzelman tells the international space station that some of their facilities are not working (ABC).

“If there’s one out there, it’s too many for the environment.”
Shawn Heflick, Florida reptile hunter, comments on the state’s great python hunt (Miami Herald).

July 17, 2009

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Ones that got away - July 17, 2009

"We completely understand the public's concern about futuristic robots feeding on the human population, but that is not our mission."
Harry Schoell, CEO of Cyclone Engine, responds[pdf] to a Fox News article (original removed) that suggested a DARPA-sponsored biomass-digesting robot could feed on dead bodies.

"We should have had a historian running around saying 'I don't care if you are ever going to use them - we are going to keep them"
As digitally remastered but still-fuzzy video of the Moon landings is released, Richard Nafzger, a NASA engineer, says that the original tape recordings were not merely lost - they were erased (Reuters).

“Normally, you do a recommendation and then nothing happens for months. This is quite unusual.”
Thorsten Markus, a member of a National Academy of Sciences committee that yesterday recommended spy satellite high-resolution images of Arctic sea ice be released to the public, is pleased that the US Geological Service did just that a few hours later. (Wired).

July 15, 2009

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Ones that got away - July 15, 2009

"It came as a joke, but something significant came out of it."
Scott Barley, a DJ for California-based Highway Radio, who has paid off a $400 fine imposed on NASA thirty years ago when parts of its Skylab space station broke up around Esperance, Western Australia. He was guest-of-honour at anniversary celebrations on 13 July. (Discover)

"After considerable study, we have determined that the potential advantages and benefits of biofuel from algae could be significant."
Emil Jacobs, vice-president of R&D at ExxonMobil, explains why the oil giant has formed an alliance worth up to $600 million with Craig Venter's biotech company, Synthetic Genomics.

"This is an opportunity to transition solid-state laser technology to the warfighter."
Dan Wildt, at Northrop Grumman, which has won a US Navy $98-million contract to install and test a prototype high-power laser on board a ship (Aviation Week).

July 13, 2009

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Ones that got away - July 13, 2009

Hello from Albert Hofmann. I understand from media accounts that you feel LSD helped you creatively in your development of Apple computers and your personal spiritual quest. I'm interested in learning more about how LSD was useful to you.
Steve Jobs gets a letter from Albert Hofmann in 2007, revealed to us now (Huffington Post).

"The cloning of a calf due to its physiology characteristics is very complex and delicate, and the successful cloning of Bonyana is a display of the country’s biotechnology"
Iran claims it has cloned a calf – a first for the Middle East (Tehran Times).


“Currently, the illness can only be reliably diagnosed when symptoms such as memory loss, language breakdown and impaired movement are advanced and only a post-mortem brain tissue examination can bring absolute certainty.”

Bayer’s Alzheimer’s marker florbetaben shows promise in Phase II trials for help with diagnosing the disease.
(Reuters).

July 07, 2009

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Ones that got away - July 07, 2009

“McDonald's is enabling a better environment for future generations by supporting zero-emissions transportation infrastructure.”
McDonald's introduces plug-in car chargers. (Hybrid cars)

"The method by which Social Security assigns numbers has been a matter of public record for years. The suggestion that Mr. Acquisti has cracked a code for predicting an S.S.N. is a dramatic exaggeration.”
The news that social security numbers can be predicted using date and location of birth meets with skepticism. (New York Times)

July 03, 2009

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Ones that got away - July 03, 2009

“We plan to use the sequence to establish a breeding programme for bluefin tuna as most aquaculture farmers presently use wild juveniles. We want to establish a complete aquaculture system that will produce fish that have good strength, are resistant to disease, grow quickly and taste delicious.”
Kazumasa Ikuta, director of research at the Yokohama-based Fisheries Research Agency, says he expects to have sequenced the bluefin tuna genome within two months (Daily Telegraph).

“The dinosaurs have been nicknamed after characters created by poet Banjo Paterson who is said to have written Waltzing Matilda in Winton in 1885.”
Anna Bligh, premier of Queensland, announces the discovery of three new dinosaurs in Australia: Australovenator wintonensis, Diamantinasaurus matildae and Wintonotitan wattsi (Brisbane Times).

“This is a pattern that we hadn’t really recognized before.”
Chris Landsea, atmospheric scientist at the hurricane research division of NOAA in the US, comments on a new paper about El Niño and hurricanes (Science News).

“[We need a] network of people involved in intelligence-gathering to be able to deal swiftly with even the faintest hint of revolution.”
An un-named vice-chancellor at a UK university reveals his paranoia (The Times Higher).

July 01, 2009

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Ones that got away - July 01, 2009

“The agreements will reduce Indonesia’s debt payments to the United States by nearly $30 million over the next eight years. In return, the Government of Indonesia has committed these funds to support grants to protect and restore the country’s tropical forests.”
The US Department of State announces a ‘debt-for-trees’ deal with Indonesia.

“Toyota’s patent-filing strategy has made it far too risky to copy the Prius without Toyota’s blessing.”
Justin Blows, patent attorney at Griffith Hack Patent and Trade Mark Attorneys in Australia, says the car company holds all the cards in the race to develop and sell hybrid cars (WSJ).

“The climate change is happening, it’s coming quicker and earlier than we thought and our way of living is just not sustainable.”
Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt says the European Union should be better, faster and stronger in tackling climate change (BBC).

“We’re to blame — we should have done this earlier but everything was done in a hurry.”
K. Sankar, a Wildlife Institute of India tiger expert, tells the Times that three Bengal tigers placed in an empty reserve in Rajasthan last year could be siblings, meaning inbreeding problems in the long term.

June 29, 2009

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Ones that got away - June 29, 2009

“I was so willing to go to jail for catching water on my roof and watering my garden, but now I’m not a criminal.”
Tom Bartels, a video producer in Colorado, comment on changes that make it legal to catch a raindrop in his state (NY Times).

“We can either heat our homes and have hot baths, or fly but not both.”
Lord Redesdale, vice-chairman of the UK’s all-party parliamentary climate change group, comments on a report on the country’s energy infrastructure from the Royal Society (BBC).

“I know you would love to make a story out of all this, but it’s quite hard work.”
Vivienne Cox, managing director of BP Alternative Energy, denies that her standing down means the company is moving away from alternative energy. She says she wants to spend more time with her family (Guardian).

June 26, 2009

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Ones that got away - June 26, 2009

“A homeless man is on trial in San Mateo County on charges that he smacked a fellow transient in the face with a skateboard as the victim was engaged in a conversation about quantum physics, authorities said Wednesday.”
The San Francisco Chronicle reports on an unfortunate end to a scientific disagreement (hat tip: Bad Astronomy).

“The aeroplane could do it theoretically non-stop - but not the pilot. We should fly at roughly 25 knots and that would make it between 20 and 25 days to go around the world, which is too much for a pilot who has to steer the plane.”
Bertrand Piccard comments on his solar plane, which he hopes to fly around the world (BBC).

“What I am saying is based on what I expect. It is not just in my dreams.”
Andreas Carlgren, Sweden’s environment minister, pledges to push for tough carbon targets as his country prepares to assume the EU presidency (European Voice).

“A system for allowing a shoe wearer to lean forwardly beyond his center of gravity by virtue of wearing a specially designed pair of shoes which will engage with a hitch member movably projectable through a stage surface.”
Michael Jackson’s patent for the ‘method and means for creating anti-gravity illusion’ (European Patent Office).

June 25, 2009

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Ones that got away - June 25, 2009

“We see crop circles in the poppy industry from wallabies that are high.”
Lara Giddings, the attorney general for Tasmania, reveals an unexpected side-effect of growing poppies for medicine (BBC).

“We don’t have any plans to change colours at this time.”
John Huston, of the company that owns Chicago’s iconic Sears Tower, says wind turbines, roof gardens and solar panels are all coming in, but the building will not be painted silver to save energy (AP).

“The large majority of subsidies are spent on vessels fishing stock that are already overfished.”
Marcus Knigge, of Pew Environment Group, says EU fishing subsides have been making fish stocks worse (Guardian).

“Sharks are very vulnerable to over-fishing because they tend to grow and mature slowly and have a small number of young. Demand for shark fins is a driving force in over- fishing of sharks worldwide.”
Sonja Fordham is co-author of a new study painting another depressingly bleak picture of the state of our sharks (Bloomberg).

“I’m hopeful that half or more of the patients that undergo stem cell transplantation may either be cured or have a long-term remission. We think it’s likely that about 50% of people [in the trial] will be cured.”
Chris Hawkey, a gastroenterologist at Nottingham University, reports good news from his clinical trial of a Crohn’s disease treatment (Guardian).

June 23, 2009

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Ones that got away - June 23, 2009

“You, the Iraqi brains, are an important part of driving the path we are on. We are happy to see ... these brains come back again, and I hope their return will not be just for a short time.”
Sadeq al-Rikabi, political advisor to Iraq’s prime minister Nuri al-Maliki, addresses a conference hosted by the Ministry of Science and Technology (Reuters).

“The deadest spot in the ocean.”
Steven D’Hondt describes the South Pacific Gyre, subject of his latest research paper (University of Rhode Island press release).

“So much forest gone, and all in two years, my God. If nothing is done, there'll be no forest left in one to two years.”
Riswan Zen, an analyst for Indonesian conservation group Yayasan Ekosistem Lestari, comments on the destruction of forest in the Tripa region (Independent).

“Extraordinarily well engineered.”
Former head of the Food and Drug Administration, David Kessler, gives his verdict on the Snickers bar (and other elements of modern food) via the New York Times.

June 22, 2009

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Ones that got away - June 22, 2009

“They both have the same objective, which is to find a target or prey or victim. They have to lurk. They want to be efficient in their search.”
D. Kim Rossmo, of Texas State University-San Marcos, has co-authored a paper on shark hunting habits and thinks they have some similarities to serial killers (AP).

“They were still huge animals, I don’t think anyone would dispute that. They might be half as big, but half of something that's really huge is still really huge.”
Geoffrey Birchard, of George Mason University in Virginia, says that while his new paper has revised the sizes of dinosaurs downwards, they’re still not small (LiveScience).

“The negative impacts of overdevelopment of hydropower would destroy the river's diverse aquatic life.”
Conservationists in China protest the proposal of a new dam on the Yangtze River (Wall Street Journal).

“Several dams on branches of the Yellow River in Gansu province are near collapse only one or two years after their construction.”
The China Daily newspaper reports that poor construction procedures, and embezzlement of construction funds are among the factors being blamed.

June 19, 2009

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Ones that got away - June 19, 2009

"What better way than to have real-time information on a huge sign in the middle of Manhattan?"
Kevin Parker, CEO of Deutsche Bank's asset management, explains the awareness-promoting benefits of a 70-foot digital billboard displaying the world's carbon emissions in New York's Madison Square Garden (New York Daily News).

"We won't put our long-term success on the line with short-term budget cuts. That's why our R&D budget is one of the largest in the automotive industry, and we intend to keep it that way." Science|Business reports that German car makers pledge to maintain R&D spending - here quoting Dieter Zetsche, the head of Daimler AG. GM officials agree (Nature).

"This work would face possible plagiarism sanctions in almost any academic environment." Law professor Michael Geist, a "one-man IP wrecking ball" (Ars Technica) finds that a report on the digital economy produced by the (part state-funded) Conference Board of Canada plagiarized a US lobby group report.

June 18, 2009

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Ones that got away - June 18, 2009

“Medical device maker Medtronic Inc. says it paid nearly $800,000 over the past three years to a former Army surgeon accused of fabricating a study that reported positive results for one of the company's key spine products.”
The Wall Street Journal reports on the latest development in the case of Timothy R. Kuklo.

“Today you find cell phone towers in almost every part of Africa. We have never been able to establish weather monitoring on that scale, until now.”
Former UN chief Kofi Annan, now at the Global Humanitarian Forum, announces a plan to put automatic weather stations on phone masts in Africa (BBC).

“We see these subsidies as worthwhile for society, because biogas is a secure supply, and it’s utilizing resources that would have a negative impact on water quality and the climate.”
Jens Bo Holm-Nielsen, of Aalborg University in Denmark, comments on subsidies that are driving up numbers of biogas plants in Europe (Wall Street Journal).

June 16, 2009

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Ones that got away - June 16, 2009

“I still think that anyone who is not a little scared by the changes that WolframAlpha brings hasn’t thought about it enough yet.”
Maria Andersen, a maths teacher at Muskegon Community College, comments on the potential of new search engine WolframAlpha to ‘assist’ pupils with their maths problems (Chronicle of Higher Ed).

“This gives Glaxo instant gratification. It generates sales immediately and allows GSK to expand in emerging markets with a ready made mix of products.”
Navid Malik, analyst at Matrix Corp, comments on GSK’s link up with of Indian generic drug maker Dr Reddy’s (Financial Times).

“I’m absolutely confident we will see the elements of the Humboldt payload eventually deployed on Mars, but probably in a more dedicated circumstance.”
David Southwood, science director of the European Space Agency, comments on the fact that the science instrument package called Humboldt will not go up on the ExoMars mission (BBC).

June 12, 2009

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Ones that got away - June 12, 2009

“We just looked at each other and said, ‘Hey, we’re actually observing again!’”
Peter Backus, manager of observing programmes at the alien hunting SETI Institute, comments on the first results from the Allen Telescope Array (MSNBC).

“There was significant risk that operators and even members of the public could have been harmed if there had not been fortunate and appropriate intervention of a contractor who just happened to be in the right plant area when things went wrong.”
The UK’s Nuclear Installation Inspectorate admits that a nuclear accident was on the cards at the Sizewell A power station in 2007 until a contractor decided to wash some clothes at a launderette serendipitously near a leak (Daily Mail).

“The funny thing is that it is the second smallest known mushroom in this genus and it grows sideways, almost limp.”
Bob Drewes, curator of herpetology at the California Academy of Sciences, is remarkably sanguine about a new species of mushroom being named after his [censored] (SiliconValley.com).

June 11, 2009

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Ones that got away - June 11, 2009

“The weakest target any country has pledged so far”
Kristian Tangen of Point Carbon describes Japan’s new greenhouse gas emissions targets.

"This lawsuit is a fictionalized, inaccurate account of Tesla's early years -- it's twisted and wrong, and we welcome the opportunity to set the record straight.”

Electric car manufacturer Tesla’s CEO Elon Musk’s team hit back over lawsuit filed against him by Tesla founder Martin Eberhard.

"The whole Caribbean has been flattened in the past decade, mainly as a result of climate change."
Nicholas Dulvy from Simon Fraser University, Canada tells us the bad news about the extent of coral reef damage in the Caribbean.


June 04, 2009

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Ones that got away - June 04, 2009

“This cancer drug approval for dogs is an important step forward for veterinary medicine.”
Bernadette Dunham, director of FDA’s center for veterinary medicine, comments on the approval of the first drug specifically made for treating canine cancer (AP).

“You cannot blame fat people for global warming - that is just victimisation - but there is a problem with food policy that has encouraged over-consumption and is spoiling the environment.”
Tim Lobstein, director of policy at the International Association for the Study of Obesity, responds to claims by UK government advisor Jonathan Porritt that “fat is a climate change issue” (Daily Telegraph).

“We would really prefer to do it in space or on Mars but living in the time that we do, this was the closest we could get to zero gravity.”
Noah Fulmore comments on his forthcoming zero gravity wedding on a 'Vomit Comet' (New York Daily News).

June 02, 2009

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Ones that got away - June 02, 2009

"There's a really good contrast between the dark poo stains and the ice."
British Antarctic Survey scientist Phil Trathan explains how spotting penguins from space is best done by following what they leave behind.

"If we were a business you wouldn't worry about nationality, you would just take the best students from wherever they came from the in the world."

Roy Anderson, rector of Imperial College London wants to set up a UK-version of the US's Ivy League of privately funded universities.

June 01, 2009

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Ones that got away - June 01, 2009

"As you walk through this desert you encounter an oasis, which is the inside of your nose"
Researcher Julia Segre, of the National Human Genome Research Institute in Bethesda, Maryland explains her research showing that the human skin hosts a much more diverse set of bacteria than previously thought.

"Canada must develop and implement regulations urgently if we are to have a chance of influencing US decisions."
Enviro-group the Pembina Institute lets its feelings known about Canada's delay in implementing greenhouse gas emissions rules.

“Clients have asked for more flexibility into 2010 and 2011, especially the large clients, who have delayed 30 percent.”

The economic downturn hits windpower company Gamesa.

May 29, 2009

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Ones that got away - May 29, 2009

“This first observational proof of General Relativity sent shockwaves through the scientific establishment.”
Today marks the 90th anniversary of Eddington’s test of Einstein’s famous theory.

“Leaders must lead and Dr. McLeroy has proven conclusively that he is less concerned with leading the board than he is with fighting the battle.”
The Texas Senate on Thursday refused to confirm evolution-unbeliever Don McLeroy as State Board of Education chairman, senator for Austin, Kirk Watson, explains why.

"Yinghuo" means light from firefly in Chinese.

China announces that its Mars probe will be ready for launch in the second half of this year, and choose a name for it.

"We have this big ball, right? And we hold our little targets inside of there, and the light focuses on there, and that's where all the action happens."

The National Ignition Facility finally opens in San Francisco, and Ed Moses, director, explains to Fox News how it works.

May 28, 2009

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Ones that got away - May 28, 2009

Curiosity is an everlasting flame that burns in everyone’s mind
Mars Science Laboratory gets a new name.

"We want fairly urgent action by government because charities are currently weathering the storm that's been caused by the recession"

Research charities face tough times in the financial downturn.

"It went down like a rock"
The world's second largest artificial reef is created when a US warship is sunk off the coast of Florida.

May 27, 2009

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Ones that got away - May 27, 2009

“The sunlight comes down and it actually goes back up – there is no greenhouse effect.”
Steven Chu, the US Secretary of Energy advocates painting roofs white to combat global warming, on a recent meeting in London. (Independent)

"For a vehicle that was designed to travel 1 km over its lifetime, going 16+ km is a pretty substantial accomplishment”
Steve Squyres, PI for the Mars rovers celebrates Opportunity reaching the 10 mile mark (Space.com)

“We can be confident that they held their heads upright.”
Roger Seymour explains his research that shows dinosaurs with long necks used those necks to hold their heads high. (BBC)

May 21, 2009

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Ones that got away - May 21, 2009

“He was a renaissance person. He had such an impact on American science and technology.”
Former University of California San Diego chancellor Robert Dynes comments on first chancellor of UCSD, Herb York, who died on Tuesday (SD Union-Tribune).

“Never before has any ape species been seen treating its own offspring as a consumable resource.”
David Dellatore, of Oxford Brookes University, comments on footage of orang-utans cannibalising the bodies of their deceased babies (BBC).

“Did you guys see my house? I’m trying to figure out if my lawn is getting mowed there.”
US President Barack Obama talks to astronauts aboard the International Space Station (AP).

May 20, 2009

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Ones that got away - May 20, 2009

“It’s disappointing that some have chosen to misrepresent a serious piece of work that aims to support Britain’s poultry industry and ensure that ducks are kept at the high welfare standards which consumers expect.”
A spokesman for the UK’s Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs is unhappy about criticism of a study being portrayed as showing that ‘ducks like water’ (The Herald).

“We are at a turning point in ESA’s human spaceflight activities. Last year, with the launch of the Columbus laboratory and the Jules Verne Automated Transfer Vehicle, ESA became a fully-fledged member of the International Space Station partnership.”
European Space Agency Director General Jean-Jacques Dordain unveils his new astronauts, who are Italian, German, Danish, British and French.

“Antimatter atoms exist, but it is very difficult to make them. It would take us billions of years to produce the amount which is used in the film.”
Rolf-Dieter Heuer, director-general of CERN, says the science in forthcoming movie Angels and Demons is not entirely accurate (Reuters).

May 19, 2009

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Ones that got away - May 19, 2009

“The discovery of so many leaks in so many places over recent years suggests that there is a real problem with the safety culture across the whole nuclear navy.”
John Ainslie, coordinator of the Scottish Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, comments on the latest news of nuclear leaks from British submarines (Guardian).

“Give them a few penguins and let that be an end to it.”
The original offer by Bernhard Blaskiewitz, the director of the Berlin zoo, over demands from Neumünster zoo for a share of the money generated by polar bear Knut. The zoos are now in a court fight (Guardian).

“Walker – who published his findings in Nature in 1981 – had to work with very incomplete skeletons, and his discoveries were not at the time seen as particularly significant. Today, however, they are recognised as among the most important in avian palaeontology.”
From the Daily Telegraph obituary of Cyril Walker, who died 6 May 6 aged 70.

May 18, 2009

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Ones that got away - May 18, 2009

“We found these bones along with a lot of carnivore teeth. So we suspect these carnivores were feeding on the hatchling dinosaurs.”
Tetsuto Miyashita, of the University of Alberta, comments on a new dino find (CanWest News).

“So, first we worked through mice and showed we could do it with mice. And now we've shown that we can actually transfer these genes into monkeys and protect these animals from SIV [simian immunodeficiency virus].”
Philip Johnson, chief scientific officer at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, comments on his new paper in Nature Medicine that is raising HIV vaccine research hopes (Forbes).

“This was never a strategy the defence discussed.”
A spokesperson for the attorney of former astronaut Lisa Nowak says she will not plead insanity if the case against her reaches court (Florida Today).

May 15, 2009

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Ones that got away - May 15, 2009

“We took this very seriously, but the evidence suggests that this is a naturally occurring virus, not a laboratory-derived virus.”
Keiji Fukuda, WHO deputy director general, rejects suggestions that the current H1N1 virus came from a lab (NY Times).

“This is the first evidence that monkeys, like people, have ‘would-have, could-have, should-have’ thoughts.”
Ben Hayden, of Duke University Medical Center, comments on new research published in Science (AFP).

“The long-term impact of West Antarctica is not be [sic] as serious as previously believed. But 17 million people in Bangladesh alone would be displaced by a sea level rise of 1.5 metres.”
Jonathan Bamber, of Bristol University, says melting of Antarctica’s ice sheet won’t be quite as bad as we thought, although it will still be pretty bad (Reuters).

May 14, 2009

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Ones that got away - May 14, 2009

“It turned out the sub-bottom is like an inky sand art. Or a Chinese brush painting of mountains.”
Melissa Clarke, a graphic artist in Brooklyn, describes making art based on scientific measurements of the Hudson River (Columbia University State of the Planet blog).

“In an era when a 5 per cent treatment effect over placebo is considered a perfectly acceptable basis to market multi-billion dollar drugs, why should poor old Mrs Putt have to demonstrate such a high threshold of effectiveness?”
Julie Robotham, of the Knight Science Journalism Tracker, playfully sides with a ‘psychic’ who failed to demonstrate her powers in a recent test.

“The medical profession has to wake up if we're going to save billions of lives. … Being a climatologist and jumping up and down pulling my hair out and saying 'we're all going to die in a horrible way' does not work.”
Climatologist Mark Maslin explains why medical journal the Lancet has got together with medics to call climate change “the biggest global health threat of the 21st Century” (BBC).

May 12, 2009

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Ones that got away - May 12, 2009

“This innovation sounds like it could be really useful to help people learn what they are looking at. It will be interesting to see how much the camera on the phones will be able to pick up.”
Carolin Crawford, of Cambridge University’s institute of astronomy, comments on Google’s latest toy, which will identify stars and planets via users’ mobile phone cameras (Times).

“It was stunning. I don't know if I was surprised or simply blown away by what we came across.”
Kirk Olson, of the University of Massachusetts, has seen a mega-herd of Mongolian gazelles gathering (BBC).

“The blue whale, the biggest animal that has ever inhabited the planet, seems to be on the move in the Pacific Ocean in ways that could reflect the revival of old migratory patterns disrupted by decades of intensive whaling in the 20th century.”
Andrew Revkin, of the New York Times, reports on a new study published in Marine Mammal Research.

“[Carbofuran] can over-stimulate the nervous system, causing nausea, dizziness, confusion and, at very high exposures, respiratory paralysis and death.”
The EPA comments on the pesticide carbofuran, which it has just banned (AP).

May 07, 2009

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Ones that got away - May 07, 2009

“They take a few liberties, but we can forgive them for that.”
James Gillies, a CERN spokesman, comments on forthcoming film ‘Angels & Demons’, which features the particle physics facility (Independent).

“The rapid appearance and sheer scale made us suspect it had accumulated offshore and been transported in.”
Dongyan Liu, a marine biologist at the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Yantai, Shandong, knows where the giant algae bloom that nearly ruined the Olympic sailing in China came from (BBC).

“We have had to throw away almost all of the extant technologies that we've been using for decades.”
Chris German, of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, explains the difficulties faced in constructing Nereus, the first autonomous vehicle to visit the Challenger Deep (BBC).

May 06, 2009

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Ones that got away - May 06, 2009

“With Anaconda, we have an invention that changes conventional thinking and it can help to meet government targets for cutting CO2 by providing renewable wave energy from our coastal waters.”
Paul Auston, chairman Checkmate Seaenergy Ltd, comments on his company’s new wave power machine (BBC).

“The international trade community all agree that this EU ban is illegal.”
Canadian MP Gerry Byrne says Europe’s ban on seal fur from his country is not on (CTV).

“We have recovered a wolf population. The populations are viable, they are in great shape, they have extreme genetic diversity and so the Endangered Species Act did its job to bring wolves back.”
Ed Bangs, wolf recovery coordinator for the US Fish and Wildlife Service in the western state of Montana, comments on the animal’s removal from the list of endangered species in the United States (AFP).

“We generally admit a signal as being something which is newly emerged, like turning on a light bulb. However, if we have a light bulb which has been left turned on continuously, turning it off can be a good signal, too.”
Dong-Hwan Choe, of the University of California, Riverside, comments on his research showing ants produce an ‘I’m still alive’ chemical to stop colleagues throwing their bodies out of the nest (NY Times).

April 30, 2009

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Ones that got away - April 30, 2009

“It was explained to us how it was supposed to work and, I think, from the technical point of view, there is no doubt that this concept would work.”
Christian Bank, designer of manned space systems at EADS-Astrium, comments on rumours that Russia’s next space craft will have rocket powered landings, rather than using a parachute (BBC).

“That’s not our tortoise. We do not have a missing tortoise”
Mary Dixon, a spokeswoman for the group that runs the Bronx Zoo in New York, denies that a large tortoise found wandering the city that never sleeps was a victim of the recent round of animal redundancies at the zoo (NY Times).

“NASA is cautious about exposing the crew to any and all viruses and bacteria in the preflight phase, whether that be swine flu or the common cold. NASA does not have to alter their current posture, because their current posture is already very conservative, as even a routine [common cold] can be problematic on a space mission.”
NASA spokesman Bill Jeffs says all precautions are being taken to prevent swine flu being carried into space (Space.com).

“I felt guilty. They need somebody.”
Retired Air Force General Lester Lyles says he feels bad about pulling out of the race to be next NASA administrator (Dayton Daily News, hat tip: NASA Watch).

April 29, 2009

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Ones that got away - April 29, 2009

“Public officials and civic leaders were inclined to look the other way so long as resurrectionists kept to what one anatomist in 1896 called the ‘prudent line of stealing only the bodies of the poor’.”
John Harley Warner, expert in the history of medicine at Yale University, has co-authored a book on photographs of historic dissections (Insider Higher Ed – slightly gruesome photographs at this link).

“As of now, half of Americans live in an area where they are at risk.”
Norman Edelman, chief medical officer for the American Lung Association, comments on a new report from his group detailing America’s most polluted cities (Forbes).

“My belief is that it’s an older woman or her estate, from the world war two generation which is much more comfortable being anonymous. Women of that generation had no automatic opportunity to go to college even if they came from a family with money, and the role of women in leadership positions was still new and exciting.”
Melissa Berman, of Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisers, speculates about the identity of a mystery donor behind donations to US universities worth $75 million (Guardian).


April 27, 2009

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Ones that got away - April 27, 2009

“The size of the site is huge. ... At the beginning of the excavation, I thought that we may rewrite the history of the area, and I was right.”
Archaeologist Abdul Rahman Al-Ayedi comments on a new archaeological find in Egypt (Reuters).

“I realised I’d have to search every inch of Victoria to find all my letters. So I just settled into the zen of trying to solve my puzzle.”
Rhett Dashwood has constructed an alphabet from pictures on Google Earth (Sydney Morning Herald).

“This star chart was the single most critical navigational device we used while on the moon.”
Buzz Aldrin explains the value of one of the many Moon items up for auction shortly (Guardian).

April 23, 2009

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Ones that got away - April 23, 2009

“It was all quite painless.”
Peter Terren discuses recreating Rodin’s The Thinker with a Tesla coil (The Age).

“It was really a surprise. We did not suspect the spiders could go into a coma.”
Julien Petillon, of the University of Rennes, discovered Wolf Spiders can survive being submerged in water for 16 hours (Discovery / MSNBC).

“The data appears to have been interpreted to support a pre-conceived hypothesis.”
Merck senior researcher Briggs Morrison discusses a paper on Vioxx in an email to colleagues now being discussed in an Australian court (Sydney Morning Herald).

April 22, 2009

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Ones that got away - April 22, 2009

“All of us at NSF join in thanking Greenlandic and Danish authorities for their good work in carrying out the search and rescue operation.”
Karl Erb, director of the National Science Foundation’s Office of Polar Programs, welcomes the rescue of a man from one of its missions who was lost for three days in Greenland (Fox News).

“The body shape is lean and mean and built for speed and they can be hideously fast and aggressive.”
Derek Gow comments on his new herd of rare ‘Nazi cows’, recently introduced into the UK (Times).

“The failure is a significant setback for Roche.”
David Kagi, an analyst at the Swiss brokerage Sarasin, comments to MarketWatch on the news that the value of Roche fell by as much as $10 billion on the back of poor trial results for key drug Avastin.

April 21, 2009

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Ones that got away - April 21, 2009

“This transaction will create a new world-leading specialist dermatology business and re-energise our existing dermatology products.”
Andrew Witty, GSK chief executive, comments on the company’s $3.6bn move for Stiefel Laboratories (Financial Times).

“We still have every intention of pursuing a drilling program in the Beaufort and the Chukchi.”
Pete Slaiby, Shell's Alaskan general manager, says the oil company is determined to drill for oil and gas off Alaska despite a court ruling last week that federal leasing under which it acquired Chukchi Sea exploration rights is illegal (Reuters).

“It’s been a labour of love which presented enormous challenges. It embodies everything I love about this fascinating shark.”
Alastair Gibson, former chief mechanic at Honda's F1 team, comments on his move into art with a £25,000 two-and-a-half metre shark made from carbon fibre and parts from Jenson Button’s 2008 Formula 1 car (Daily Telegraph).

“Irrespective of any reform, a number of fishing fleets are two-three times the size needed to catch the available fish.”
Uta Bellion, director of the Pew Environment Group's EU marine programme, comments on the European Commission’s new green paper on fisheries policy (BBC).

April 20, 2009

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Ones that got away - April 20, 2009

“The Great Wall of China is even greater than once thought.”
AP reports that the Great Wall is even greater than we thought, with an extra 300-odd kilometres newly detected.

“The Saturn V is a great choice to model as it will help this project connect to all Americans as a symbol of not only our national pride, but also our achievements in space engineering.”
Jeff Taylor of Loki Research and Engineering comments on a project that will soon attempt to launch a 10 metre model Saturn V rocket (Rocketry Planet, hat tip: Wired).

“Le Mans is all about pressure and stress, dangerous twists and turns, red-eyed fatigue and rivals trying to cut you up. Who would be better qualified than a politician?”
Geoff Hoon, UK transport secretary, comments on the fact that science minister Lord Drayson will be competing in this year’s 24 hour Le Mans race (Sunday Times).

April 16, 2009

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Ones that got away - April 16, 2009

“What we’ve got to get people used to is the idea that electric cars will become quite normal, quite usual.”
UK transport secretary Geoff Hoon tells the Guardian that incentives of up to £5,000 will be offered to people buying electric cars.

“When US researchers are being actively approached for ideas to use the stimulus money to think big and to hire and retain their researchers, their Canadian counterparts are now scrambling to identify budget cuts for their labs, while worrying about the future of their graduating students.”
In Canada, 2,000 researchers have signed an open letter to the Prime Minister complaining about the recent budget (Globe and Mail).

“Every drop of water requires desalination. One leaf of salad has to be flown eight hours from New Zealand. Cameron would have absorbed so many resources that he was not invited.”
Film director Werner Herzog explains why his two-person crew got to film a documentary in Antarctica and Titanic director James Cameron’s 35-person crew didn’t (Guardian).

“Biomass is a limited resource, and we must make sure it is not wasted on inefficient generators that do not take advantage of the emissions savings to be made from combined heat and power.”
Tony Grayling, head of climate change and sustainable development at the UK’s Environment Agency, comments on a new report suggesting switching to biomass fuel could release more carbon dioxide than fossil fuels (BBC).

“A news agency item, Volcano begins to erupt on Galapagos island, reported that flowing lava could affect "iguanas, wolves and other fauna" on Fernandina island. The surprising reference to wolves probably stemmed from a mistranslation of one of the South American terms for sea lion, lobo marino (sea wolf).”
The Guardian newspaper corrects its invention of a new species of wolf on the Galapagos islands (Regret the Error blog).

April 15, 2009

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Ones that got away - April 15, 2009

“This significant breakthrough gives a means of preserving the valuable genetics of our elite racing and milk producing camels in the future.”
Lulu Skidmore, Scientific Director of the Camel Reproduction Centre in Dubai, says the world’s first cloned camel has arrived (Gulf News).

“We don’t typically name US space station hardware after living people and this is no exception.”
Bill Gerstenmaier, NASA’s associate administrator for space operations, explains why comedian Steven Colbert will not be getting a room on the International Space Station named after him, despite winning a poll (AP).

“In social insects, there are a number of different types of reproduction. But this species has evolved its own unusual mode.”
Anna Himler, of the University of Arizona, is part of a team that discovered the first asexual ants (BBC).

April 14, 2009

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Ones that got away - April 14, 2009

“As academics involved in research on the uses and abuses of state power, it is becoming increasingly apparent that members of staff in universities and colleges are being drawn into a role of policing immigration.”
A group of UK academics are urging a boycott of new student immigration rules (Guardian letters, Guardian article).

“It’s staggering how much power is potentially available in space. And I say ‘potentially’ because a lot remains unknown about the cost and other details.”
Jonathan Marshall, spokesman for Pacific Gas and Electric Co, discusses plans to put solar panels into orbit and ‘beam’ the power down to Earth (SF Chronicle).

“I've never seen a problem that wouldn't be easier to solve with fewer people, or harder, and ultimately impossible, with more.”
UK wildlife broadcaster David Attenborough offers his support to the Optimum Population Trust, which wants fewer people on Earth (BBC).

“We didn't pay 37 million zlotys ($11 million) for the largest elephant house in Europe to have a gay elephant live there.”
Michal Grzes, a councillor in Poznan, Poland, says a new zoo addition is a waste of money, as 'Ninio the gay elephant' will not help the breeding programme (Reuters, Reuters video).

April 08, 2009

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Ones that got away - April 08, 2009

“This may implicate a universal structure of the first genetic codes anywhere.”
Ralph Pudritz, an astrophysicist at McMaster University in Hamilton, comments on new amino acid research that suggests, in Wired’s words, that the “building blocks of life may be more than merely common in the cosmos”.

“It's a matter of survival for us, also. So we are among the most vulnerable countries, economically.”
Mohammad Al Sabban, Saudi Arabia's lead climate negotiator, sees threats in tough action on carbon dioxide emissions (Reuters).

‘Nano song’ wins prize.
The excellent nano-song featured recently on this blog won both the ‘People’s Choice’ and ‘Critics’ Choice’ in the American Chemical Society’s What is Nano? video contest (press release).

“I was counting away like a madman, but it just wouldn’t work.”
Emelie Baedecke Yllner, comments on the accident that saw Swedish maths students at the Royal Institute of Technology set three impossible questions in a five question paper (Svd.se via The Local).

April 07, 2009

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Ones that got away - April 07, 2009

“We wanted to see if this program can have a palpable effect. The answer is: without a doubt.”
Eran Bendavid of Stanford University comments on his research into the effectiveness of the George W. Bush’s President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (Bloomberg).

“The interrogation process is contrary to international law and the participation in such a process is contrary to international standards of medical ethics.”
The Red Cross says medical professionals monitoring interrogations in Guantanamo Bay violated medical ethics (AP).

“A lot of the impacts we’re seeing are running ahead of our expectations.”
William Hare of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research talks to Reuters, as it announces a poll of 11 global warming experts found 10 think it ‘unlikely’ that warming can be limited to 2 degrees C.

April 06, 2009

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Ones that got away - April 06, 2009

“We can tell within 30 seconds whether it's going to be a big or small quake. We can sense the scale and how much damage it's likely to cause.”
Wu Yih-min, of the National Taiwan University Department of Geosciences, says his group has invented a cheap device that can give crucial warnings just before earthquakes (Reuters).

“We need our top scientific minds on this. Get me India on the phone!”
Writers on the children’s movie Monsters vs Aliens have slipped a science policy joke into the mouth of their cartoon US president (movie, see also: SAJA blog).

“Although there is a long way to go, methods that can induce a pleasurable scratch sensation without damaging the skin, via mechanical stimuli or drugs that can inhibit these neurons, could be developed to treat chronic itch.”
Gil Yosipovitch, of Wake Forest University in North Carolina, discusses research that identifies neurons which appear to be blocked by scratching (BBC).

“The Canadian Press moved a story April 3 that erroneously reported The Wilkins Ice Shelf was originally part of Jamaica. In fact the Ice Shelf, located on the western side of the Antarctic was originally the size of Jamaica.”
The Regret the Error blog highlights a scientific example of that moment every journalist dreads: the mistake.

April 03, 2009

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Ones that got away - April 03, 2009

“I think they can generalize to human eyes somehow, and interpret human eyes as eyes.”
Auguste Bayern, of the University of Oxford, discusses research showing that jackdaws can interpret the movement of human eyes (LiveScience).

“This morning I got a worrying email from Vanessa Woods, a bonobo expert who’s at a bonobo research facility in DRC.”
Science journalist Carl Zimmer is worried about the bonobo. You should be too (The Loom blog).

“It’s a clean technology. We can't do anything that kills our organisms.”
Angela Belcher, of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, is making viruses make batteries (Reuters).

April 01, 2009

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Ones that got away - April 01, 2009

“We hung the [robot] arm over the right wing, we panned it to the location and took a look and I said to myself, ‘we are going to die’. There was so much damage.”
Shuttle commander Robert Gibson discusses a very close call on a secret space mission (CBS Space Place). [Hat tip: Bad Astronomy.]

“This one fed on meat. Its name is tyrannosaurus rex.”
Petr Springer, a five-year-old boy in Czechoslovakia can distinguish 69 dinosaur species (Czech News Agency).

“Takeda is making meaningful changes in structure and governance through this reorganization.”
Yasuchika Hasegawa, president of Japan’s biggest pharma firm Takeda, announces that the company is shifting its global research and development headquarters from Osaka to Illinois (AP).

“Discretion is important, so please only discuss your application with your partner and/or immediate family.”
The UK’s ‘security intelligence agency’ MI5 is recruiting a chief scientific advisor. British citizens who fancy becoming chief science spook should start polishing their CVs (Nature Jobs). [Hat tip: Research Fortnight.]

March 31, 2009

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Ones that got away - March 31, 2009

“We’re just very proud to build this, do some testing and demonstrate to America that we're moving beyond the space shuttle onto another generation of spacecraft.”
Don Pearson, project manager for the Post-Landing Orion Recovery Test, comments on the unveiling of a full-size mock-up of NASA’s new space vehicle on the National Mall in Washington (Reuters).

“These ancient lions were like a supersized version of today's lions, up to 25 per cent bigger than those we know today and, in the Americas, with longer legs adapted for endurance running.”
Ross Barnett, of the University of Oxford’s Department of Zoology, discusses his research on the skulls of cats (Daily Telegraph).

“What is going on has an adverse effect on our work.”
Cosmonaut Gennady Padalka says diplomatic squabbles are preventing Russians on the International Space Station from using American toilets or sharing their food (AP). [Hat tip – NASA Watch]

“It was like nothing we’d ever seen before.”
Owen Gilbert, a grad student at Rice University, discusses his research on a giant colony of clonal amoebas (NY Times).

March 30, 2009

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Ones that got away - March 30, 2009

“It has been an incredibly difficult challenge.”
Richard Jenkins comments on setting a new wind-powered land speed record of 126.1-mph (Wired).

“What we've done is pin down where the dust comes from – it comes from Patagonia.”
David Sugden, of the University of Edinburgh, explains his researching showing South American glaciers are responsible for layers of dust in Antarctic ice (Reuters).

“We were really sorry for causing any hassle and we are in the process of paying for the slight damages that the triceratops sustained whilst we lifted it over the fence.”
Steve Fry, student at Kingston Maurward College in England, apologises for ‘borrowing’ a giant dinosaur from the Dinosaur Museum in Dorchester (Daily Mail).

“The fish oil affects the methane-producing bacteria in the rumen part of the cow's gut, leading to reduced emissions.”
Lorraine Lillis, of University College Dublin, explains how feeding cows omega 3 oils might reduce their greenhouse gas emissions (Daily Telegraph).

March 27, 2009

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Ones that got away - March 27, 2009

“The investigators are not to blame. They can't tell if a cotton bud has DNA sticking to it.”
Ulrich Goll, justice minister for the state of Baden-Wuerttemberg in Germany, announces that a woman sought by police after her DNA was found at six murder scenes may be an innocent if careless employee in the factory that produces swabs for collecting DNA samples from murder scenes (BBC). [Hat tip: Good Morning Silicon Valley.]

“By saying that condoms exacerbate the problem of HIV/AIDS, the Pope has publicly distorted scientific evidence to promote Catholic doctrine on this issue.”
Medical journal The Lancet wades in on the Pope’s recent condom comments (AFP).

“With vertebrates we are asked to err on the side of caution and I believe this is the approach to take with these crustaceans.”
Bob Elwood, of Queen's University in Belfast, comments on his research suggesting hermit crabs can feel pain (BBC).

“…to increase the effectiveness of cooperation with the border agencies (coast guards) of neighboring states in the fight against terrorism on the high seas, combat smuggling and illegal migration and defend marine life and resources.”
The Russian National Security Council explains why retreating ice means it is considering a new Arctic military force (Wired).

“As a scientist it was my priority on this project to develop tools to help us predict eruptions and ultimately reduce the loss of lives. As a musician and artist too, it was a natural step for me to take these seismic sonification sounds and apply them to the arts.”
Domenico Vicinanza explains why he worked to get a modern dance company moving to music generated from seismic data (press release).

March 26, 2009

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Ones that got away - March 26, 2009

“According to the global-warming people, I say what I say because I’m paid by the oil industry. Of course I’m not, but that’s part of their rhetoric.”
Freeman Dyson, in The New York Times, on the row he stirred up by casting doubt on global warming.

“These rumours contradict all scientific facts.”
Egypt’s health and interior ministries deny that a killer text message is causing deaths through the cell phone network (AFP).

“No plan that we had before has been cut.”
Energy company Iberdrola Renovables denies reports that it is planning to slash investment in UK wind farms (Reuters).

March 25, 2009

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Ones that got away - March 25, 2009

“I have serious concerns that your memorandum goes beyond legitimate privacy concerns and appears to run contrary to many statutes protecting executive branch communications with members of Congress.”
Senator Charles Grassley, scourge of drug company links to academia, thinks an FDA memorandum might discourage whistleblowing (Bloomberg).

“The Government needs to be saying ‘It is socially unacceptable to be against wind turbines in your area - like not wearing your seat belt or driving past a zebra crossing.’”
UK climate change minister Ed Miliband gets controversial on wind farms (Daily Telegraph).

“Making NASA’s scientific and astronomical data more accessible to the public is a high priority for NASA, especially given the new administration’s recent emphasis on open government and transparency.”
Ed Weiler, of NASA’s Science Mission Directorate in Washington, explains why the agency is putting even more of its images up for grabs online (Wired).

“Obviously, this [statute] was intended to deal with a rogue state, intended to deal with terrorists. It wasn’t intended to deal with a housewife.”
Lawyer Robert Goldman says his client shouldn’t have been charged under terrorism laws for trying to harm a love rival with chemicals from a lab (AP).

March 24, 2009

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Ones that got away - March 24, 2009

“I know it didn't turn out the way we wanted it to, but you guys did a great job.”
Astronaut Steven Swanson talks to colleagues on the International Space Station about their attempts to unstuck a jammed piece of equipment on the outside of the ISS. Eventually Swanson’s colleagues Richard Arnold and Joseph Acaba ended up just securing the stuck cargo platform (Reuters).

The Colbert Node
NASA is refusing to say whether it will go with the results of its online poll to pick a name for a new node on the International Space Station. The suggestion that accrued the most votes was ‘Colbert’, after the US comedian (Boston Globe).

“There will be thousands of cases in our archives that could benefit from this technique.”
Martin Bill, of the UK’s Forensic Science Service, says a new DNA technique could lead to developments in numerous ‘cold cases’ (Daily Telegraph).

March 23, 2009

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Ones that got away - March 23, 2009

“If this was a year ago, the outcome would have been a totally different situation.”
Jake Chait, of the I.M. Chait Gallery in New York, explains that the credit crunch has even reached the fossil market, as a 9-foot-long dryosaurus skeleton fails to reach its reserve price (NY Daily News).

“I truly believe that this is a different time. The opportunities are enormous, despite all the economic and other challenges.”
Jane Lubchenco, the new administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, talks to the NY Times Dot Earth blog.

2009 Mission Madness
NASA devises a silly game to waste time one. Go Skylab!

March 20, 2009

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Ones that got away - March 20, 2009

“This behaviour suggests it is aware of its susceptibility to the harsh African sun, and adapted a unique behaviour to improve its chances of survival.”
A pink albino elephant is already learning to stay out of the sun, says Mike Chase, of conservation charity Elephants Without Borders (BBC).

“This mouth is kind of nasty. I always use the analogy of a pencil sharpener.”
Jean-Bernard Caron, associate curator of invertebrate paleontology at the Royal Ontario Museum, discusses new research on an ancient sea beastie (Toronto Star).

“It was like a low-stakes X Prize for music…”
Wired presents the first annual Guthman Musical Instrument Competition in pictures.

“It carried out all tasks ... without any parts of it making any mistakes.”
Iran’s recently launched satellite has carried out its mission, says an expert known only as Ebrahimi. What that mission was is still a mystery (Boston Globe).

March 19, 2009

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Ones that got away - March 19, 2009

“Sir Elton John will focus his address on the HIV/AIDS epidemic, how biotechnology has influenced prevention and treatment of the disease and an outlook of the challenges and solutions that lie ahead.”
The Bio International Convention explains why the Rocket Man has been invited to give its keynote speech.

“I am pleased with the result, and I hope this sets a precedent that will support anyone who shares my views on climate change and the environment.”
Tim Nicholson reacts to a judge's ruling that he can claim he was unfairly dismissed from his job due to his “philosophical belief in climate change” (Independent).

“In using robotic fish we are building on a design created by hundreds of millions of years’ worth of evolution which is incredibly energy efficient.”
Rory Doyle, a scientist at the BMT Group consultancy firm, explains why robot carp could be measuring pollution in a port in Spain (Daily Telegraph).

“It is our hope that it will come to the forefront of public attention along with Hawaii's other numerous endangered plants.”
Patrick Leonard, of the Fish and Wildlife Service, discusses the Phyllostegia hispida vine from the island of Molokai, which has just been listed as an endangered species in the US (AP).

March 18, 2009

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Ones that got away - March 18, 2009

“If there aren’t investment opportunities which compete with other projects we won't put money into it.”
Linda Cook, oil giant Shell’s executive director of gas and power, says the company is backing biofuels over wind, solar and hydro power, which are not cost-competitive with other options (Guardian).

“One hundred kW threshold has been viewed traditionally as a proof of principle for ‘weapons grade’ power levels for high-energy lasers.”
Dan Wildt, vice president of directed energy systems at Northrop Grumman, says electric lasers are now at ‘battlefield strength’ (Wired).

“There is nothing like a ‘shark horror’ story to quicken an old journo’s pulse rate.”
Australian journalist Joe Morris explains how he became ‘the leading light of the ‘Shark Scare’ story’ (Ranters blog).

March 17, 2009

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Ones that got away - March 17, 2009

“I'm not going to answer that question. I am a Christian, and I don't think anybody asking a question about my religion is appropriate.”
Gary Goodyear, Canada’s federal Minister of State for Science and Technology, refuses to answer the question ‘do you believe in evolution’ (Globe and Mail).

“We will not meet the challenges of climate change without the far wider use of civil nuclear power.”
UK prime minister Gordon Brown addresses a conference in London (Reuters).

“This structure is a true conundrum, and certainly worthwhile investigating further, because it forms part of the historic and cultural seascape of the area.”
Ziggy Otto, of Pembrokeshire College, comments on a huge ancient fish trap discovered off the Welsh coast (BBC).

March 13, 2009

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Ones that got away - March 13, 2009

"Bletchley Park has a real role to play in supporting the economy of Milton Keynes"
The World War II code-breaking centre is getting an extra £600,000 for vital repairs over three years. Local councillor Vanessa McPake feels the boost to local tourism is more important, however (BBC).

“We were never good at math in my family. I thought I was voting for p-i-e.”
Rep. John D Murtha (D-Pa) looks forward to the prospect of Pi Day, 14 March (Politico).

"We protest a launch and strongly demand it be canceled."
Japan's Prime Minister, Taro Aso, objects to North Korea's plan to launch a rocket over Japan sometime between 4 and 8 April.

March 12, 2009

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Ones that got away - March 12, 2009

"Our business requires perfection and our vehicle was not perfect today."
NASA launch director Mike Leinbach reflects on the gas leak that prevented the space shuttle Discovery launching on Wednesday. It will now not take off until Sunday 15 March (Space.com).

"What I don't want NASA to do is just limp along."
Barack Obama says NASA is an agency afflicted by "a sense of drift" and that it needs "a new mission that is appropriate for the 21st century" (Orlando Sentinel).

"I cannot begin to comprehend why a person would take this course."

Steven Shafer, editor-in-chief of Anesthesia and Analgesia, a journal which is retracting [pdf] articles penned by a leading anesthesiology researcher, Scott Reuben. Reuben is accused of faking data in at least 21 published studies, published over 13 years. (Anesthesiology News; see also BMJ (subscription required); New York Times; Boston Globe; Wall Street Journal; Scientific American).

March 10, 2009

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Ones that got away - March 10, 2009

“One of the ways that animals learn what's good to eat in the world, is on the basis of what mom ate during pregnancy.”
Steven Youngentob, of the State University of New York in Syracuse, comments on his research showing that alcohol may taste sweeter to rats if their mother drank while pregnant (New Scientist).

“Hi my name is Christine Shrock, I'm 18 and my project is Effects of Lid Dynamics on the Binding of MDM2 to the Tumor Suppressor Protein p53 with Implications for Cancer Therapeutics.”
Scientific American catches up with the finalists of the Intel Science Talent Search, “the Super Bowl of science” or “the baby Nobels”.

“Jerry and Ben just haven't stopped flirting. The fact they have turned out to be gay has played havoc with our breeding plans.”
Grace Rawnsley, of the Wetlands Trust in the UK, explains a setback to a programme to breed two male and one female New Zealand Blue Ducks (Chester Chronicle).

March 06, 2009

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Ones that got away - March 06, 2009

“Why not turn their Real-Time PCR thermal cycler into an ass-kicking robot?”
Tyler Kay, of marketing company Bison, explains the logic behind a Roche advert that sees a lab-machine transform into a ninja robot (Wired).

“Some experts are concerned that unless there is an independent program, then Japan may be left behind in terms of space development.”
An unnamed official from Japan’s Strategic Headquarters for Space Policy explains why the country is considering putting robots on the Moon by 2020 and an astronaut on the Moon by 2030 (Reuters).

“No parking whitebeam.”
A new species of tree in Wales has been named after a sign once fixed to it (Western Mail).

“If anybody doubted the greening of Peter Mandelson and his willingness to take the green agenda on his shoulders we’ve seen it in practice on our television screens already this morning.”
UK prime minister Gordon Brown comments on a green custard attack on Business Secretary Mandelson. The attacker was supposedly protesting about plans to expand a major British airport (The Times).


March 04, 2009

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Ones that got away - March 04, 2009

“Overall, the trend is towards net loss.”
The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds comments on a study analysing the impact of climate change on Europe’s birds (BBC).

“There were no surprises in Genentech’s presentation. They had the platform and I don’t think they impressed.”
Carri Duncan, an analyst at Sal. Oppenheim in Zurich, comments on the latest instalment of the ongoing Roche / Genentech saga (Bloomberg).

“I find this troubling as I have documented several instances where pharmaceutical companies have attempted to intimidate academic critics of drugs.”
US Senator Charles Grassley comments on allegations that a Pfizer employee took photos of students protesting at drug industry links to academia, in the latest round of his battle against big pharma (NY Times).

March 03, 2009

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Ones that got away - March 03, 2009

"You know all this [expletive deleted] that's going on around the world, weather-wise, well, we're seeing it in Arlington [location of the Rangers Ballpark]. The jet stream at The Ballpark ain't what it used to be. That's changing. I think it'll help our arms."
Rudolpho 'Rudy' Jaramillo, hitting coach for the Texas Rangers, hopes that global warming will help the team's pitching [hat tip: The Guardian, Star-Telegram.com]

“Maybe the best we can do is join in a bipartisan agreement to engage only in the harmless type of science-hating everyone can love: UFOs, psychics and underwater kingdoms that appear on Google maps”
Columnist Joel Stein, writing in the Los Angeles Times, finds liberals hate science just as much as the far right - and searches for common ground between them.

"You can't expect tigers to become vegetarians. They need meat and humans trespassing their territory are relatively easy targets."
Nurazam Nurdin of the Nature Conservation Agency asks sympathy for Sumatran tigers, who are attacking humans in desperation for food as their forest habitats are illegally eroded. The Sumatran tiger is in danger of becoming the first major mammal to become extinct in the 21st century, The Times reports.

February 27, 2009

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Ones that got away - February 27, 2009

“Patents whose procedures are hard to reproduce are familiar to every industrial chemist, unfortunately, but coming across one that seems completely mistaken in its most important details is rare. And this is the first time I’ve seen one of these dragged out into the open literature for a give-and-take with the original authors about whether they’re delusional or not.”
Chemist Derek Lowe looks over a spat between researchers (In the pipeline blog).

“It had grabbed the tube that pulls out the water and caused it to spray outside the tank.”
Nick Fash, of the Santa Monica Pier Aquarium, explains how an octopus came to flood the facility (LA Times).

“Thanks to lessons learnt in crane school we now have the feathery-fingered skills to raise crane chicks.”
Debbie Pain, director of conservation at the Wildfowl & Wetlands Trust, on plans to reintroduce cranes to the UK (Daily Telegraph).

“In hospital they told me that I was very very lucky.... I still have all my fingers but it could up end really worse if the magnets collided in a other way.”
The dangers of neodymium magnets explained by ‘Dirk from the Netherlands’ (Magnet Nerd).
WARNING – NOT FOR THE SQUEAMISH, LINK CONTAINS ACCIDENT PHOTOS.

February 26, 2009

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Ones that got away - February 26, 2009

“We can do personalized genetics on these dogs. We’ve found out a lot about how to study disease.”
Gordon Lark, of the University of Utah, approves of Barack Obama’s choice of pooch for the White House, a choice Wired calls ‘solidly scientific’.

“This puts us in a pretty good position to launch by the middle of the month.”
Allard Beutel, a spokesman at Kennedy Space Center, comments on a new 12 March launch date for the next space shuttle mission (Gannett News Service).

"The review will be conducted by eminent representatives of the science and policy domains from the EU and US."
The European Union notes that Elias Zerhouni, the former director of the US National Institutes of Health, is to sit on a panel charged with reviewing the European Research Council’s structure and funding mechanisms. Vaira Vike-Freiberga, President of Latvia from 1999-20007 and a former professor of psychology, will chair the panel, which also includes David Sainsbury, the UK’s former science minister.

“If people enjoy using these games, then they should continue to do so - that's a no-brainer. But if people are under the illusion that these devices are scientifically proven to keep their minds in shape, they need to think again.”
Martyn Hocking, editor of consumer magazine Which?, comments after a “panel of experts” concludes there is no evidence playing Brain Training games actually improve memory (Guardian).

February 25, 2009

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Ones that got away - February 25, 2009

“Our country's lunar exploration research and development project will be opened to all of society, bringing in a competitive mechanism.”
Chinese newspaper Guangming Daily reports that China will implement a competitive bidding system for the construction of parts of its forthcoming Moon probe (via Reuters).

“It dragged me across the boat and would have pulled me in had my colleague not grabbed my trousers - it was like the whole earth had just moved. I knew it was going to a big one.”
Ian Welsh was on a stingray tagging project in Thailand when he caught a big surprise (Daily Telegraph).

“If you want some truly original seating for your living room, these giant foam dinosaur bones are where it's at.”
The Dvice website has the near-perfect answer for palaeontology fans in need of a sofa.

February 24, 2009

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Ones that got away - February 24, 2009

“The Formula That Killed Wall Street”
Wired looks at the maths behind the credit crunch.

“Now you have an opportunity within this crisis, so let the experiment begin.”
Kert Davies, research director of Greenpeace, in the Guardian’s special report ‘can economic rescue plans also save planet?’

Video: Oktapodi
They may not have won the Oscar they were up for, but the team behind this octopus romance animation have produced perhaps the best thing on the internet [hat tip: Newsweek].

“She was a major force in the field of finding near-Earth asteroids, discovering or co-discovering almost 900 asteroids in her lifetime, as well as several comets.”
Phil Plait comments on ‘asteroid hunter’ Eleanor Helin, who died recently (Bad Astronomy).

February 23, 2009

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Ones that got away - February 23, 2009

"The archive presents all of the negatives we hold from twenty-five separate expeditions."
Heather Lane, librarian at the Scott Polar Research Institute, discusses making photos from historic arctic missions available online (BBC).

"He was a very intuitive character, and although he was not an academic he understood the value of education in general and higher education in particular."
David Greenaway, vice-chancellor of the University of Nottingham, remembers Lord Dearing, who died recently (Times Higher Education).

"There was just a sense of unease that we did not quite have the rigor that we typically expect for a question like this."
John Shannon, space shuttle programme manager, discusses why the next mission has been delayed (AP).

February 18, 2009

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Ones that got away - February 18, 2009

“Dealing with climate change will require a much broader strategy, even larger federal investments in clean-energy technologies and an effort to put a price on greenhouse gas emissions to unlock private investment on an enormous scale. But this is a useful down payment, which could also help reduce the nation’s reliance on foreign oil.”
The NY Times editorialises about Obama’s stimulus package and energy.

“In Peru, [the glaciers] are melting very quickly. More than 20 percent of the glacial ice caps have disappeared since the 1970s.”
World Bank climate change specialist Walter Vergara warns that the future of South America’s Andes glaciers is in doubt (AFP).

“People will be brought to task.”
Attorney General J.B. Van Hollen comments after a jury finds Pfizer has overcharged for drugs in the state of Wisconsin (Milwaukee Journal Sentinel).

February 16, 2009

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Ones that got away - February 16, 2009

“It is really important that as a small country we can show our participation in large international efforts here in Antarctica.”
Belgian defence minister Pieter De Crem inaugurates the country’s new ‘zero emissions’ science base in Antarctica (AP).

“They entered briefly into contact at very low speed.”
The French Defence Ministry makes a collision between two nuclear submarines sound almost harmless (Bloomberg).

“One of the distinguishing factors of Liberty is that every single student here takes a class called creationist studies.”
Liberty University campus pastor Johnnie Moore tells the Lynchburg News and Advance about his institution’s creationist ways.

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Nature at the AAAS: Part II - February 16, 2009

aaas.bmpNature reporters are still at the American Association for the Advancement of Science meeting in Chicago. Here are some recent dispatches from the science news front line. Full coverage is over on our In the Field blog.

Bowser blazes the trail
Whenever I see Elaine Ostrander talk about dogs, I feel sorry for human geneticists. Ostrander, a researcher at the U.S. National Human Genome Research Institute on Bethesda, Maryland, studies the hundreds of dog breeds that exist in the world. And because human breeders have simplified dog genetics enormously, it’s a lot easier to answer questions about the genetic basis of all kinds of traits in dogs than it is in humans.

Darwin the Buddhist
Ordinarily, Paul Ekman is to be found doing rigorous, detailed studies of facial expression, body movement, emotion and deception...

Climate issue getting "more complicated"
A leader of the the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change told the meeting today that the world's climate is likely to change much faster than predicted, leaving the world with two choices: start cutting carbon emissions earlier, or make the cuts deeper.

February 10, 2009

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Ones that got away - February 10, 2009

“Today, all the research councils have committees setting up the ‘grand challenges’ for their disciplines. Personally, I think this is bullshit. Clever people will find grand challenges that other people haven't even thought of.”
Chemist Graham Richards discuss research and commercializing research with the Guardian.

“My own story was really nothing special. I made $30,000 for the year, which is less than some of these doctors make in a weekend.”
Daniel Carlat, a psychiatry professor at Tufts University in Boston, discusses medicine’s ties to drug money with Reuters.

RIP Xiangzhong ‘Jerry’ Yang.
The man who “was born in poverty to a family of pig farmers in rural China but escaped to become a leading researcher in cloning technology” has died (LA Times).

Papers with good titles: Getting Smashed: The deposition of amphorae and the drinking of wine in Gaul during the late Iron Age.

February 09, 2009

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Darwin 200 – shorts - February 09, 2009

darwin logo.bmpIf you haven't had enough Darwin yet, here are some more tidbits.

“I think in many respects Wallace was as talented, if not more talented, than Darwin.”
David Grimaldi, curator of invertebrate zoology at the American Museum of Natural History in New York, sings the praises of the poor man who has been forgotten in all this Darwin worship (Washington Post).



“We respectfully encourage those who reject evolution to weigh the now overwhelming evidence, hugely strengthened by recent advances in genetics, which testifies to the theory’s validity. At the same time, we respectfully ask those contemporary Darwinians who seem intent on using Darwin’s theory as a vehicle for promoting an anti-theistic agenda to desist from doing so, as they are, albeit unintentionally, turning people away from the theory.”
Prominent scientists and religious figures call for a ‘Darwin ceasefire’ in the Daily Telegraph.


“Creationism is the belief that the biblical stories of Creation as described in the Book of Genesis are literally true. Is genuine Christianity obliged to adopt any of these positions? No, it is not.”
So says Cormac Murphy-O'Connor, head of the Catholic church in England (The Times).


“You must have noticed there’s an awful lot of Darwin about at the moment. Now, some people claim Darwin is due to global warming. Some say he’s a figment of the collective “id”, an animistic need to see patterns and purpose in the fearful random chaos of existence. Still others believe Darwin is plainly an act of God. They point out that if you found the great naturalist sitting on top of a Galapagos tortoise, weaving beetles into his beard in the ready-meal aisle of Tesco, he would inescapably remind you that he had been designed and therefore there must be a grand designer and that that cosmic architect could only be God — or David Attenborough, as we more commonly know him.”
Is AA Gill losing it? Make up your own mind at his Times review of the latest programme by Attenborough.


“One risk, just below the equator, is sunburn. Another is pretentiousness: I can't be the first to feel the constant temptation to compare the great man's observations with mine. Here goes anyway.”
BBC science correspondent David Shukman has got a trip to the Galapagos out of the anniversary. He still finds plenty to complain about.

Previously
Darwin 200 - February 02, 2009
Darwin 200 redux

February 06, 2009

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Ones that got away - February 06, 2009

“This observation adds to the growing evidence that dolphins may be included in the list of mammals that practice infanticide.”
Researchers tell an unpleasant tale in Marine Mammal Science. Repeat after me … dolphins are not cute animals.

“I go into 2009 with my eyes wide open and a sense of confidence.”
Andrew Witty, chief executive of GSK, announces more restructuring and more job losses (Financial Times).

“From an agronomic standpoint, it has all of the issues of GM rape, but is arguably worse.”
Richard Roush, of the University of Melbourne, doesn’t like a new herbicide resistant oilseed rape (New Scientist).

“The situation down here is getting very, very chaotic and very aggressive.”
Anti-whaling activist Paul Watson’s ship has collided with a Japanese whaling vessel (AP).

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AQ Khan Walks - February 06, 2009

Abdul Qadeer Khan, the father of Pakistan's nuclear bomb and a central figure in a major nuclear smuggling ring, has been freed.

A brief order issued on 6 February by the Islamabad High Court released the 72-year-old metallurgist from house arrest. Khan had been confined since 2004, after confessing to selling Pakistani nuclear technology to Iran, North Korea, and Libya.

Khan's freedom has gradually returned over the past year or so. While he remains a pariah in the West, he enjoys overwhelming public support in Pakistan, where he is revered as a national hero. He has given a few interviews in recent months, and even started his own website.

It's a little unclear what happens next. The government has asked Khan to let them know if he's planning any domestic travel, and there's no word on whether he'll be able to take trips abroad. In interviews he says he's done with smuggling and will devote the remainder of his life to education.

February 04, 2009

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Ones that got away - February 04, 2009

“I’ve been working with ants for eight years, and have never seen a traffic jam — and I've tried.”
Audrey Dussutour, of the University of Sydney, discusses how ants smooth movement could help gridlocked roads (Wired).

“What we are seeing is not necessarily optimism, but a pullback in the pessimism.”
David Kelly, chief market strategist at JPMorgan Funds, looks at a big pharma-led rise in the stock market (Bloomberg).

“We want to make sure we got this right. This has important consequences for us.”
Shuttle program manager John Shannon discusses why NASA has delayed the next shuttle flight (Reuters).

February 02, 2009

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Ones that got away - February 02, 2009

“The whalers are deploying water cannons, concussion grenades, acoustic weapons, and throwing solid brass and lead balls at Sea Shepherd crew members."
Paul Watson, captain of anti-whaling ship Steve Irwin, on the latest run in with the Japanese whaling fleet (Times).

“All legal means available will be used to ensure these pirates do not board Japanese ships or threaten the lives of the crews or the safety of the vessels."
Glenn Inwood, of the Japanese Institute of Cetacean Research, comments on the same incident (Times).

"The delivered kid was genetically identical to the bucardo."
Jose Folch, director of the bucardo project at the University of Zaragoza in northern Spain, comments on the birth of a clone of the extinct Pyrenean ibex (bucardo). The animal died shortly after its birth (Independent).

January 29, 2009

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Ones that got away - January 29, 2009

“Emergency is too strong a word for Pfizer's $68 billion agreement to buy Wyeth, but not by much.”
The Wall Street Journal isn’t impressed by the latest pharma industry mega-merger.

“All of this is consistent with climate change, and all of this is consistent with what scientists told us would happen.”
Australia’s Climate Change Minister Penny Wong lays the blame for repeated heatwaves at the door of climate change (Reuters).

“The National Park Service is using members of the public to solve with rifles that which should be the bailiwick of wolves.”
Rob Edward, of the WildEarth Guardians group, complains about plans to use ‘volunteer sharpshooters’ to cull elk in the Rocky Mountain National Park (Colorado Independent).

January 28, 2009

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Ones that got away - January 28, 2009

“Just as people respond better to the personal touch, cows also feel happier and more relaxed if they are given a bit more one-to-one attention.”
Catherine Douglas, of Newcastle University, comments on her research showing that cows given names can produce an extra pint and a half of milk a day. Of course this probably just indicates that farmers who name their cows are generally nicer to them (Daily Mail).

“Even though we could not find a definitive explanation for this higher incidence, the existence of other ‘twin towns’ around the world – most of them in remote isolated areas with high levels of inbreeding just as Linha São Pedro – shows that external influence is not needed for this to happen.”
Ursula Matte, of the medical genetics unit at Porto Alegre Hospital in Brazil, rejects suggestions that Josef Mengele created a ‘tribe of twins’ in the city of Cândido Godói (New Scientist).

“I hereby declare a state of national emergency with particular emphasis on the existing and potentially affected counties.”
Liberia's president Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf takes action against a crop-devastating caterpillar problem (BBC).

“I think that whalers will be satisfied by this quota.”
Iceland Fisheries Minister Einar Gudfinnsson comments on a six-fold increase in whaling quotas (AFP).

January 27, 2009

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Ones that got away - January 27, 2009

“This is a long-awaited day for the world of ocean research.”
Robert Gagosian, president of the Consortium for Ocean Leadership, comments on the sea-trials of re-fitted research vessel JOIDES Resolution (NSF press release; hat tip: Deep Sea News).

“It’s not the only explanation. But there is a discernible and substantial role of genes in your social network position.”
Study author Nicholas Christakis of Harvard on his research, which seems to show that popularity might depend on genes (Scientific American).

“There’s been an unusually high number of births and we’re extremely pleased about it. It’s a postwar baby boom.”
Virunga National Park Director Emmanuel de Merode on a boom in gorilla numbers in the strife-ridden Democratic Republic of Congo (Bloomberg).

January 26, 2009

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Ones that got away - January 26, 2009

“Epidemiological tests show that the patient previously had exposure to live poultry markets.”
The Chinese Health Ministry comments on the sixth human case of bird flu detected in China this year (Reuters).

“They do come on slowly and if there are steps or objects in the way, people can fall over, have accidents and that's the biggest danger.”
David Adams, spokesman for The Royal National College for the Blind, isn’t happy about European plans to do away with traditional light bulbs (BBC).

“Call it a gut feeling.”
The LA Times puns its way through the news that DNA from human gut parasites can be used to track human migrations.

January 23, 2009

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Ones that got away - January 23, 2009

“We don't comment on marketplace rumor."
Pharma company Pfizer is purportedly trying to buy rival Wyeth for $60 billion dollars, but a Wyeth spokesman refuses to comment.

“I think we are seeing a funding future that is a reflection of the world's current economy.”
Jules Duga has co-authored a report suggesting that the US will spend less on R&D in 2009, the first decrease in a decade.

Anti-evolution biologist has his court case against his old bosses dismissed, again.
An appeals court has upheld a ruling that Nathaniel Abraham's lawsuit, claiming he was asked to resign from Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute for telling his supervisor that he didn’t believe in evolution, was not filed in time.

"Our goal is to develop, form and finance one or two companies a year.”

Johnson & Johnson is the latest member to join a global consortium of pharma companies that will fund research together and co-own the results, says Daphne Zohar, founder of PureTech. The total in the pot is now $52 million.

January 22, 2009

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Ones that got away - January 22, 2009

“We are seeing some signs that consumers and patients are becoming more frugal.”
William Weldon, Chief Executive of Johnson & Johnson, explains why his company has seen its first revenue decline in 76 years.

Vietnam is the most vulnerable nation to global warming
A sea level rise of 1 meter could potentially displace about 10.8% of the Vietnamese population, according to a World Bank report.

“We are calling for international assistance to combat these insects.”
Ravenous caterpillars are destroying crops and terrorizing villagers in Liberia, says Agriculture Minister Christopher Toe.

January 21, 2009

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Ones that got away - January 21, 2009

"This image reminds me of the vast and incredible power of the neocortex, and of the amazing capability of the human body."
An anonymous neuroscientist shows off his Ramon y Cajal drawing of a human motor cortex pyramidal cell - in tattoo form.

"Africa is the most politically correct region in which to develop [the United Nations' Clean Development Mechanism] projects and we want to be there"
CarbonStream Africa, a South African/Norwegian initiative to boost carbon emissions trading in sub-Saharan Africa and raise the continent's lagging profile in the $120 billion global carbon market, launches

January 20, 2009

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Ones that got away - January 20, 2009

"For the Persians to kill 20 men in a space less than 2m high or wide, and about 11m long, required superhuman combat powers - or something more insidious"
News reaches us that in the 3rd century AD, Persians used chemical weapons against the Romans.

Today's announcement apparently formalizes the project's status, as we're about to enter a new administration -- and that may not be coincidental.
More big money for a user facility upgrade at the US Department of Energy: A $1 billion construction project for a neutron source, the Oak Ridge National Laboratory Spallation source.

City boffins send worms into orbit
University of Nottingham, UK, scientists plan to use worms aboard the Space Station to study muscle wasting.

January 19, 2009

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Ones that got away - January 19, 2009

"The virtual cows have been named Myrtle, Buttercup, Jesse, Ethel, Daisy and Boris"
New Zealand scientists make fake cows to look into methane emissions. These faux-beasts have artificial stomachs, the contents of which ferment to leave nicely filled "poo jars".

Malvinder Singh, Ranbaxy’s chief executive, said he aimed to “take products back to the US market at the earliest possible time.”
Indian generics company Ranbaxy hopes to get around the FDA's ban on imports from the company by buying production facilities in the US, or in another country where those facilities have already approved by the FDA.

January 16, 2009

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Ones that got away - January 16, 2009

"There is not much we do in space any more that is really new, but this is really new."
The US Defense Department is using 'top secret' microsatellites to inspect a crippled US spacecraft, says John Pike, head of a military think tank.

"The change is to underline our 'excellence with impact' agenda."
Chloë Somers, from Research Councils UK, discusses new requirements whereby grant seekers have to assess the economic and social impact of their work.

"The Mesopotamians had different-coloured farm animals 5,000 years ago and, in that regard, they were no different to Paris Hilton, who has a pink Chihuahua…"
Ancient farmers may have selectively bred coloured animals to make them easy to spot or for amusement’s sake, says Greger Larson, of the University of Durham.

January 15, 2009

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Ones that got away - January 15, 2009

“Do you have a grove of bamboo that is taking over your property -- at least an acre or more?”
The Washington Post reports on the fact that the National Zoo is running out of food for its pandas.

“Photos from the accident site, which happened in the Altai region on January 9, give the initial impression that passengers in the crashed helicopters were hunting for Argali mountain sheep.”
The WWF wants an investigation into the deaths of a party of senior Russian politicians in a helicopter crash. It says they may have been illegally hunting endangered sheep (Reuters).

RIP Arne Naess
The Norwegian philosopher “whose ideas about promoting an intimate and all-embracing relationship between the earth and the human species inspired environmentalists and Green political activists around the world” died on Monday, reports the NY Times.

“Here's a way to increase the available funding to NIH without increasing the NIH budget: halt funding to NCCAM, the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine. “
An online attempt to get Barack Obama to stop funding research on alternative medicine has begun (hat tip: Pharyngula).

January 14, 2009

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Ones that got away - January 14, 2009

“It would be inappropriate for me to comment further right now.”
Angela Sekson, an Eli Lilly spokeswoman, remains tight lipped about speculation the drug company will soon pay $1.4 billion to settle charges it illegally marketed on of its drugs (NY Times).

“We try to think of organisms as engaging in a work of self-preservation. To be living is to be engaged in that work. To die is to cease to be engaged.”
Bioethicist Gilbert Meilaender tells Wired why the definition of death is being changed.

“In my view, this is the earliest archaeological evidence for the use of chemical warfare, which was later used by the ancient Greeks.”
Simon James, of the University of Leicester, says the Persians used chemicals in a vicious fight with the Romans in 256 (Science News).

“Even if caffeine were responsible for hallucinations in some way, the part it plays would be small compared to other factors in life.”
Simon Jones, of Durham University, plays down his research suggesting a link between nasty instant coffee and hallucinations (BBC).

January 13, 2009

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Ones that got away - January 13, 2009

“A key question for us is ‘where has all the Australian poo gone?’”
Alan Cooper, director of the Australian Centre for Ancient DNA, discusses research on faeces from giant extinct birds (University of Adelaide ).

“I almost fell off my chair. I could not believe what I was seeing.”
John Coates, of the University of Cambridge, departs from the traditional cry of ‘eureka’ upon discovering financial traders with shorter ring fingers seem to lose the most money (ScienceNow).

“They’re a complete mystery to me. I think they must divide their minds.”
Atheist-du-jour Richard Dawkins talks to the LA Times about religious scientists, and other things.

“We’re not giving up.”
Rick Doblin, president of the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies, wants to grow marijuana for medical research in Massachusetts, and he isn’t planning on letting the DEA stop him (Boston Globe).

January 12, 2009

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Ones that got away - January 12, 2009

“Cyprus will in fact become more like Abu Dhabi or other states that we know because there is just not enough water.”
Geophysicist Manfred Lange sees trouble ahead for the Mediterranean island (Reuters).

“Our study shows that between 2000 and 2007 there has been widespread ecosystem devastation and decades of conservation effort compromised.”
Dana Bergstrom, of the Australian Antarctic Division, says the removal of cats from a sub-Antarctic island has caused a devastating increase in rabbit numbers (BBC).

“We anticipate Roche will ultimately be forced to offer in excess of $100 a share to secure Genentech board approval.”
Analysts at Morgan Stanley comment on the latest moves on what is potentially the biggest biotech deal ever (Reuters).

January 07, 2009

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Ones that got away - January 07, 2009

“The worldwide trend is to kill two birds with one stone by investing in action against global warming and linking that to taking care of both the environment and the economy.”
Ichiro Sumikura, a Japanese environment ministry official, outlines plans to go green to beat the credit crunch (Reuters).

“This was the first human bird flu case reported in Beijing since 2003.”
State news agency Xinhua on the latest bird flu death in China.

“We are not saying that people with [Post Traumatic Stress Disorder] should play Tetris but we do think it is hugely valuable to understand how the brain works and how it produces intrusive flashback memories.”
Emily Holmes of Oxford University comments on research that suggests playing Tetris may reduce the impact of traumatic stress (BBC).

January 06, 2009

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Ones that got away - January 06, 2009

RIP pharmalot
The interweb will be missing one of its best pharma-industry blogs this year.

‘3 Cheap, Safe Ways to Destroy Deadly Explosives’
Wired looks at ingenious solutions to a global problem.

“We’re certainly hoping not to find any human bits inside, but you never know.”
Tom Trinski, marine curator at Auckland Museum, is going to dissect a shark live on the internet (Times).

“We’re a little freaked out by this. We’ve never seen anything like it.”
Rebecca Dmytryk, of the nonprofit WildRescue, discusses a bout of mysterious pelican deaths in California (LA Times).

January 05, 2009

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Ones that got away - January 05, 2009

“No-one goes to prison for the crime of trafficking wild animals, or to put it another way, a crime against humanity is not considered a serious matter.”
Marcelo Rocha, of Brazilian NGO SOS Fauna, discusses the country’s illegal wildlife trade (BBC).

“Third-hand smoke.”
A new term has been coined for nasty cigarette residue that lingers even after smoke has dissipated (NY Times).

“We have also been able to reproduce the sound of someone speaking or clapping in Stonehenge 5,000 years ago.”
Rupert Till, of Huddersfield University in the UK, joins the long line of people who think they’ve worked out what Stonehenge was for (Daily Telegraph).

December 24, 2008

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Ones that got away - December 24, 2008

“The public should be aware that money donated in good faith to Stop Huntingdon Animal Cruelty (SHAC) was in fact being used to finance this criminal conduct.”
Detective Chief Inspector Andy Robbins speaks about animal rights extremists who have been convicted for establishing a “climate of fear” and for running a blackmail campaign to shut down Huntingdon Life Sciences in Oxford, UK.

“The progress is not enough to approve building measures”
Three insurers announce that they are halting plans to build a £1.1 billion Turkish dam.

“It's not just humans who expect to be given something in return when they are co-operative. Orangutans do that too."
Valerie Dufour, of the University of St Andrews, finds that orangutans trade food for favours.

December 18, 2008

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Ones that got away - December 18, 2008

“It provides the missing link because it explains how the Wari people allowed for the continuation of culture after the Moche.”
Archaeologist Cesar Soriano tells Reuters why a ruined city discovered in Peru is so important.

“When I found the frog, I had a thrilling suspicion that we were looking at an entirely new species of amphibian.”
Naturalist and photographer Jeremy Holden talks about the new frog he found. It’s got green blood and turquoise-coloured bones (Fauna and Flora International).

“It is generally believed that LUCA was a heat-loving or ‘hyperthermophilic’ organism - a bit like one of those weird organisms living in the hot vents along the continental ridges deep in the oceans today. However, our data suggests that LUCA was actually sensitive to warmer temperatures and lived in a climate below 50 degrees.”
Nicolas Lartillot, of the Universite de Montreal, has been working on the ‘last universal common ancestor’ (LUCA), from which we all came (Canwest News).

December 16, 2008

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Ones that got away - December 16, 2008

“If you look at molecular biology as breaking Humpty Dumpty into as many pieces as possible, then systems biology is about trying to put him back together again.”
Physiologist Denis Noble talks to the Guardian.

“The tusks help females identify males within their species, which could otherwise be difficult as these species are quite similar to each other in shape and coloration.”
Scott Baker, of Oregon State University, comments on the strange tusks of beaked whales (BBC).

“The Supreme Court on Monday declined to consider reinstating a lawsuit against The New York Times by a former government scientist who contended that he was defamed by a series of columns about the anthrax mailings of 2001.”
So says ... The New York Times.

December 15, 2008

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The big one, simulated - December 15, 2008

shakedown.bmpPosted for Emma Marris

Researchers at the University of Nevada, Reno working on earthquake-resistant building materials (nickel-titanium bars, elastomeric materials, and polyvinyl fibre concrete, to be precise, three different designs in three different pairs of support columns) shook a 33.5 metre, 190 tonne concrete bridge with three "shake tables" that simulated a 8.0 earthquake on December 11th.

The test was the second of three at this unprecedented scale—the first one back in February 2007 shook a conventional bridge, representing the current bridge-building practice. The third test will use fibre composites as the primary resisting force in the column and the beam as a kind of shell around the concrete.

Continue reading "The big one, simulated" »

December 12, 2008

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Ones that got away - December 12, 2008

“It suggests that ancient and modern criminal justice systems may otherwise be built on a much more primitive, pre-existing machinery for recognizing unfairness to you.”
Owen Jones, of Vanderbilt University, comments on his study of how the brain deals with crime and punishment (New Scientist).

“This brain is particularly exciting because it is very well preserved, even though it is the oldest recorded find of this type in the UK and one of the earliest worldwide.”
Sonia O'Connor, of the University of Bradford, comments on a 2,000 year old brain dug up in England (PA).

“Potential for extreme violence and even death.”
US District Judge Morrison C. England Jr. comments on the ‘eco-terror’ crimes of Lauren Weiner as he passes sentence (Sac Bee).

“According to my files, there are at least 13 different types of elves.”
National Geographic investigates the belief of elves in Iceland. Your guess as to why is as good as mine.

December 11, 2008

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Ones that got away - December 11, 2008

The Clean Coal Carolers
If you weren’t a fan of ‘clean’ coal before, you certainly won’t be after listening to this.

“The moment you hear its voice, you can’t help [but] think of a large cat.”
Greg Budney, a biologist from the Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology, discusses the bare-throated tiger heron with NPR.

“Your real impact factor”
PhD comics’ unique take on an academic issue.

“Top 10 Scientific Discoveries of 2008”
At least according to Time magazine.

December 10, 2008

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Ones that got away - December 10, 2008

“To our sincere regret ... it has now emerged that the text contains deeper levels of meaning, which are not immediately accessible to a non-native speaker.”
The Max Planck Institute has apologised after Chinese “poetry” it used to illustrate an article on the front of its journal turned out to be an advert for a brothel (Independent).

“Totally without merit.”
Mrs Justice Dobbs throws out Christian groups’ attempt to block scientists in the UK from creating human-animal hybrid embryos for research (BBC).

“Dolphin spongers are workaholic loners.”
That’s what ABC makes of a new study showing “female dolphins that use marine sponges to help them forage for prey spend less time socialising with others”.

December 09, 2008

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Ones that got away - December 09, 2008

“I couldn't believe it. I was shocked at first, these were school boys in their school uniforms.”
Documentary-maker Tooli Nhlapo tells the BBC how some South Africans are recreationally smoking drugs meant to help treat AIDS.

“We are starting to get to the point that when an adverse weather event occurs we can quantify how much more likely it was made by human activity. And people adversely affected by climate change today are in a position to document and quantify their losses.”
Myles Allen, a physicist at Oxford University, tells the Guardian people could soon be suing oil companies over climate change (see also his Nature commentary from 2003 on this topic).

“Like so much of nature, it must hint at the menace that lurks in all beauty.”
Kathleen McFarlane comments on her work. The artist, who the Daily Telegraph explains “subverted the domestic arts of weaving, tapestry and crochet work to create fantastical and often disturbing images and forms reminiscent of sea monsters, huge fungal growths — and worse” has died at the age of 86.

“Someone saw we were doing well and decided to put their hand in the honeypot.”
Joseph Costard, head of the Normandy shellfish farmers committee, comments on an outbreak of oyster rustling in France (Guardian).

December 08, 2008

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Ones that got away - December 08, 2008

“I feel confident that the (carbon storage) time of stable biochar is from high hundreds to a few thousand years.”
Johannes Lehmann, of Cornell University, explains why ploughing burned plants into fields is a good idea (Reuters).

“We are happy to engage in serious debates on airport expansion, and we respect people’s right to protest within the bounds of the law.”
The owners of Stansted airport in the UK comment on a climate change protest that shut down their runways (Bloomberg).

“Next week I will move on: but know that nobody else has.”
Ben ‘Bad Science’ Goldacre is angry about media coverage of the MMR vaccine. Again.

“It’s really important for neuroscientists to start to think about the effects of people's experiences on their brain function, and specifically about the effect of people's socioeconomic status.”
Martha Farah, director of the Center for Cognitive Neuroscience at the University of Pennsylvania, comments on research showing that some brain functions may be reduced in poor children compared with rich children (USA Today).

December 05, 2008

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Ones that got away - December 05, 2008

“It was apparent that the monkeys associated humans with danger -- perhaps due to ongoing threats from hunters.”
Researchers have found a new population of endangered Tonkin snub-nosed monkeys in Vietnam (CNN).

“It’s something that they need to assist them in daily living.”
Matthew Carmel, president of American company Constitution Arms, explains the rationale behind his easy-firing pistol for the infirm (New Scientist).

“It was on the third night that we found out that the octopus Otto was responsible for the chaos.”
A spokesman for the Sea Star Aquarium in Coburg, Germany, explains how an octopus has been shooting out the electrics with a jet of water (Daily Telegraph).

“The chemicals Das was using in his 'factory' could have been extremely dangerous.”
A former Astra-Zeneca employee has been jailed for producing £10 million of bootleg vodka and whisky (Daily Mail).

December 04, 2008

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Ones that got away - December 04, 2008

“Copper Thefts Threaten US Critical Infrastructure”
That’s what the FBI says in a new report (Wired).

“Therefore his minimum age is 176-years-old. He is the oldest inhabitant on St Helena and is claimed to be the oldest living tortoise in the world.”
Meet Jonathan the Tortoise, who has been dated thanks to Boer War-era photos (Daily Telegraph, if you prefer your science salacious check the Sun’s Old-age mutant swinger tortoise).

“I really enjoyed launching the teddy-bear into space.”
Science outreach seems to have worked on Kane Robbins, age 12 (University of Cambridge).

“There has been so much man-made damage to the river that I sometimes can't see how the Chinese sturgeon can recover.”
Wei Qiwei, biologist at the Yangtze River Fisheries Research Institute, comments on the plight of ‘a living dinosaur’ (Austin-American Statesman).

“From time to time, in our experience, fruit has been encountered at crime scenes.”
Researchers Matej Trapecar and Mojca Kern Vinkovic of the forensic science laboratory in Slovenia explain their new paper ‘Techniques for fingerprint recovery on vegetable and fruit surfaces used in Slovenia — A preliminary study’ in the Science and Justice journal (subscription required).

December 03, 2008

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Ones that got away - December 03, 2008

“They would be expected to sleep better because their internal clock is on the right time.”
Elizabeth Klerman comments on her research that shows jet lag might be treatable with a drug that mimics melatonin (LA Times).

“I texted him and he texted back step-by-step instructions.”
Surgeon David Nott explains how a colleague talked him through a risky amputation in the Democratic Republic of Congo (Guardian).

“The citadel [overlooks] an abyss that, we think, ancient inhabitants used as viewing-point and where they could see possible enemies.”
Benedicto Perez Goicochea reports discovering a pre-Inca citadel in Peru (Andina, mirror in English).

December 02, 2008

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Ones that got away - December 02, 2008

“It’s simply too much money. It’s time for him to go - the sooner he gets a new home the better.”
Heiner Kloes, senior bear keeper at Berlin Zoo, explains that the zoo is trying to sell celebrity polar bear Knut as it cannot afford a new compound that would be large enough for him to mate in (The Times).

“We thought that when it had escaped out to the world it would have a more dignified name. But it didn't.”
Doug Engelbart, of the Stanford Research Institute in California, invented the computer mouse 40 years ago (Daily Telegraph).

“We drilled and drilled all winter when it was dark and the windchill was 80 below. Everyone thought I was crazy.”
Chuck Fipke explains how, in Wired’s words, ‘a Rogue Geologist Discovered a Diamond Trove in the Canadian Arctic’.

December 01, 2008

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Ones that got away - December 01, 2008

“There wasn't a scrap of bone left.”
Fossil thieves have left Michael Ryan, head of vertebrate paleontology at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History, disgruntled (Cleveland Plain Dealer).

‘Alien-like Squid With "Elbows" Filmed at Drilling Site’
After the amazing ‘stuck fish’ video, more great footage from the oil industry (National Geographic).

“A feasible approach to produce hypoallergenic peanut”
Peggy Ozias-Akins, of the University of Georgia, wants to make peanuts safer for everyone (Wired, research paper).

“It was so busy ripping up the thing, it didn't even care about us approaching.”
Scott Gremel, a wildlife biologist at Olympic National Park in Washington state, thinks an aggressive relation might be driving out the spotted owl (LA Times).

November 28, 2008

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Ones that got away - November 28, 2008

“This is the best wind in North America, we think.”
Ronald Lehr, of the American Wind Energy Association, comments on a wind-driven land-rush in Wyoming (NY Times).

“OMG! Its FILLED with Stars!!”
A day in the life of starfish researcher Chris M (hat tip: Deep Sea News).

Top 20 optical illusions
It’s Friday, so why not mess with your own mind (Daily Telegraph).

“By forming this national park, Cameroon sends a powerful message about the importance of conservation.”
Steven Sanderson, president of the Wildlife Conservation Society, commends the creation of the Takamanda National Park to preserve the 115 Cross River gorillas.

“It sounded simple. Fly around in a small airplane and count moose in Game Management Unit 20A south of Fairbanks.”
Tim Mowry goes out with the Alaska Department of Fish and Game’s aerial moose counters (Daily News-Miner).

November 26, 2008

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Ones that got away - November 26, 2008

“Observing his behaviours, we got suspicious as to whether Tsuyoshi was really a male.”
Zoo keepers in Japan have discovered why two polar bears they have been attempting to mate, Tsuyoshi and Kurumi, have failed to become intimate (AP).

“I’m actually more interested in seeing the animals than Escobar's old stuff.”
A tourist comments on the fact that drug baron Pablo Escobar’s former mansion, complete with full-size fake dinosaurs, has become a zoo (Guardian).

“We will intensify our actions and punish those responsible. We won't be intimidated.”
Brazilian environment minister Carlos Minc vows not to back down after a mob attacks environment agency offices and vehicles after a clampdown on illegal logging (Reuters).

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Ones that got away - November 26, 2008

Physics gets sexy
LHC physicist Brian Cox is one of the ‘Sexiest Men Alive’ according to People magazine (via Bad Astronomy).

“This is a grey area but, looked at correctly, we say this is a classic case of personal injury.”
James Townsend is representing six cancer victims seeking damages from a hospital in England after a freezer malfunction destroyed their preserved sperm, and their chances of fathering children (The Times).

“After a male and female encounter, and we can't see what they are doing, the female lets out a high-pitched scream and immediately after the male emits a loud bellow.”
Bill Ellis is using mobile phones to evesdrop on koala calls in Australia in an attempt to work out what they’re saying to each other (Reuters).

“Who knows, if you come back after 10 years maybe there is no more glacier.”
Percussionist Terje Isungset talks about making music with ice from a 2,500 year old glacier (The Guardian).

November 19, 2008

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Ones that got away - November 19, 2008

“I’m the only person in the world to ever be bitten by a pygmy tarsier.”
Sharon Gursky-Doyen, Texas A&M University professor of anthropology, was one of a team that found the first living pygmy tarsiers seen in 80 years (Reuters).

“The epidemic is starting to generalize.”
Li Dongliang, a district director of the Center for Disease Control and Prevention in Beijing, warns that AIDS in China is spreading into the mainstream of society (WSJ).

“There are some scars that women do seem to find appealing.”
Robert Burriss, a psychologist at the University of Liverpool, found men with facial scars were 5.7 percentage points higher in ‘appeal ratings’ than their smooth-skinned equivalents (Guardian).

“Debby was a great bear. She acted like a grumpy old bear a lot of times. It was great. She had a lot of life in her, a lot of feistiness.”
Jos Gatien, senior bear keeper at Winnipeg's Assiniboine Park Zoo, remembers the world’s oldest polar bear, who died this week (The Canadian Press).

November 18, 2008

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Ones that got away - November 18, 2008

“We needed to save the young one’s life. If the hemoglobin was low, there was only one remedy: blood transfusion.”
Pandurang Munde, director of the Sanjay Gandhi National Park in Mumbai, explains why vets have been undertaking blood transfusions on a tiger (AP).

“There is absolutely no reasonable scientific dispute on the subject of whether children who are raised by gay parents are disadvantaged in any way.”
Leslie Cooper, an attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union, comments on a case in Miami that has social scientists going head to head over whether a gay man should be allowed to adopt his two foster children (Miami Herald).

“We always do tend to have music on but we certainly wouldn't stick to classical music and I think our elephants are a bit partial to Terry Wogan and Chiltern FM.”
David Field, zoological director of London and Whipsnade zoos, comments on research showing that classical music can reduce pachyderm abnormal behaviours (Guardian).

November 17, 2008

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Ones that got away - November 17, 2008

“Why must the great die young?”
The ‘death’ of the Phoenix Mars mission is hitting some people hard (Arizona Daily Star).

“Survival is kind of the bottom line when it comes to cancer.”
Research by Barbara Andersen, of Ohio State University, seems to suggest that group therapy can help fight cancer (Reuters).

“One way to work out what is going in one end is to look at what is coming out of the other.”
Mark Meekan, a researcher at the Australian Institute of Marine Science, is rather excited about the first video footage of a whale shark’s ‘ocean motion’ (BBC).

“Who doesn't love a good animal video?”
A top ten animal videos from Wired that shows even a hamster eating broccoli can be enthralling.

November 12, 2008

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Ones that got away - November 12, 2008

“I bent over backward to make it difficult for my work to be misused, and to no avail. When people are motivated to twist something for political purposes, they'll find a way to do it.”
University of Utah psychologist Lisa Diamond is not happy that her research is being allegedly distorted by up a group advocating “treatment” of homosexuality, from the Salt Lake Tribune (hat tip: Wonkette).

“I always say you never know what the sands of Egypt might hide.”
Zahi Hawass, secretary general of Egypt’s Supreme Council of Antiquities, comments on the discovery of a 4,300-year old pyramid to National Geographic.

“My fear is that the [monkeys] will end up in a birdcage in someone’s lounge.”
Jamie Craig, of the Cotswold Wildlife Park in England, has had his squirrel monkeys stolen, from the Guardian.

“This consumer demand is increasingly placing the natural environment - both in China and abroad - at risk through unsustainable and illegal wildlife trade.”
Reuters looks at a new report on consumption of wild animals in China.

November 10, 2008

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Ones that got away - November 10, 2008

“If left unchecked, rabies is likely to kill over two-thirds of all wolves in Bale's Web Valley, and spread further, with wolves dying horrible deaths and numbers dwindling to perilously low levels.”
Claudio Sillero of Oxford University's Wildlife Conservation Unit warns the BBC that rabies could wipe out the Ethiopian wolf.

“China will send a moon-lander and moon-buggy around 2012.”
A state news network announces ambitious plans for the Moon from China, via Reuters.

“Not all biofuels are created equal. There are enormous differences in what’s used to make them, how they perform in the engine, what they cost to produce and, of course, how much CO2 is emitted in their production processes.”
Rob Routs, executive director at Shell, answers questions from Times readers about biofuels.

November 04, 2008

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Ones that got away - November 04, 2008

“The same ballots, run through the same machines, yielded different results each time.”
Oakland County Clerk Ruth Johnson reports problems with electronic voting machines. Lucky there isn’t an election happening (Wired).

Bones definitely Steve Fossett’s
DNA shows remains found in October were those of missing adventurer (LA Times).

“We were surprised to find this link.”
Researcher Anita Chandra comments on finding that watching Sex in the City, Friends, and similar high-quality entertainment is linked to teenage pregnancy (Times).

“What debris may have been still together after re-entry, it fell into the ocean between Australia and New Zealand.”
Space station manager Mike Suffredini says a giant ammonia tank jettisoned from the ISS has not hit anything major (Space.com).

November 03, 2008

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Ones that got away - November 03, 2008

“Galileo saw nature as a book whose author is God.”
Pope Benedict has been telling a meeting of scientists there is “no opposition between faith’s understanding of creation and the evidence of the empirical sciences” (Reuters).

“It obviously wasn’t my intent that it would be copied word for word.”
John Miller, a physics professor at the University of Houston, comments in the Houston Chronicle on allegations that one of his grant proposals was plagiarised by a researcher at Texas Southern University.

“All credit to them for not sitting on their hands.”
Geologist John Underhill commends researchers who voted on the likely causes of a controversial mud volcano in Indonesia. Of 74 scientists, 42 blamed drilling for oil, 16 thought evidence was inconclusive, 13 blamed a combination of drilling and an earthquake, and three blamed the earthquake alone (BBC).

“I’ve gone on record as saying that I am personally standing behind delivering the cars.”
Paypal billionaire Elon Musk moves to quash rumours of problems at his electric car company Tesla (Reuters).

October 28, 2008

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Ones that got away - October 28, 2008

NASA’s next rocket: “on the chopping block”
Former Republican congressman Robert Walker tells the Orlando Sentinel that Ares I is under threat. [Hat tip: NASA Watch.]

“After 15 years of work, we are handing over to industry to produce an artificial heart usable by man.”
Researcher Alain Carpentier tells AFP an artificial heart for transplant will be ready for clinical trials by 2011.

Pssst. Wanna buy some ivory?
The BBC reports that the first sanctioned sale of ivory in southern Africa in nearly a decade started today.

“We’re exercising our Constitutional right and privilege in casting our ballot this Election Day.”
So says E. Michael Fincke, who will be voting from space in the US elections (Scientific American).

October 27, 2008

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Ones that got away - October 27, 2008

“This is a disaster. The population drop is worse than the stock market.”
Whale researcher Ken Balcomb is concerned that seven Puget Sound killer whales are missing, presumed dead (AP).

No rest for the wolf lobby
The Bush administration is trying to get the northern Rockies gray wolf off the Endangered Species List in the latest skirmish in this fight (Washington Post).

“Humans made fire 790,000 years ago”
So says Reuters, detailing findings from researchers at Israel’s Hebrew University.

David Attenborough = frog Viagra
After three years without mating, Mission Golden-eyed Tree frogs at London Zoo “did the deed” during a visit by famous naturalist Sir David Attenborough. The Daily Telegraph adds, “the frogs' keepers admitted it was more likely that the amphibians finally mated because of a humidifier placed in their new tank”.

October 24, 2008

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Ones that got away - October 24, 2008

“This is one of the most exciting things you can do on God’s Earth.”
Richard Noble is enthused about his ‘Bloodhound’ project: a car capable of 1,000 miles an hour (BBC).

‘Japan develops cheaper catalyst to make plastic’
Reuters says Keiichi Tomishige’s catalyst turns natural gas into plastic and alternative fuels more cheaply than existing compounds.

‘Appalachian Coal to Power India?’
The NY Times Dot Earth blog ponders India’s moves to buy American coal for its planned ‘Ultra-mega’ power plants.

“It may be one of the quickest recoveries in the history of the Endangered Species Act.”
Deputy Interior Secretary Lynn Scarlett tells the LA Times she’s mighty pleased with efforts to rescue Southern California's island foxes.