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    Company offers to clone dogs for 5 highest bidders (AP)

    In this image provided by BioArts International, BioArts International chief executive Lou Hawthorne poses with dogs cloned from his family pet on Saturday, May 3, 2008 in Mill Valley, Calif. BioArts is offering to clone the dogs of the five highest bidders in an online auction next month. Opening bids start at $100,000. The cloning project is in partnership with a South Korean research team that includes Hwang Woo-Suk, who scandalized the international scientific community in 2005 when his breakthrough human cloning research was found to have been faked. (AP Photo/BioArts International)AP - A Northern California biotech company announced Wednesday that it will clone dogs for the five highest bidders in a series of online auctions. Some ethicists condemned the offer, fearing it could lead to human clones.


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    Thu, 22 May 2008 02:57:26 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Calif. quake scientists detail impact of 'Big One' (AP)

    In this Jan. 17, 1994, file photo, the covered body of Los Angeles motorcycle officer Clarence W. Dean lays near his motorcycle which plunged off  Highway 14 overpass that collapsed onto Interstate 5 in the San Fernando Valley section of Los Angeles. In a joint publication, to be released Thursday, May 22, 2008, of the U.S. Geological Survey and California Geological Survey, scientists for the first time have written a script detailing the devastation California would likely face if it were rocked by a monstrous 7.8-magnitude earthquake.  (AP Photo/Doug Pizac)AP - The "Big One," as earthquake scientists imagine it in a detailed, first-of-its-kind script, unzips California's mighty San Andreas Fault north of the Mexican border. In less than two minutes, Los Angeles and its sprawling suburbs are shaking like a bowl of jelly.


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    Thu, 22 May 2008 06:43:49 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    AP: Foot-and-mouth plan used flawed study (AP)

    This undated file photo provided by the Agricultural Research Service of the U.S. Department of Agriculture shows Plum Island Animal Disease Center off the coast of New York's Long Island. The Bush administration relied on a flawed study to conclude that research on a highly infectious animal disease could safely be moved from an isolated island laboratory to sites on the mainland near livestock, congressional investigators concluded in findings obtained by The Associated Press. (AP Photo/ARS-USDA, File)AP - The Bush administration relied on a flawed study to conclude that research on a highly infectious animal disease could safely be moved from an isolated island laboratory to sites on the mainland near livestock, congressional investigators concluded in findings obtained by The Associated Press.


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    Thu, 22 May 2008 08:07:30 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Aspen trees starved in global warming experiment (AP)

    Ohio State University grad student Brady Hardimann cuts an aspen tree in Pellston, Mich., May 5, 2008. The 'girdling,' stripping a band of bark from around each tree, prevents sugars produced by the leaves from traveling to the roots, causing trees to starve slowly without regenerating. Scientists are starving Michigan aspen trees in a global warming experiment to boost carbon absorption. (AP Photo/John Flesher)AP - Chain saws scream in a northern Michigan forest, but it's not the familiar sound of lumberjacks.


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    Thu, 22 May 2008 08:29:32 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    US Official: Interior rulings subject to meddling (AP)
    AP - A congressional investigator asserted Wednesday that at least four Interior Department officials may have inappropriately interfered in decisions on protection of endangered species. -- read full article
    Wed, 21 May 2008 18:11:39 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Supernova caught exploding on camera (Reuters)

    Light from supernovas in the NGC 2770 galaxy as imaged by the Gemini Multi-Object Spectrograph at Gemini North on Mauna Kea in Hawaii is seen in a handout image. (Gemini Observatory/Handout/Reuters)Reuters - Excited astronomers said on Wednesday they had for the first time caught a supernova on camera just as it was exploding, and they may now learn how to spot others.


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    Wed, 21 May 2008 17:57:37 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Scientists witness start of star's explosive death (AP)

    In this ultraviolet image (upper L), several weeks-old Supernova 2007uy is seen in galaxy NGC2770, taken on January 7, 2008, with a close-up, X-ray image of that supernova beneath.  New Supernova 2008D (R) appears onto the scene in these images taken January 9, 2008, giving scientists the unique opportunity to witness the birth of a supernova. Thanks to a fortunate observation with NASA's Swift satellite, astronomers, for the first time, have caught a normal supernova at the moment of its birth--the first instant when an exploding star begins spewing its energy into space, transforming into a supernova that during its brief lifetime will shine brighter than billions of stars combined.  REUTERS/NASA Swift team/Handout.  NO SALES. NO ARCHIVES. FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY. NOT FOR SALE FOR MARKETING OR ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS.AP - In a stroke of cosmic luck, astronomers for the first time witnessed the start of one of the universe's most fiery events: the end of a star's life as it exploded into a supernova.


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    Wed, 21 May 2008 18:41:44 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Supernova Birth Observed for First Time (SPACE.com)
    SPACE.com - While peering at her computer screen four months ago, astronomer Alicia Soderberg expected to see the small glowing smudge of a month-old supernova. But what she and her colleague saw instead was a strange, extremely bright, five-minute burst of X-rays. -- read full article
    Wed, 21 May 2008 17:31:55 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    'Frog-amander' Fossil Fills Evolutionary Gap (LiveScience.com)
    LiveScience.com - A frog-like creature with a stubby tail once paddled through a quiet pond in what is now Texas, snapping up mayflies while keeping an ear out for bellowing mates, new fossil evidence suggests. -- read full article
    Wed, 21 May 2008 17:21:00 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    US researchers find missing space matter in cosmic web (AFP)

    NASA image shows a dark matter ring in a galaxy. Researchers say they have found about half of the universe's missing matter hidden in the spaces between billions of galaxies thanks to the Hubble telescope.(AFP/NASA/File/Ho)AFP - Researchers say they have found about half of the universe's missing matter hidden in the spaces between billions of galaxies thanks to the Hubble telescope.


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    Wed, 21 May 2008 15:54:01 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Australian dilemma: too many kangaroos, too few devils (AP)

    In this Aug. 29, 2000 file photo, a mother and her joey kangaroo are seen at the Lucas Heights Nuclear Science Testing Facility in Sydney, Australia. Australian authorities have started the controversial killing about 400 kangaroos on the outskirts of Australia's capital of Canberra, animal rights activists said Monday, May 19, 2008. (AP Photo/Rob Griffith, File)AP - Too many kangaroos, too few Tasmanian devils. Two of the country's beloved icons are challenging Australians' thinking on wildlife management.


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    Wed, 21 May 2008 17:10:46 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    US biotech company offers to clone man's best friend (AFP)

    This combo shows file photos of South Korea's first cloned dog, an Afghan puppy named AFP - A US biotech company on Wednesday announced it will auction off the right for five dog owners to have their furry best friend cloned, with bidding starting at 100,000 dollars.


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    Wed, 21 May 2008 14:58:21 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Congress grills oil execs on record pump prices (Reuters)

    Chairman and President of BP America Inc. Robert Malone, (L), and President of Shell Oil Company John Hofmeister, (2nd L), Vice Chairman of the Board of Chevron Corporation Peter Robertson, (C), Executive Vice President of the ConocoPhillips Company John Lowe, (2nd R) and Senior Vice President of the Exxon Mobil Corporation Stephen Simon, (R), swear in before their testimony about the rising cost of gas prices before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington, May 21, 2008. (Larry Downing/Reuters)Reuters - Democrats in the Senate on Wednesday attempted to link record gasoline prices to cozy ties between President George. W. Bush - a former Texas oil man - and five big energy companies who logged $36 billion in profits in the first quarter of 2008.


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    Wed, 21 May 2008 14:57:30 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    First dinosaur tracks found in Arabian Peninsula (Reuters)

    Researchers at the site of a newly-discovered sauropod in the Republic of Yemen in an undated photo. Scientists have discovered the tracks of a herd of 11 long-necked sauropods walking along a coastal mudflat in what is now the Republic of Yemen, the first discovery of dinosaur footprints on the Arabian peninsula. (Nancy Stevens/Handout/Reuters)Reuters - Scientists have discovered the tracks of a herd of 11 long-necked sauropods walking along a coastal mudflat in what is now the Republic of Yemen, the first discovery of dinosaur footprints on the Arabian peninsula.


    -- read full article
    Wed, 21 May 2008 12:35:45 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    US Official: Interior rulings subject to meddling (AP)
    AP - A congressional investigator says at least four top Interior Department officials may have inappopriately interfered in decisions on protection of endangered species. -- read full article
    Wed, 21 May 2008 16:55:39 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
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