Archive of articles published on the 17th of November 2011
-
Response time to open arteries for most critical patients still too slow
-
Discovery may help fight late-stage ovarian cancer
-
New model more accurately describes migratory animals' extinction risk
-
Harm not those strangers that pollinate, study warns
-
LGBT seniors face harder old age, national study finds
-
New material can enhance energy, computer, lighting technologies
-
Toward more cost-effective production of biofuels from plant lignocellulosic biomass
-
Princeton release: Massive volcanoes, meteorite impacts delivered one-two death punch to dinosaurs
-
Astronomers use advanced equipment aboard Hubble to reveal galaxies' most elusive secrets
-
Researchers discover new way to form extracellular vesicles
-
Study: Ozone from rock fracture could serve as earthquake early warning
-
Targeting bacterial gas defenses allow for increased efficacy of numerous antibiotics
-
In an enzyme critical for life, X-ray emission cracks mystery atom
-
Multidisciplinary team of researchers develop world’s lightest material
-
Microfabrication breakthrough could set piezoelectric material applications in motion
-
Study explains how heart attack can lead to heart rupture
-
Molecules on branched-polymer surfaces can capture rare tumor cells in blood
-
UofL researcher determines how Legionnaires' bacteria proliferate, cause disease
-
What bacteria don't know can hurt them
-
The buzz around beer
-
Marshall study shows nanoparticles used as additives in diesel fuels can travel from lungs to liver
-
Environmental conditions and predators affect Atlantic salmon survival in the Gulf of Maine
-
Bleak future for Bay area tidal marshes?
-
Smart swarms of bacteria inspire robotics researchers
-
Squid mystery in Mexican waters unraveled by Stanford biologist and a class of students
-
Job market for college grads has 'legs'
-
Researchers pinpoint date and rate of Earth's most extreme extinction
-
Satellite images help species conservation
-
A new stent design may put patients at risk
-
Rehabilitating vacant lots improves urban health and safety, Penn study finds
-
Public willing to pay more for greener urban spaces
-
Treatment for juvenile offenders shows shows positive results 22 years later