2015年9月24日 星期四

2015-09-25 Australia Science


Sydney Morning Herald
   
Giant killer lizards shared Australia with first Aborigines: UQ researchers   
Sydney Morning Herald
Some of Australia's earliest human inhabitants may have had to deal with giant predator lizards that weighed up to half a tonne, Queensland researchers have found. The University of Queensland researchers have discovered evidence of "giant killer ...
Giant killer lizard fossil shines new light on early Australians   UQ News
Australia's earliest human inhabitants may deal with Giant Predator lizards   Gracious Column
Giant Killer Lizards Lived Among Ice-Age Aussies   Discovery News
Science Recorder   
Headlines & Global News   
Globalnews.ca   
all 32 news articles »   


ABC Online
   
Stakeholders form opposite readings of illegal fishing statistics on Great ...   
ABC Online
Stakeholders on opposite sides of the fence have taken different readings of new data on illegal fishing on the Great Barrier Reef. In the last financial year, 694 offences were reported on the Reef; 538 involving recreational fishers and 96 involving ...
Researchers find surprising way to fight Great Barrier Reef threat after ...   NEWS.com.au
Australian scientist find household vinegar can prevent collapse of Great ...   International Business Times AU
Reef-eating Starfish: vinagre may be the solution for Australian corals   Pulse Headlines
MyTechBits   
Nature World Report   
Mother Nature Network (blog)   
all 87 news articles »   


World Science
   
“Missing” space-time waves leave scientists puzzled   
World Science
Albert Einstein's theory of relativity—which uses geometry to describe how gravity shapes the universe and celestial motions—has withstood every test scientists have thrown at it. But one festering problem is starting to raise eyebrows. Einstein's ...
Where are the missing gravitational waves?   The Conversation AU
Australian astronomers cast doubt on understanding of galaxy: 11-year study   Xinhua
11-year search turns up no sign of Einstein's gravitational waves   Updated News
Space.com   
Phys.Org   
all 14 news articles »   


The Australian
   
Qld birth spike provides hope for echidna   
The Australian
A SHARP spike in echidna births at a Gold Coast wildlife park has researchers confident they are global leaders in the species' prickly mating methods. THE Currumbin Wildlife Sanctuary has welcomed 14 short-beaked echidna puggles in the past five years ...

Echidnas' 'bizarre' mating no longer obstacle to successful breeding program   The Guardian
Better Understanding of Echidna Breeding Method Gives Hope for Species   BizTek Mojo
Endangered Anteaters: Long-Beaked Echidnas Successfully Bred By Conservationists   Nature World News
Discovery News   
all 10 news articles »   


NYC Today
   
Novel approach promises easier way to detect protein fibers implicated in ...   
News-Medical.net
Liquid crystals are familiar to most of us as the somewhat humdrum stuff used to make computer displays and TVs. Even for scientists, it has not been easy to find other ways of using them. Now a group of researchers at the University of Chicago's ...
Liquid crystals show potential for detection of neuro-degenerative disease   HealthCanal.com
Liquid Crystal Defects can be used for creation of Nanomaterials: UW Madison ...   NYC Today
Designed Defects in Liquid Crystals Can Guide Construction of Nanomaterials   Newswise (press release)
Phys.Org   
all 17 news articles »   


Business Insider Australia
   
Test your smarts against this program that can solve geometry SAT questions   
Business Insider Australia
Scientists recently unveiled a new AI system that can outfox average high school students on the geometry portion of the SAT. The program answered 49% of the official SAT geometry questions correctly, and got 61% of the practice test questions right.
Artificial intelligence is now smart enough to sit SAT level geometry exams   ScienceAlert
Scientists develop AI system that can take SAT exams   IT PRO
Artificial intelligence system correctly answers 49% geometry questions in   Bulletin Leader

all 5 news articles »   


Sydney Morning Herald
   
Giant wooden megaphones take over Estonian forest   
Sydney Morning Herald
Students from the Estonian Academy of Arts have designed and installed a striking series of timber "forest megaphones" that amplify the ambient sounds of the natural environment. Part-sculptural installation, part-architectural folly, the project ...
Giant Megaphones Amplify Forest Sounds   Discovery News
Giant timber megaphones amplify sounds of Estonian forest   Dezeen
Gigantic wooden megaphones: it's speakers. For nature   Stoney Roads
OutdoorHub   
Mother Nature Network   
The Calvert Journal   
all 7 news articles »   


Rockhampton Morning Bulletin
   
FISHING TAILS: Crabs, salmon and bream chewing in CQ   
Rockhampton Morning Bulletin
LOOK WHAT I CAUGHT: Ben Pole with his first barra and he played it like a pro. Related Items. FISHING TAILS: Barra starting to appear in better numbers · FISHING TAILS: Catching boaties on roads and bad parkers · FISHING TAILS: Boat maintenance on ...

FISHING TAILS: Corio Bay filled with fish variety right now   Central Queensland news

all 4 news articles »   


Live Science
   
Amazing Snapshot: Jet Zooms Over Bahamas in Astronaut Photo   
Live Science
The turquoise waters snaking through Great Exuma Island in the Bahamas are almost unbelievably vivid in a new photograph taken from space. But zoom in, and the picture becomes even more impressive. An astronaut with a long lens and a steady hand ...

This Photo Of An Aeroplane Flying Over The Bahamas Was Shot From The ISS   Gizmodo Australia
Astronaut photographs a single airplane from space   The Budapest Report

all 3 news articles »   


New Historian
   
Ice Age Humans Hunted Salmon for Food   
New Historian
A new research paper published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences says that humans living in Alaska during the Ice Age hunted salmon as a food source – some of the earliest known evidence of its kind. The evidence turns the ...

Research concludes that Ice age Alaskans dined on salmon 11500 years ago   NYC Today
Study finds evidence of prehistoric salmon fishing in Alaska   Summit County Citizens Voice

all 3 news articles »   

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