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The Martian moon Phobos as seen by the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter's HiRISE camera on March 23, 2008. Credit: NASA/JPL/University of Arizona
in General Science
via Space.com @ 1:22 11th Apr
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In this photo provided by Hadoram Shirihai and the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds a Becks petrel is seen in the summer of 2007 in the Bismarck Archipelago Papua New Guinea. The pale-bellied bird species last seen in the 1920s and long thou ...
in Biological Science
via PhysOrg.com @ 23:03 8th Mar
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Asteroids that strike Earth have cosmic origins, but clues to the size of ancient impactors now have come from a decidedly Earth-bound source: the chemistry of ancient seawater.
in General Science
via Space.com @ 1:23 11th Apr
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A bird not seen for almost 80 years has been discovered in the Pacific to the delight of conservationists.
in Biological Science
via 999 Today @ 20:14 14th Mar
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Head to the Salford Tourist Information Centre to see the entrants in this year's As Seen in Salford photography competition - an annual competition to capture the sights and scenes of our city. Vote for your favourite or see if your picture made the final!
in Arts & Culture
via Salford City Council @ 15:13 10th Mar
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By Gautam Parihar, New Delhi, Mar 15 : People have heard Naga music but a very few have seen Naga paintings. This was evident at the Naga Art Exhibition recently held at the India International Centre (IIC).
in Arts & Culture
via NewKerala.com @ 3:19 16th Mar
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London: It seems that gardening was not Rachel McGarie’s cup of tea, for the weeds and brambles in her garden grew so long that they could be seen from space on Google Earth.
in Search Engines
via IBNLive India News @ 12:38 6th May
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A pale-bellied bird species last seen in the 1920s and long thought to be extinct has been rediscovered near Papua New Guinea. The Beck's petrel was photographed last summer by an Israeli ornithologist in the Bismarck Archipelago, a group of islands northeast of Papua New Guinea.
in Biological Science
via Town Hall @ 20:58 7th Mar
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LONDON - A pale-bellied bird species last seen in the 1920s and long thought to be extinct has been rediscovered near Papua New Guinea. The Beck's petrel was photographed last summer by an Israeli ornithologist in the Bismarck Archipelago, a group of islands northeast of Papua New Guinea.
in Biological Science
via AP via Newsday @ 15:23 8th Mar
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LONDON - A pale-bellied bird species last seen in the 1920s and long thought to be extinct has been rediscovered near
in Biological Science
via Yahoo! News @ 0:02 8th Mar
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LONDON (AP) -- A pale-bellied bird species last seen in the 1920s and long thought to be extinct has been rediscovered near Papua New Guinea. The Beck's petrel was photographed last summer by an Israeli ornithologist in the Bismarck Archipelago, a group of islands northeast of Papua New Guinea.
in Biological Science
via Associated Press @ 20:58 7th Mar
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(AP) A pale-bellied bird species last seen in the 1920s and long thought to be extinct has been rediscovered near Papua New Guinea. The Beck's petrel was photographed last summer by an Israeli ornithologist in the Bismarck Archipelago, a group of islands northeast of Papua New Guinea.
in Biological Science
via CBS News @ 20:58 7th Mar
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The brightest burst of light ever seen - which peaked at a few hundred million billion times the brightness of our Sun - has been witnessed by astronomers.
in Space Science
via Telegraph @ 18:00 20th Mar
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The Space Shuttle Endeavour is seen from cameras aboard the International Space Station as the crews aboard the two spacecraft prepare for docking in the image obtained from NASA TV March 12, 2008. REUTERS/NASA TV.
in Space Science
via Yahoo! Canada @ 12:01 24th Mar
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Home > Sports > Cricket > Profiles > Shoaib will probably never be seen in a Pakistan shirt again - and that's a tragedy for cricket
in Cricket
via Betfair @ 15:01 6th Apr
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Fossilized tiny creatures by the hundreds from the Age of Dinosaurs have been found embedded inside opaque amber -- not the more familiar translucent amber as seen in the movie "Jurassic Park."
in General Science
via People's Daily Online @ 9:39 11th Apr
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Okay, now astronomers are just showing off. See the three little multicolored dots in the upper right of this image? That's NASA's WMAP satellite, seen from a distance of 1.5 million km. The photograph was taken from the 2.2 meter telescope at the European Southern Observatory at La Silla, Chile. Apart from demonstrating some impressive imagine power and technique, the astronomers are testing out new tracking techniques for ESA's upcoming Gaia space observatory.
in Space Science
via Universe Today @ 0:26 11th May
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BEIJING, April 11 (Xinhuanet) -- Fossilized tiny creatures by the hundreds from the Age of Dinosaurs have been found embedded inside opaque amber -- not the more familiar translucent amber as seen in the movie "Jurassic Park."
in General Science
via EView Week @ 15:10 11th Apr
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This picture was released a couple of days ago, but since it's so special, it deserves a post on Universe Today. And besides, everyone secretly likes to look at pictures of themselves. And this is a picture of us: it's the Earth and the moon, as seen from Mars. From the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, to be exact, and it was taken by the HiRISE Instrument on board, the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment. That's the same camera that gave us the images of the avalanche on Mars, so the capabilities of this instrument are quite spectacular. This image was snapped back in October 2007, from a distance of 142 million kilometers, and if you look closely, you can make out a few features on Earth.
in General Science
via Universe Today @ 22:26 6th Mar
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Storm clouds thought to be made of water are thought to rise to the planet's surface from a depth of about 300 kilometres. Sunlight reflecting off the planet's famous rings is so bright that lightning itself can't be seen, but radio signals thought to arise in lightning bolts are observed (Image: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute)
in Space Science
via New Scientist @ 20:17 30th Apr
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has detected the brightest cosmic explosion ever recorded -- a massive burst of energy 7.5 billion light years away that could be seen with the naked eye from Earth, the US space agency said Thursday.
in Space Science
via Yahoo! @ 2:35 21st Mar
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NASA has detected the brightest cosmic explosion ever recorded -- a massive burst of energy 7.5 billion light years away that could be seen with the naked eye from Earth, the US space agency said Thursday.
in General Science
via Antara Interactive @ 9:32 21st Mar
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Missy Elliott and adidas Originals are teaming up for the international launch of the Respect M.E. talent competition, “Stand Up Be Seen.”
in Arts & Culture
via EURweb @ 1:57 25th Mar
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WASHINGTON -Images of colliding galaxies show them spinning, sliding and slipping into one another, wreaking stellar destruction that will give birth to new and larger galaxies, pictured above. The Maryland-based Space Telescope Science Institute released 59 new images from the Hubble Space Telescope yesterday to celebrate the 18th anniversary of its launch. "This new Hubble atlas dramatically illustrates how galaxy collisions produce a remarkable variety of intricate structures in never-before-seen detail," it said. "Astronomers observe only one out of a million galaxies in the nearby universe in the act of colliding. However, galaxy mergers were much more common long ago when they were closer together, because the expanding universe was smaller.
in General Science
via National Post @ 10:08 26th Apr
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Have you ever seen a Rubin vase? A "Rubin vase" isn't actually a vase; it's an optical illusion. Perhaps you've seen it; it's an image that can be interpreted either as a vase or as two faces in profile. As Danish psychologist Edgar Rubin discovered in the early twentieth century, what you see in the "Rubin vase" depends on how you look at it. For the publishing industry, Amazon's new handheld reading device, the Kindle, can be interpreted much like Rubin's vase/face illusion; it all depends on how you look at it. From one perspective, publishers can view the Kindle as a threat, a ten- ounce battery-powered harbinger of doom for the printed word. However, viewed from another perspective, the publishing paradigm associated with Amazon's Kindle might suggest a solution to the Internet-induced financial woes of many magazines and newspapers.
in E-commerce
via Red Orbit @ 4:01 9th Mar
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