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    Science Headlines
    Satellites track Mexico kidnap victims with chips (Reuters)

    A global positioning satellite is seen in a handout artist's rendering. (Handout/Reuters)Reuters - Affluent Mexicans, terrified of soaring kidnapping rates, are spending thousands of dollars to implant tiny transmitters under their skin so satellites can help find them tied up in a safe house or stuffed in the trunk of a car.


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    Fri, 22 Aug 2008 00:39:34 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Typhoon Nuri shuts down Hong Kong (Reuters)

    People make their way in the wind and rain as Typhoon Nuri approaches Shenzhen, Guangdong province August 22, 2008. (Stringer/Reuters)Reuters - Hong Kong was buffeted by gale force winds on Friday as typhoon Nuri churned toward the major financial hub, with most of the city and its markets shut down ahead of a direct hit by its worst typhoon in five years.


    -- read full article
    Fri, 22 Aug 2008 06:32:12 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Study: Large Earthquake Could Strike New York City (LiveScience.com)

    A view of the New York skyline with buildings along Central Park South, as seen from the AeroBalloon ride flying above New York's Central Park on the opening day of rides open to the public, July 25, 2008. (Mike Segar/Reuters)LiveScience.com - The New York City area is at "substantially greater" risk of earthquakes than previously thought, scientists said Thursday.


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    Fri, 22 Aug 2008 00:03:09 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Australian officials euthanize lost baby whale (AP)

    An unidentified veterinarian, center, from Taronga Zoo holds a syringe after giving a sedative to an abandoned and lost baby humpback whale at the Pittwater in Sydney, Australia, Friday, Aug. 22, 2008. The whale calf that spent nearly a week bonding with boats in waters off north Sydney was euthanized by wildlife officials Friday after veterinarians determined it was too weak to survive on its own. (AP Photo/Rob Griffith)AP - An injured and abandoned baby humpback whale that spent nearly a week bonding with boats in waters off north Sydney was euthanized by wildlife officials Friday after veterinarians determined it was too weak to survive on its own.


    -- read full article
    Fri, 22 Aug 2008 07:13:56 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Study: A bad joke might endanger the teller (AP)

    Nancy Bell, left, a Washington State University applied linguist, uses a key as a prop as she asks Jenai Uhrich, a freshman from Ravensdale, Wash., a deliberately bad joke while Bell demonstrates how she and her assistants conducted research into failed humor, Monday, Aug. 18, 2008 on the WSU Pullman campus. (AP Photo/Dean Hare)AP - There's a reason comedians call it "dying on stage."


    -- read full article
    Fri, 22 Aug 2008 08:17:22 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Saber-toothed cat fossils discovered in Venezuela (AP)

    In this undated photo released by Ascanio Rincon, a fossil of a type of saber-toothed cat is seen. An ancient tar pit exposed when state oil workers laid a pipeline has yielded a rich trove of fossils, including a type of saber-toothed cat that paleontologists never found in South America before, and scientists say it holds the promise of many discoveries to come.(AP Photo/Ascanio Rincon)AP - An ancient tar pit exposed when Venezuelan oil workers laid a pipeline has yielded a rich trove of fossils, including a type of saber-toothed cat that paleontologists had never found before in South America. Scientists say the find holds the promise of many discoveries to come.


    -- read full article
    Thu, 21 Aug 2008 22:08:46 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    At top of Greenland, new worrisome cracks in ice (AP)

    This image provided by the Byrd Polar Research Center, Columbus, Ohio, taken July 25, 2008, shows a growing giant crack and an 11-square-mile chunk of ice hemorrhaging off a prominent glacier in northern Greenland. The crack, at center, right,  is seven miles long and about half a mile wide. It is about half the width of the 500 square mile floating part of the glacier. If the cracking continues, the floating part of the glacier could lose up to one third of its size. (AP Photo/Byrd Polar Research Center)AP - In northern Greenland, a part of the Arctic that had seemed immune from global warming, new satellite images show a growing giant crack and an 11-square-mile chunk of ice hemorrhaging off a major glacier, scientists said Thursday.


    -- read full article
    Fri, 22 Aug 2008 05:08:24 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Oil prices rocket back above 122 dollars (AFP)

    An oil platform in the Gulf of Mexico. Oil prices jumped back above 122 dollars on Thursday as traders tracked geopolitical tensions between the United States and Russia, a weak dollar and a large drop in US motor fuel reserves.(AFP/HO/File)AFP - Oil prices jumped back above 122 dollars on Thursday as traders tracked geopolitical tensions between the United States and Russia, a weak dollar and a large drop in US motor fuel reserves.


    -- read full article
    Thu, 21 Aug 2008 18:27:12 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Whopping Fish Declared New Species (LiveScience.com)
    LiveScience.com - A man-sized grouper that trolls the tropical waters of the Eastern Pacific Ocean for octopuses and crabs has been identified as a new fish species after genetic tests. -- read full article
    Thu, 21 Aug 2008 15:11:31 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    How Stars Form Amid Black Hole Chaos (SPACE.com)
    SPACE.com - Deep in the center of our galaxy, circling suspiciously close to the giant black hole lurking there, is a group of massive stars. -- read full article
    Thu, 21 Aug 2008 18:31:39 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Storm Fay makes landfall in Florida again (Reuters)

    Workers clear debris from a damaged roof at the Palm Beach Equine Clinic after Tropical Storm Fay passed through Wellington, Florida August 19, 2008. (Joe Skipper/Reuters)Reuters - Tropical Storm Fay came ashore on the Florida coast for the third time in less than a week on Thursday, bringing more of the torrential rain that has flooded hundreds of homes.


    -- read full article
    Thu, 21 Aug 2008 18:38:42 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    The Real Story Behind the 'Roof of the World' (LiveScience.com)
    LiveScience.com - It's called the "Roof of the World" with good reason - the Tibetan Plateau stands over 3 miles above sea level and is surrounded by imposing mountain ranges that harbor the world's two highest summits, Mount Everest and K2. While the world's top mountaineers regularly attempt to summit the forbidding peaks, the remote area is home to a rich variety of cultures, from villages in Pakistan that practice the various sects of Islam to the Buddhist communities of Tibet, now part of the People's Republic of China. ... -- read full article
    Thu, 21 Aug 2008 18:10:59 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Iran's space agency says it will send man to space (AP)

    A Saturday Aug. 16, 2008 photo taken at an undisclosed location in Iran which the Fars News Agency claim shows Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, second right, looking at an Iranian satellite launching vehicle. Iran has test launched a rocket it plans to use to carry a research satellite into orbit, state television reported Sunday. Saturday's test of the two-stage rocket, called the Safir-e Omid, or Ambassador of Peace, was successful, state TV said, broadcasting images of the nighttime launch. The rocket released equipment that beamed flight data back to ground control, said Reza Taghipoor, the head of Iran's Space Agency, in a live television interview. (AP Photo/Fars News Agency, Vahid Reza Alaei)AP - State TV says Iran's space agency aims to send an astronaut to space within 10 years.


    -- read full article
    Thu, 21 Aug 2008 10:07:27 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Australian officials to euthanize baby whale (AP)

    In this handout photo released by NSW Parks and Wildlife, a lost humpback whale calf swims around  the Pittwater, north of Sydney Harbour Wednesday, Aug 20, 2008. The 1- to 2-month-old calf was first sighted Sunday in waters off north Sydney, and on Monday tried to suckle from a yacht, which it would not leave. (AP Photo/NSW Parks and Wildlife)AP - Officials who had planned to euthanize an injured and abandoned baby whale postponed the operation Thursday night after being unable to find the animal in the dark waters off north Sydney.


    -- read full article
    Thu, 21 Aug 2008 13:58:18 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
    Obama sounds populist themes in Virginia bus tour (AP)

    Virginia Democratic Senatorial candidate, former Virginia Gov. Mark Warner, left, grabs a meal with Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., Wednesday, Aug. 20, 2008, at Short Sugar's BBQ in Danville, Va. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)AP - Democrat Barack Obama pledged Wednesday to create millions of union jobs in alternative energy and end tax breaks for companies that move jobs overseas, using tough new populist language to convince voters that he, not rival John McCain, is best positioned to lift the limping U.S. economy.


    -- read full article
    Thu, 21 Aug 2008 02:58:22 GMT - Yahoo! News: Science News
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