Health & Science

Health & Science
Sunday, September 12th 2010 - 06:57 UTC

Glow of eyes could help detect mad cow disease, says Iowa university report

A cow suffering from the deadly BSE

Cattle infected with mad cow disease give off a tell-tale glow in their eyes, according to new research published in the journal Analytical Chemistry. In future, the discovery could lead to a long-sought test to detect infection with the agent that causes mad cow disease, preventing it from spreading throughout the food supply for humans.

Sunday, September 12th 2010 - 06:39 UTC

Ex Argentine president Kirchner undergoes emergency angioplasty

This is the second vascular accident the former president suffers in seven months

Former Argentine President Nestor Kirchner is back in the Los Arcos hospital with heart trouble. There were no immediate announcements from the government, but according to the local Noticias Argentinas news agency, the husband of President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner Fernandez underwent an angioplasty after he was rushed to a clinic in the capital late Saturday night with numbness in his legs.

Friday, September 10th 2010 - 03:28 UTC

Invasive “killer shrimp” discovered at water reservoirs in England

Dikerogammarus villosus, has already colonized parts of Western Europe and kills a range of native species

A killer shrimp has been found for the first time in the UK at an Anglian Water reservoir in Cambridgeshire, England. Two anglers spotted the shrimp, which can be as small as three mm, at Grafham Water near St Neots on Friday September 3 and sent samples to the Environment Agency for identification.

Thursday, September 9th 2010 - 00:53 UTC

Cambridge knocks Harvard off the top of QS World university ratings

The University of Cambridge next to the Cam river

The University of Cambridge has knocked Harvard University off the top of the QS World University Ratings, as the U.K. establishment’s number of academic citations rose.

Wednesday, September 8th 2010 - 01:53 UTC

Paraguay vaccinating against FMD; fears about Bolivia’s cattle sanitary condition

Almost three quarters of Paraguay’s cattle have been vaccinated against FMD

Paraguay has already vaccinated 74% of its cattle heard against foot and mouth disease FMD, which is considered very positive, but there are lingering doubts about the sanitary situation in Bolivia that remains a threat for Mercosur, the world’s leading exporter of beef.

Friday, September 3rd 2010 - 05:03 UTC

Sweet busting: eleven indicted for biggest food smuggling case in US history.

The case involves 606 illegal shipments of honey over six years

US authorities have indicted 11 German and Chinese executives for conspiring to illegally import 40 million US dollars of honey from China. The executives were accused of being part of an operation which mislabelled honey and tainted it with antibiotics in an attempt to avoid import duties.

Thursday, September 2nd 2010 - 06:31 UTC

Tiny marine animals reveal a possible ancient sea passage in Antarctica

Bryozoans are tiny, filter feeding marine animals which in their adult form stick on to boulders, rocks and other surfaces

Scientists have found evidence for an ancient sea passage linking currently isolated areas of Antarctica. The evidence comes from a study of tiny marine animals living either side of the 2km thick Western Antarctic ice sheet.

Monday, August 30th 2010 - 06:59 UTC

UK scientists decode wheat genome; vital to help feed growing population

Neil Hall B.Sc. Ph.D. from the University of Liverpool led the research

British scientists have released draft sequences of the wheat genome, which they think could make a vital contribution to securing global food supplies. The researchers say their efforts could help British farmers to develop new strains with greater yields.

Friday, August 27th 2010 - 07:59 UTC

European Southern Observatory In Chile Discovers New Solar System

European Southern Observatory (ESO) on Chile’s Cerro La Silla

Some 127 light years away in the constellation of Hydrus, a new solar system has been discovered by a team of astronomers at the European Southern Observatory (ESO) on Cerro La Silla in Chile’s Coquimbo Region (IV).

Thursday, August 26th 2010 - 02:21 UTC

Chile asks NASA for technology and rations to keep trapped miners healthy

Conditions are not different from those in the International Space Station

Chile has appealed to the US space agency NASA for help in keeping 33 trapped miners alive during a rescue attempt which could take four months. Health officials compared the cramped conditions the men are in to those astronauts experience during long stints on the International Space Station.

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