Articles from 12/2005
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The Week in Science 12/23-12/29
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Year in Science: Issues
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Year in Science: Ideas
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Year in Science: Icons
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New & Notable: 12/17 - 12/23
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The Year in Science 2005
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Panel Declares Research Fake
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Power to the People?
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An Environmentalist’s Christmas Carol
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The Week in Science: 12/16-12/22
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Mental Time Travel
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Keeping Control
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Do Bacteria Dance?
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Mars Attack!
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Evolution Wins in Dover
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Why’d They Die?
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Wiped from the Earth
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Heeding Cassandra
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The Electric Slide
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New & Notable: 12/10 - 12/16
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On the Fly
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Thinking Pain Away
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The Week in Science: 12/10 - 12/16
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Hwang Defends Technology
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Oceanfront Property in the Desert
A fissure in Ethiopia’s Afar Desert may be the beginnings of a new ocean basin.
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Dispatch from Montreal
A youth-led movement builds at the UN's climate change talks.
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Hwang Admits to Faking Data, Says Collaborator
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Mapping the Invisible
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Number One with a Bullet
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Angelic Tibet
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Hydrogen Caged!
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New & Notable: 12/03 - 12/09
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Science Goes To The Dogs
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Pump It Up
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Surveying the Landscape
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The Week in Science: 12/03- 12/09
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First Runner-up
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Jews on Jews: Jews are Great
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Singing a Different Tune
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Blinis, Blix & Bling
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Seed in Stockholm: Anders Sandberg
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Seed in Stockholm: Adam Bly
Our Editor-in-Chief reports from Stockholm and the Nobels.
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Seed in Stockholm
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Reflections on Mirror Neurons
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Neurons Notice Novel Noises
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Conic Cross Sections
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New & Notable: 11/26 - 12/02
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Java Jives With Brain
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Evolution on Ice
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Lose Weight in Seconds!
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The AIDS Riddle
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New & Notable: HIV/AIDS Research
Now on SEEDMAGAZINE.COM
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Ideas
I Tried Almost Everything Else
John Rinn, snowboarder, skateboarder, and “genomic origamist,” on why we should dumpster-dive in our genomes and the inspiration of a middle-distance runner.
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Ideas
Going, Going, Gone
The second most common element in the universe is increasingly rare on Earth—except, for now, in America.
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Ideas
Earth-like Planets Aren’t Rare
Renowned planetary scientist James Kasting on the odds of finding another Earth-like planet and the power of science fiction.








