Unveiling the underwater ways of the white shark

User rating: 4.7 / 5 after 3 vote(s)

It's hard to study a creature when you only catch fleeting glimpses of it. Up until recently, that was one of the big stumbling blocks for marine biologists and ecologists, but advances in electronic tracking technology have allowed them to peer farther across, and deeper under, the surface of the oceans than ever before.


Full story »

All News summaries from General Science news
All News summaries for February 18, 2008

Fossil feathers preserve evidence of color

4 hours ago | User rating: not rated yet
The traces of organic material found in fossil feathers are remnants of pigments that once gave birds their color, according to Yale scientists whose paper in Biology Letters opens up the potential ...

Do we think that machines can think?

5 hours ago | User rating: not rated yet
When our PC goes on strike again we tend to curse it as if it was a human. The question of why and under what circumstances we attribute human-like properties to machines and how such processes manifest on a cortical level ...

Superfast muscles in songbirds

5 hours ago | User rating: not rated yet
Certain songbirds can contract their vocal muscles 100 times faster than humans can blink an eye – placing the birds with a handful of animals that have evolved superfast muscles, University of Utah researchers ...

Art of deception: Crystal skulls in British, US museums were fakes

5 hours ago | User rating: not rated yet
How about this for the next instalment of the Indy franchise: "Indiana Jones and the Dodgy Antiques Dealer"?

Milwaukee museum unveils woolly mammoth skeleton

5 hours ago | User rating: not rated yet
(AP) -- A 14,500-year-old woolly mammoth skeleton dug up in 1994 has been unveiled at the Milwaukee Public Museum, giving locals a glimpse of perhaps the most intact specimen discovered in North America.