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    Science Headlines
    Navy disputes restrictions to protect whales (AP)

    In this 1992 photo released by the International Fund For Animals Welfare (IFAW), a minke whale's head breaks the surface of the water as it swims in the Southern Ocean Sanctuary for whales.  The International Whaling Commission (IWC) is holding its 60th annual meeting in Santiago, Chile, Tuesday, June 24, 2008, where Chile's President Michelle Bachelet pushed to permanently ban whaling along Chile's sprawling coast and create a whale sanctuary.  (AP Photo/IFAW)AP - The Navy is challenging Hawaii's authority to protect whales by restricting the use of sonar during training exercises, environmentalists and military representatives say.


    -- read full article
    Thu, 26 Jun 2008 20:56:47 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Study: Global warming chases plants uphill (AP)

    This undated handout photo provided by the journal Science shows the Bure summit located in the Dévoluy range of the French Alps.  Faced with global warming, plants are heading for the hills. A study of 171 forest species in Western Europe shows that most of them are shifting their favored locations into higher, cooler locations. (AP Photo/Science)AP - Faced with global warming, plants are heading for the hills. A study of 171 forest species in Western Europe shows that most of them are shifting their favored locations to higher, cooler spots.


    -- read full article
    Thu, 26 Jun 2008 22:02:35 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Mars lander finds salty environment in taste test (AP)

    This photo released by NASA shows four Wet Chemistry Laboratory units, part of the microscopy, electrochemistry and conductivity analyzer, instrument on board the Phoenix Mars Lander on Aug. 4, 2007, before the Phoenix was launched into space. The Phoenix lander's first taste test of soil near Mars' north pole reveals a briny environment similar to what can be found in backyards on Earth, scientists said Thursday.  (AP Photo/NASA/JPL/CalTECH/University of Arizona)AP - The Phoenix lander's first taste test of soil near Mars' north pole reveals a briny environment similar to what can be found in backyards on Earth, scientists said Thursday.


    -- read full article
    Thu, 26 Jun 2008 23:21:28 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Tony Blair urges action on climate change (AP)

    Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair speaks about a report, 'Breaking the Climate Deadlock,' he presented to Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda, host of the G8 summit, at a meeting of  The Climate Group, a nonprofit organization Blair is part of, in Tokyo, Friday, June 27, 2008. The world already knows that global warming is a serious problem and the time has come for politicians and experts to come together to map out a practical solution, former British Prime Minister Tony Blair said Friday. (AP Photo/Katsumi Kasahara)AP - The world already knows that global warming is a serious problem and the time has come for politicians and experts to come together to map out a practical solution, former British Prime Minister Tony Blair said Friday.


    -- read full article
    Fri, 27 Jun 2008 07:20:40 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Britain outlines wind farm expansion plans (AFP)

    A wind farm. Thousands of new wind turbines could be built across Britain by 2020 as part of multi-billion pound plans to switch to more sustainable energy sources, Prime Minister Gordon Brown has said.(AFP/File/Marcel Mochet)AFP - Thousands of new wind turbines could be built across Britain by 2020 as part of multi-billion pound plans to switch to more sustainable energy sources, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said Thursday.


    -- read full article
    Thu, 26 Jun 2008 16:10:04 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Groups want import ban on polar bear hides lifted (AP)

    Polar bear hides cure on the mountainside of the Eskimo village of Little Diomede, Alaska with Russia's Big Diomede Island on the horizon in this undated file photo. Environmental and animal rights groups have lined up to oppose a lawsuit that seeks to let American sport hunters import hides of polar bears shot legally in Canada. Trophy hunting of U.S. bears in Alaska has been banned since 1972. Bears killed by subsistence hunters are not considered a threat. Safari Club International attorney Doug Burdin said Wednesday June 25, 2008 his organization may join the state of Alaska in suing to overturn the listing but so far has only filed to overturn the ban on importing hides from animals killed in approved populations in Canada. Politicians from Canada's Northwest Territory this week made the same request to Interior Department officials in Washington, D.C. (AP Photo/Al Grillo, FILE)AP - Environmental and animal rights groups are lining up to oppose a lawsuit that seeks to let American sport hunters again import hides of polar bears shot legally in Canada.


    -- read full article
    Thu, 26 Jun 2008 11:52:42 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Senate Committee Approves Bill for Extra Shuttle Mission (SPACE.com)
    SPACE.com - The Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee approved a NASA authorization bill this week that would forbid the U.S. space agency from retiring the space shuttle before completing all remaining missions, including an additional flight to deliver the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer (AMS) to the International Space Station. -- read full article
    Thu, 26 Jun 2008 15:02:46 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Weather around the U.S.A. (AP)
    AP - Weather around the U.S.A. -- read full article
    Thu, 26 Jun 2008 13:46:28 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Bird Study Reveals 10 Things You Didn't Know (LiveScience.com)
    LiveScience.com - Birds are among the most studied and openly stalked animals (by binocular-clad humans), but scientists have just discovered a flock of unexpected new avian facts, based on an analysis of genetic data that yielded an evolutionary tree full of surprises. -- read full article
    Thu, 26 Jun 2008 18:16:06 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Authorities hope to shoo dolphins from N.J. rivers (AP)
    AP - The latest visitors to the New Jersey shore are doing what many tourists do: splashing around in the waves with the kids and feasting on seafood. -- read full article
    Thu, 26 Jun 2008 18:54:56 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Navy disputes restrictions to protect whales (AP)

    In this 1992 photo released by the International Fund For Animals Welfare (IFAW), a minke whale's head breaks the surface of the water as it swims in the Southern Ocean Sanctuary for whales.  The International Whaling Commission (IWC) is holding its 60th annual meeting in Santiago, Chile, Tuesday, June 24, 2008, where Chile's President Michelle Bachelet pushed to permanently ban whaling along Chile's sprawling coast and create a whale sanctuary.  (AP Photo/IFAW)AP - The Navy is challenging Hawaii's authority to protect whales by restricting the use of sonar during training exercises, environmentalists and military representatives say.


    -- read full article
    Thu, 26 Jun 2008 10:26:48 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Japan defends 'scientific' whale hunting at IWC (AFP)

    Fishermen butcher a 10metre-long bottlenose whale in Minami-Boso city, east of Tokyo on June 25. Japan has defended its practice of 'scientific' whale hunting at the annual International Whaling Commission insisting it had yielded important scientific results(AFP/Yoshikazu Tsuno)AFP - Japan defended its practice of 'scientific' whale hunting at the annual International Whaling Commission meeting here on Wednesday, insisting it had yielded important scientific results.


    -- read full article
    Thu, 26 Jun 2008 06:19:01 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    NASA beefs up next-generation moon rocket (AP)

    Steve Cook, manager of the Ares project office at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., stands in front of a video screen while discussing rocket design during a media briefing on Wednesday, June 25, 2008. NASA is beefing up the size and of its planned Ares V moon rocket to make it capable of taking more weight to the lunar surface. (AP Photo/Jay Reeves)AP - NASA unveiled a beefed-up redesign of a proposed moon rocket Wednesday, saying the Ares V spacecraft that is to carry astronauts to the lunar surface in 12 years will be around 38 stories tall and carry a heftier load than originally planned.


    -- read full article
    Wed, 25 Jun 2008 22:05:36 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Mass at Philippines ferry site, relatives weep (Reuters)

    U.S. military personnel dive beside the sunken ferry M/V Princess of the Stars in Sibuyan island, central Philippines June 25, 2008. (Romeo Ranoco/Reuters)Reuters - A Catholic priest said mass over the site of a capsized ferry in the central Philippines on Thursday as divers prepared to bore a hole in the vessel to speed up the retrieval of bodies.


    -- read full article
    Thu, 26 Jun 2008 07:05:59 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Gloom and Doom Rule the Baby Boom (LiveScience.com)
    LiveScience.com - Boomers are tired, overworked, strapped, bummed out and don't expect to get a break. -- read full article
    Wed, 25 Jun 2008 21:35:47 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
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