Articles from 03/2006
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Sailing the Seas of Acid
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Seed’s Daily Zeitgeist: 3/1/2006
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Getting Physical
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Mathematical Uncertainty
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The One Drug To Replace All Drugs
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Seed’s Daily Zeitgeist
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New & Notable: 2/17 - 2/23
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Where to Look for Alien Life
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The Last Name’s the Same
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Summers’ Fall
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Better Living Through Chemistry.com
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Week in Science: 2/17 - 2/23
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{Force Diagram}: The United States Supreme Court
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In Cord Blood
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A Break from Decision-Making
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Using the Past to Model the Future
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The Reinvention of the Self
Elizabeth Gould overturned one of the central tenets of neuroscience. Now she’s building on her discovery to show that poverty and stress may not just be symptoms of society, but bound to our anatomy.
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On My Mind: Frans de Waal
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What Makes a Winner
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Doing Math With Baby
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Let the Doping Begin
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Changing the Way Science Is Taught
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Crunchy Granola Suite
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New & Notable: 2/10 - 2/16
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Week in Science: 2/10 - 2/16
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The Bipolar Protein
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A New Weapon Against Viruses
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Finding Flaws in Figure Skating
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Hitting a High E
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Staffers Try Out Chemistry.com
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Re-Icing the Arctic
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Ramparts of Speech
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Staffers Try Out Chemistry.com
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Staffers Try Out Chemistry.com
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Meeting of the Minds
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The Prion Anomaly
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Learning to Speak “Science”
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New & Notable: 2/3 - 2/9
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Science Censor Resigns
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Week in Science: 2/3 - 2/9
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18 and a Lifetime to Go
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Built to be Fans
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The Anatomy of a Hit Song
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Glow Worms
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The Poisoning of Ukraine’s President
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The Myth of the “Freshman 15”
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Instant Study Hints Advertisers Should Objectify Women
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Waisting Time
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New & Notable: 1/27 - 2/2
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Show Me the Money
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In Time for the Super Bowl, Drug Shown to Curb Gambling
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What’s Worse: Faking a Memoir or a Medical Study?
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And Then There Were 10…Or Should It Be Eight?
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Week in Science: 1/27 - 2/2
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Why Didn’t I Think of That?
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The Science Left Out of the Speech
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Bush Looks to Science
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Live-Chatting the State of the Union
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.








