Science Archive:

I think this would have been better un-nested.

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Climate change scientists have started a fightback against sceptics who argue that the observed changes in the Earth’s climate can largely be explained by natural variability. This comes after the email hacking furore.

A major Met Office review of more than 100 scientific studies tracking the observed changes in the Earth’s climate system finds that it is an "increasingly remote possibility" that human activity is not the main cause of climate change

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Similar symbols found across the globe raise questions about how writing originated. Some of the findings will appear in a new Smithsonian exhibition. Related New Scientist article.

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From the New Scientist.

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Six spam WordClouds:

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What cities might flood when.

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A beautiful interactive visualization of the effectiveness of various health supplements from Information is Beautiful, based on scientific research. Use the roll up menu on the right hand side to filter by condition. You can also view the raw research data they dug up to draw your own conclusions.

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It’s from Cracked magazine, so not entirely accurate – still an entertaining read, though.

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An expansion on last week’s flowchart. (via)

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Breasts

In: Culture Science

22 Feb 2010

Some basic facts.

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We are FAT

In: Culture Maps Science

19 Feb 2010

The CDC has a number of maps tracking rising obesity levels (1985-2008). Thanks to Allison for passing them on.

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(via)

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THE private provision of health care comes in several forms across Europe. In Germany and the Netherlands it provides coverage for those not on government schemes; in Britain and Ireland it duplicates state-run systems; and in France it tops up cover from official programmes. .  A study by the Boston Consulting Group concludes that countries relying mainly on insurance-such as France, Germany and the Netherlands-provide better care than those, like Britain, Italy and Spain, that are chiefly funded by taxes and which spend less on health care as a proportion of GDP.

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Memory

In: Interactive Science

17 Feb 2010

Ok, the animations in this one are incredible and slightly freaky. They rotate, color, and pop open your head in 3D to explain in clear detail how we input, process, and forget things. Very nice.

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