Secret Harvard Meeting Criticized For Synthetic Human Genome, Ethically Fraud Projects?
First Posted: Jun 09, 2016 04:30 AM EDT A Harvard meeting transpired three weeks ago to tackle a challenging plan to produce synthetic human genomes. Based on reports, 130 scientists, policy leaders and entrepreneurs were invited to this closed-door, invitation-only meeting, which earned a lot of criticisms. Now, the ideas that came up in the Harvard meeting have already been published in the journal Science, announcing a project to be launched to radically lessen the cost of synthesizing ge..>> view originalFlood-affected spiders are covering a town in webs
Australians have watched the recent freak storms pass through the east coast with an uneasy mix of awe and horror. The storm pushed its way through Queensland, down to New South Wales and Victoria. There were so many incredible images caught, from standing waves to collapsed pools. It’s now moving through Tasmania, and is just as powerful and unrelenting. Launceston City Council released drone footage, captured by Rob Burnett, of the crazy scale of the floods which affected most of the state. ..>> view originalMassive 'hot Jupiter' has power to 'spin-up' own star, scientists claim
Scientists studying a newly discovered ‘hot Jupiter’ in space say there is evidence that the giant exoplanet is orbiting its nearest satellite at such speed that it’s moving or ‘spinning up’ its nearby star. A planetary study of the otherworldly ‘hot Jupiter’ - a giant gas orb physically similar to its namesake in our Solar System - has found that HATS-18b has an extremely fast orbital period of less than a day.A newly-released analysis of the intergalactic find describes HATS-..>> view originalDiscovery provides new clues on 'Hobbit'
The discovery of fossilised remains by an Australian-led team in Indonesia has unlocked new questions about human evolution and the history of the tiny human, known as the `Hobbit'. And it all could have started with a tsunami. It was three weeks until the end of the digging season at the Mata Menge site on the Indonesian island of Flores in October 2014 when Dr Gerrit van den Bergh, from the University of Wollongong's Centre for Archaeological Science in NSW began thinking about what to do nex..>> view originalFish eyes life inside a jelly's belly
A fish has been pictured swimming inside a jellyfish off Australia's east coast in a remarkable and rare image that has gone viral, with more than two million online views. Underwater photographer Tim Samuel was in the water with a friend near popular ...>> view originalHear 13 Billion Year Old Stars Sing, Starry Music Helps Discover Star's Origin
First Posted: Jun 09, 2016 04:40 AM EDT Asteroseismologists from the University of Birmingham (BHAM) have recorded the sounds of some of Milky Way's oldest stars, according to a paper published in the journal Royal Astronomical Society's Monthly Notices. The sound of the stars will reportedly help to understand the age, mass and early history of stars in our galaxy. The researching team, from Birmingham University's School of Physics and Astronomy, revealed the discovery of "resonant acousti..>> view originalPhysicists confirm there's a second layer of information hidden in our DNA
Theoretical physicists have confirmed that it's not just the information coded into our DNA that shapes who we are - it's also the way DNA folds itself that controls which genes are expressed inside our bodies. That's something biologists have known for years, and they've even been able to figure out some of the proteins responsible for folding up DNA. But now a group of physicists have been able to demonstrate for the first time through simulations how this hidden information controls our evol..>> view originalDiamond worlds may have hosted universe's first life
Carbon planets consisting of graphite, carbides and diamonds possibly hosted life in the early universe, according to a new study. (Photo: Reuters) Carbon planets consisting of graphite, carbides and diamonds possibly hosted life in the early universe, according to a new study. Scientists suggest that searching a rare class of stars might help find these diamond worlds. Our Earth consists of silicate rocks and an iron core with a thin veneer of water and life. But the first potentially habi..>> view originalMicroplastics Threaten To Destroy Fish Populations, Study Finds Perch Love Eating Plastic Over Natural Food
Thursday, June 9, 2016
Secret Harvard Meeting Criticized For Synthetic Human Genome, Ethically Fraud Projects? and other top stories.
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