Articles from 09/2006
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The Social Life
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Martian Pole Dotted With Carbon Dioxide Geysers
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Triangulating Tehran
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Do Landscapes Influence Human Behavior?
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Best Week Ever
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Fewer Vietnam Vets Suffered From PTSD
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The New Goldrush: The Demand for Ethanol
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The Battle Between Food and Fuel
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Fast-Evolving DNA May Account for Differences Between Human, Chimp Brains
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I Can’t Believe It’s Science (for Aug. 28, 2006)
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Week in Science (for Aug. 28, 2006)
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Time Before Time
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The Great, Dysfunctional Planet Debate
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Scientists Confirm Dark Matter’s Existence
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What is The Poincare Conjecture?
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Not Feeling the Fields
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Huntington’s Disease Study Keeps Its Subjects in the Dark
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The Contrarian
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Human Sexual Behavior May Influence Pathogen Strains
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Seed Video Feature: On the Ground at the XVI AIDS Conference
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I Can’t Believe it’s Science: 8/11 - 8/17
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Thank You For Polluting
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Protein Made by Lower Primates Combats HIV
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Week in Science: 8/11 - 8/17
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Infants May be Able to Detect Arithmetic Errors
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State of the Pandemic
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Mixed Record for Prisons in Fight Against HIV/AIDS
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AIDS Educators Face Uphill Battle in South Africa
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Men (And Sometimes Women) Lure Mates Creatively
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Re-Visiting Wan Yanhai
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At AIDS Conference, Vaccines Take a Back Seat to Microbicides
Scientists and funding agencies are pegging gels or creams that prevent the transmission of HIV during sex as the key to stopping the pandemic.
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Seed Interview: Wan Yanhai
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The Culture-Shaping Parasite
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Blogging the XVI International AIDS Conference
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25 Years Later
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25 Years Later: The Vaccine
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Genetically Manufacturing Flavor
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25 Years Later: Money
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25 Years Later: Conflict
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I Can’t Believe It’s Science: 8/4 - 8/10
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25 Years Later: The Media
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25 Years Later: Advocacy
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Week in Science: 8/4 - 8/10
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25 Years Later: Overview
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AIDS at 25
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The Plan B Saga
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Plan B: The Behind-the-Counter Over-the-Counter Pill?
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A Venomous Treatment for Brain Tumors
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I Can’t Believe It’s Science: 7/28 - 8/3
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The Value of Small Things
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Jurassic Lark
A visit to LA's most peculiar museum.
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Over the Moon
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Week In Science: 7/28 - 8/3
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Computer-Animated Blonds Have More Fun
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Einstein in Lust
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The Jury on Global Warming
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How We Make a Memory
Researchers find that familiarity is the touchstone for being able to remember.
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A Hostile Climate
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How To Spot a Noun
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.








