Articles from 06/2006
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Eulogizing the EV1
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A Silver Lining to Our Science Struggles
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Cribsheet #5: Nuclear Power
Nuclear Power 101: How it works, where it's used, and why it can be dangerous.
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Crater Could be Linked to “Great Dying”
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I Can’t Believe It’s Science: 6/16 - 6/22
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Seduced by the Flickering Lights of the Brain
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GM Yeast Turn Waste Into Ethanol
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Week in Science: 6/16 ‐ 6/22
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Scientists Triple Your Ability to Rock Out
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Eat My Contrails, Branson!
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Monkeys Monitor Weather, Too
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The Future of Fusion
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I Can’t Believe It’s Science: 6/9 - 6/15
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Quantum Pulp
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The Big Payoff
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Putting the Past In Front
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Week in Science: 6/9 - 6/15
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Science Star Search
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Infinite Jest
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Plants Go TOPLESS
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After the Fire
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A Sexy Song for Stronger Spawn
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No Longer a Mind of Our Own
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As Science Goes, so Goes the Nation
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New & Notable: 6/2 - 6/8
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‘Lab Chickens’ Challenge Lab Mice
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Built to be Bilingual
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Week in Science: 6/2 - 6/8
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Real-Time Evolution
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Warmer Weather Could Speed Up Speciation
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Serenity Now!
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The Gay Animal Kingdom
The effeminate sheep and other problems with Darwinian sexual selection.
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The Horniness Gene
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New & Notable: 5/26 - 6/1
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Scent of a Terrorist
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Week In Science: 5/26 - 6/1
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In Need of New Levees
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.








