January - 1998 Articles
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In brief : Solar fireworks
31 January 1998
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Lighten up, shuttle - A waffle-like fuel tank is transforming prospects in space
31 January 1998
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Singing sirens could save the blind
31 January 1998
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Bouncing back - Coated titanium is mending broken bones fast
31 January 1998
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You'll end up just like Mum
31 January 1998
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On the level - Sloshing seas have fooled us about the height of the oceans
31 January 1998
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Technofile : Film noir
31 January 1998
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Technofile : Specs for nerds
31 January 1998
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Technofile : Perfect timing
31 January 1998
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Technofile : Fast surf
31 January 1998
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Netropolitan :
31 January 1998
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Netropolitan :
31 January 1998
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Newswire : Genetic privacy
31 January 1998
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Newswire : Spot checks
31 January 1998
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WHO sinks to new low - The troubled UN agency is mired in controversy again
31 January 1998
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Nosy doctor's aide sniffs out disease
31 January 1998
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Focus: A killer waits
31 January 1998
No one knows when or where the next flu pandemic will strike, but it could be soon. Is the world ready?
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Newswire : So near
31 January 1998
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Surf DJs fear wipeout - Will copyright reforms put Internet music sites out of business?
31 January 1998
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Netropolitan : In with a growl
31 January 1998
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Netropolitan :
31 January 1998
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Beeline for blossom - Honeybees' acute sense of smell could help farmers harvest bumper crops
31 January 1998
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Kinky characters - Telephone handsets, climbing plants and soil bacteria all follow the same rules
31 January 1998
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The big picture - How to get ultra-wide TV screens off to a flying start
31 January 1998
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Waiting in the wings - Butterflies have some cool tips for chip designers
31 January 1998
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Editorial : Full exposure - Eternal vigilance over reproductive technology is better than banning it
31 January 1998
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Editorial : The wrong way to sell beef?
31 January 1998
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Surrogate fathers - Mice that grow human sperm might transform fertility treatment. But will people accept the idea?
31 January 1998
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Check this out . . . - Can molecular tests reassure those who don't want to eat mad cows or engineered crops?
31 January 1998
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Did Hubble catch a glimpse of a nearby giant?
31 January 1998
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Talking point - Excited researchers think they have found a gene for language
31 January 1998
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Earth shattering - The sound of a crack ripping through rock may make it split even faster
31 January 1998
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Washed out
31 January 1998
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Newswire : Age no barrier
31 January 1998
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Patents : Secret cameras
31 January 1998
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Patents : Panic stations
31 January 1998
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Patents : Home gnomon
31 January 1998
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A formula for disaster? - Premature babies may not be getting adequate nutrition
31 January 1998
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The world's dustbin - Britain wants to cash in on America's nuclear waste
31 January 1998
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Wildlife traders slow to change their spots
31 January 1998
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Newswire : River wild
31 January 1998
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Newswire : Take heart
31 January 1998
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Newswire : Public interest
31 January 1998
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Gene police could end up on the bean beat
31 January 1998
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In brief : Out of breath
31 January 1998
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Letters : Screen tests
31 January 1998
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Letters : Lastly
31 January 1998
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Letters : Seminal name
31 January 1998
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Feedback
31 January 1998
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The last word
31 January 1998
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Review : Soft skies
31 January 1998
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Review : Wired and wet
31 January 1998
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Review : Clever thinking
31 January 1998
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Review : The egg and I
31 January 1998
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Review : Jumping Jehoshaphat
31 January 1998
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31 January 1998
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31 January 1998
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31 January 1998
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Letters : Funding drought
31 January 1998
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Letters : . . . . .
31 January 1998
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Letters : Jupiter for sale
31 January 1998
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Letters : . . . . .
31 January 1998
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Letters : Fatal rust
31 January 1998
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Letters : . . . . .
31 January 1998
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Letters : No short cut
31 January 1998
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Letters : Dead talk back
31 January 1998
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Review : Deathly tales
31 January 1998
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In brief : Learning zone
31 January 1998
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Review : Space shot
31 January 1998
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Splitting the electron
31 January 1998
Electrons can "split" to form smaller charges, and physicists have finally worked out how they do it – by swirling and swarming like angry bees. Bennett Daviss reports
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Wasteworld - What do you get when you mix river water polluted with raw sewage and lakes as acid as vinegar? A place to take the kids waterskiing. Dan Charles explains
31 January 1998
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Aerial magic – Your mobile phone, the gas meter under the stairs and the
31 January 1998
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In brief : Suicidal cells
31 January 1998
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The storm in the machine
31 January 1998
It defeated Hitler's assault on Russia and has brought violent weather to Europe. It may even be channelling global warming. Oliver Morton introduces El Niño's Atlantic cousin
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Ancient footprints stay firmly on the ground
31 January 1998
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In brief : Did dry glaciers roam the Red Planet?
31 January 1998
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In brief : Cancer clue
31 January 1998
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Review : Would you risk it?
31 January 1998
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Review : Up nights
31 January 1998
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Review : Cuvier the catastrophist
31 January 1998
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Review : Collected works - Sue Bowler chips away at geology
31 January 1998
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Letters : . . . . .
31 January 1998
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Washington diary : - Andreas Frew reports from the heady heights of Capitol Hill
31 January 1998
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Letters : Caribbean eclipse
31 January 1998
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Letters : Close to home
31 January 1998
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Forum : Eyeless in the observatory - Schoolchildren may never get the chance to see the rest of the Milky Way, laments Charles Seife
31 January 1998
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Bestsellers : from London
31 January 1998
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Forum : Keep it simple, keep it safe - Don't abandon your trusty old software just because you've got a new computer, says Barry Fox
31 January 1998
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Review : Old faithfuls
31 January 1998
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Netropolitan : Shiver your timbers
24 January 1998
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Netropolitan :
24 January 1998
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Netropolitan :
24 January 1998
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Any day now . . . - West of Tokyo, the ground is shuddering ominously
24 January 1998
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Tube travel - Inflatable cylinders could house space voyagers
24 January 1998
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City dwellers dying for a breath of fresh air
24 January 1998
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Focus : On stony ground - The erosion of science within Britain's conservation agencies is having dire consequences for wildlife
24 January 1998
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Technofile : Fish market
24 January 1998
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Technofile : Fragrant sludge
24 January 1998
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Technofile : Brittle bone detector
24 January 1998
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There may be a future after all
24 January 1998
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Death wish gene - Suicidal depression seems to run in some families
24 January 1998
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In brief : Flying high
24 January 1998
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In brief : Ancient bones
24 January 1998
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Far from the madding cows . . . - Don't throw away that gunk at the bottom of the tube—it could turn prions into the good guys after all. Jonathan Knight reports
24 January 1998
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In brief : HIV's accomplice
24 January 1998
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In brief : Eternal life
24 January 1998
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Barking up the wrong tree
24 January 1998
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Newswire : Two into one
24 January 1998
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Newswire : Clean break
24 January 1998
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Newswire : Green continent
24 January 1998
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Switching satellites - BSkyB is going to extraordinary lengths to stay in the digital TV race
24 January 1998
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Technofile : Colourful smoothie
24 January 1998
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The great divide - Even chopped up chromosomes can replicate like a dream
24 January 1998
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Grow your own arteries - Cultured blood vessels are stronger than the real thing
24 January 1998
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Light relief - How your skin could help beat the winter blues
24 January 1998
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Work-outs keep the brain in shape
24 January 1998
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A brilliant way to protect outdoor art
24 January 1998
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Chain reaction - What do warehouses and chaotic systems have in common?
24 January 1998
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Designer tunnel
24 January 1998
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Crunch time - Could cloning rescue pandas from extinction?
24 January 1998
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Change of heart on pig transplants
24 January 1998
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Newswire : Space for all
24 January 1998
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Newswire : Confused fish
24 January 1998
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Newswire : Hormone hearings
24 January 1998
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Roadblocks ahead
24 January 1998
If you want to ease traffic congestion, there's a simple solution. Shut a few roads
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In the beginning - It's hard to grasp, but the Universe may have made itself
24 January 1998
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Royalties row upstages digital TV launch
24 January 1998
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The perils of PVC - Plastics are implicated in one of the commonest male cancers
24 January 1998
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Fractal cancer
24 January 1998
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Patents : Guide lines
24 January 1998
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Consuming needs - Neglected but key food research is now on the cards
24 January 1998
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Patents : Flying twins
24 January 1998
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Patents : Tuned in
24 January 1998
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Editorial : Sans everything - Are telomeres a vital part of the quest for a cure for old age—or mere hype?
24 January 1998
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Newswire : Lunar sacrilege
24 January 1998
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In brief : Down to Earth
24 January 1998
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In brief : There ain't no cure for the baby blues
24 January 1998
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Letters : Something smells
24 January 1998
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Letters : Don't panic
24 January 1998
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Review : Human interest stories
24 January 1998
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Review : Collected works - David Barrett picks out the weird but worthy among the alien detritus
24 January 1998
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Bestsellers : from Washington
24 January 1998
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Forum : Bald today...hair tomorrow - Video conferencing discriminates against the follicularly challenged, complains Michael Cross
24 January 1998
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Forum : A canny way with whales - Limiting catches to coastal waters should kill off the commercial trade, says Kieran Mulvaney
24 January 1998
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Thistle diary : - More comment from Westminster by Tam Dalyell
24 January 1998
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Letters : Bony monsters
24 January 1998
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Letters : . . . . .
24 January 1998
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24 January 1998
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24 January 1998
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The last word
24 January 1998
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Letters : Milking the system
24 January 1998
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Letters : Snip in time
24 January 1998
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Letters : . . . . .
24 January 1998
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You could be on the wanted lists!
24 January 1998
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Feedback
24 January 1998
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Antipodes : Study uncovers a new carbon sink - Ian Lowe explores a business environment venture
24 January 1998
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Letters : Wallowing in health
24 January 1998
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Letters : . . . . .
24 January 1998
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Letters : Carbon credits
24 January 1998
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Boiling fridges - Forget heavy compressors and noxious gases. New-generation fridges may use hot chips that only need electrons to keep them cool, says
Michelle Knott 24 January 1998
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Review : Writers live
24 January 1998
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Review : Spirit world
24 January 1998
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Review : Art of science
24 January 1998
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Review : Babies without sex
24 January 1998
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Review : 2001: an oddity
24 January 1998
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Review : Hidden treasure
24 January 1998
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Review : Monkey business
24 January 1998
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How the Mind Works by Steven Pinker
24 January 1998
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Family feuds - Reconstructing life's evolutionary tree is tough enough without warring researchers trying to cut the branches away from under each other, says Roger Lewin
24 January 1998
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There's an ant in my phone… - Would you let ants run the digital superhighways of the future? Even if they were smart little programs and getting smarter all the time? Mark Ward wonders
24 January 1998
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Review : Watch this space
24 January 1998
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Review : Closer encounters
24 January 1998
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Letters : Alarmingly clean
24 January 1998
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Letters : Ape liberation
24 January 1998
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Letters : . . . . .
24 January 1998
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Letters : Brewer's droop
24 January 1998
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Letters : Cosmic cash
24 January 1998
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Letters : . . . . .
24 January 1998
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24 January 1998
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Letters : Morning after
24 January 1998
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Letters : Raw details
24 January 1998
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Review : Stargazers
24 January 1998
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Netropolitan :
17 January 1998
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Netropolitan :
17 January 1998
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Coming soon...the disposable desktop computer
17 January 1998
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Tricky light - They may look like exploding stars to amateur astronomers, but the truth is more mundane
17 January 1998
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Focus : Paradise postponed
17 January 1998
Dozens of new methods exist to make agriculture greener and help wildlife recover from decades of decline. So why is Europe turning its back on a chance to promote them?
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A cure in sight - Pinning down the cataract trigger could help millions of sufferers
17 January 1998
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Jet-setting black holes bare all
17 January 1998
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Technofile : Keeping tabs
17 January 1998
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Technofile : Power modems
17 January 1998
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Netropolitan : Lone wolves
17 January 1998
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Coast to coast - Eastern invaders threaten Canada's native salmon
17 January 1998
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In brief : Auroras light up Saturn's poles
17 January 1998
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Dementia linked to faulty RNA
17 January 1998
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The future in tow - Old waterways are coming into their own again with the revolution in communications
17 January 1998
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Could algae save the world?
17 January 1998
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Living colour - It's not your imagination—those old films really were more vivid
17 January 1998
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In brief : Prime candidates
17 January 1998
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Newswire : Own brand
17 January 1998
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Newswire : Dioxin disclosure
17 January 1998
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Newswire : Homegrown fly
17 January 1998
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Technofile : Light on leaks
17 January 1998
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Technofile : In the groove
17 January 1998
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Make do and mend - Meet the supercomputer cobbled together on a shoestring from obsolete PCs
17 January 1998
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Price of pet freedom - Quarantine rules protect Britain from more than just rabies
17 January 1998
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Editorial : A force of nature? - Human need could prove too much for any ban on cloning
17 January 1998
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Crossing the line - Richard Seed may not win a place in history for cloning humans, but someone probably will
17 January 1998
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So who exactly is Richard Seed?
17 January 1998
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Talking point - Chimps' gestures may have more meaning than we realised
17 January 1998
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He's making eyes at me - When they meet a male, female stalk-eyed flies are only interested in one thing
17 January 1998
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Mercury's ghostly glow reveals its secret
17 January 1998
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Good for nothing - Genes that seemed useless are working in subtle ways
17 January 1998
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The dragnet closes in - Tobacco sleuths have put a biotech company in the dock
17 January 1998
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Piles of plutonium blow up big bomb fears
17 January 1998
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Blind prejudice - "Hard" scientists believe they are immune to bias
17 January 1998
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Newswire : Dolly's baby
17 January 1998
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Newswire : Muscleman tragedy
17 January 1998
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Newswire : E-mail for free
17 January 1998
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Stars of the small screen
17 January 1998
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Going with the flow - Quick-fire pulses keep track of an expensive commodity—sewage
17 January 1998
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Patents : Beer mat deluxe
17 January 1998
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Patents : Dial V for video
17 January 1998
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Patents : Smuggling chips
17 January 1998
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Newswire : A raw deal
17 January 1998
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In brief : Smell-binding
17 January 1998
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Recycling the Earth
17 January 1998
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Letters : Hot air at Kyoto
17 January 1998
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Letters : Prozac and cons
17 January 1998
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Letters : Moving to Mars
17 January 1998
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Letters : Altruistic Microsoft?
17 January 1998
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Thistle diary : - More comment from Westminster by Tam Dalyell
17 January 1998
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Antipodes : Government opens the door to technology - Ian Lowe assesses the new science advisory structure
17 January 1998
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Letters : Island diet
17 January 1998
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Forum : Let's hear it for the woodworm - Why don't we treat our fellow creatures more consistently, asks John Stonehouse
17 January 1998
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Letters : What's in a name?
17 January 1998
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Letters : Number nine
17 January 1998
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Letters : Facing it out
17 January 1998
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Letters : Tanks for the memory
17 January 1998
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Feedback
17 January 1998
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The last word
17 January 1998
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Letters : . . . . .
17 January 1998
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Letters : Costly coffee
17 January 1998
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Letters : Sight and surfing
17 January 1998
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Letters : Fighting genes
17 January 1998
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Letters : Unauthorised
17 January 1998
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Review : Collected works - Wendy Grossman connects to the wild, wired future
17 January 1998
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Bestsellers : from Oxford
17 January 1998
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Forum: Playing dirty in Kyoto
17 January 1998
Fred Pearce reveals the winners and losers from last month's battle over carbon emissions
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Review : The global symphony
17 January 1998
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Review : Law for green activists
17 January 1998
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The legend of big G - Measuring gravity may be more than an intellectual exercise for trainspotters, says David Kestenbaum. It could be the loose thread that unravels the whole of modern physics
17 January 1998
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Praying for Silence - Imagine living with deafening noises that only you can hear. Fortunately the hell of tinnitus is finally getting the research attention it needs, says Saffron Davies
17 January 1998
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Pastures new - The crops that feed us today give up their grain and die, leaving the soil exposed to wind and rain. But what if the plants lived on from one year to the next, asks Meg Gordon
17 January 1998
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In brief : Saliva thwarts HIV
17 January 1998
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That's amazing, isn't it ? - Why is intuition worse than useless when it comes to spotting real coincidences? Jack Cohen and Ian Stewart investigate
17 January 1998
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In brief : Reclusive stars
17 January 1998
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In brief : Common grammar
17 January 1998
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Review : Religious greens
17 January 1998
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Review : World about us
17 January 1998
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Review : Roar of the surf
17 January 1998
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Review : Doctors' orders
17 January 1998
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Review : Survival guide
17 January 1998
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Review : Nietzsche was here
17 January 1998
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Review : Uncertain light
17 January 1998
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Review : Peacock's tale
17 January 1998
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Review : Rainforest quest
17 January 1998
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Review : Pest wars
17 January 1998
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Review : Diamond life
17 January 1998
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Fever outbreak follows Kenyan rains
10 January 1998
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Funny old bird
10 January 1998
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Prime suspects - Could the glow of atoms spell defeat for data security?
10 January 1998
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Brief encounters - Clumpy gas between stars would make any signals from ET fleetingly short
10 January 1998
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Technofile : Swift treatment
10 January 1998
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Technofile : Mighty disc
10 January 1998
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This won't hurt a bit - The dentist's drill is being ousted by a remarkable red gel
10 January 1998
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Smart cattle nose ahead
10 January 1998
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In a spin on discs - A battle over DVD standards is leaving customers confused
10 January 1998
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Boom and nearly bust - Concorde came much closer to being cancelled than we thought
10 January 1998
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Technofile : Ebola vaccine
10 January 1998
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Technofile : In a flash
10 January 1998
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Let me out - It's the fetus that decides when it's time to be born. The mother is just obeying orders from her insatiable unborn baby. Garry Hamilton finds out how
10 January 1998
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Inner visions - A virus that robbed David Jane of his language and memory left him struggling to understand what had happened to him. His salvation, as Simon Ings found out, was to recreate his condition on canvas
10 January 1998
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Netropolitan : The truth will out
10 January 1998
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Netropolitan :
10 January 1998
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Nerves of the Pharaohs - What can a dried-out old corpse teach modern doctors?
10 January 1998
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Why Vegas is America's suicide capital
10 January 1998
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Focus : Dying for an answer
10 January 1998
Ten thousand badgers are to be killed in a long overdue experiment to prove they spread bovine TB
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How body snatchers put a stop to sex
10 January 1998
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In brief : Age before beauty
10 January 1998
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Riches spill from Davy Jones's locker
10 January 1998
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Hidden flu?
10 January 1998
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Putt it this way - Animation gives armchair golfers a place on the green
10 January 1998
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How to get your hands on the world's first computer - How to get your hands on the world's first computer
10 January 1998
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Don't shoot - In the heat of the battle quick decisions are vital
10 January 1998
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Pee is for proteins
10 January 1998
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Little chocaholics - Harmless microbes with a sweet tooth can make chocolate crack up
10 January 1998
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Editorial : The inscrutable Brock - We still don't know if badgers spread tuberculosis but we do have a plan . . .
10 January 1998
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Editorial : Biotech's bitter harvest
10 January 1998
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Seafood warning
10 January 1998
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Net curtain
10 January 1998
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Where am I? - Navigation satellites' signals are vulnerable to jamming
10 January 1998
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Patents : Whodunnit?
10 January 1998
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Patents : Some like it hot
10 January 1998
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Gene crop axed
10 January 1998
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Food bug's Latin link - Deadly E. coli strains may have come from South America
10 January 1998
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The turn of the worm - First it was rabies. Now foxes are spreading a deadly parasite
10 January 1998
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El Niño puts a damper on stargazing
10 January 1998
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Patents : Stetson hat tricks
10 January 1998
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Current events - Do tiny electrical signals herald an earthquake?
10 January 1998
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Darwin's paradise awash - El Niño has brought heavy rains and warm waters that may change the Galápagos forever
10 January 1998
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In brief : Dreamland
10 January 1998
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Letters : Killing kangaroos
10 January 1998
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Letters : Lunar commercials
10 January 1998
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Letters : Rotting rituals
10 January 1998
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Letters : Error unearthed?
10 January 1998
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Letters : Horticultural theft
10 January 1998
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Letters : Correction
10 January 1998
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Feedback
10 January 1998
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The last word
10 January 1998
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Antipodes : The good oil gives locust protection for crops
10 January 1998
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Letters : No smoking
10 January 1998
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Letters : . . . . .
10 January 1998
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Letters : Nthly
10 January 1998
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Letters : . . . . .
10 January 1998
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Letters : Global icing
10 January 1998
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Letters : . . . . .
10 January 1998
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Letters : Seismic sea changes
10 January 1998
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Letters : Same difference
10 January 1998
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Letters : Peace and prosperity
10 January 1998
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Letters : Titan summer
10 January 1998
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Letters : Pleasure is addictive
10 January 1998
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Forum : A hostile land - Could one tiny fossil overthrow Australia's orthodoxy, asks Tim Flannery
10 January 1998
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In brief : Getting warm
10 January 1998
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Review : Many voices
10 January 1998
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Review : How not to do it
10 January 1998
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Review : Gay histories
10 January 1998
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Review : Trials of life
10 January 1998
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Review : Born to sum
10 January 1998
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In brief : Is that you mother?
10 January 1998
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In brief : A star's best friend
10 January 1998
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In brief : Smoking gap
10 January 1998
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Review : Fast flow
10 January 1998
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Review : Blinded by dust
10 January 1998
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Review : Part work
10 January 1998
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Thistle diary : More comment from Westminster by Tam Dalyell
10 January 1998
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Review : Collected works - Edward James on science fiction giants and their imitators
10 January 1998
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Review : Gene genie
10 January 1998
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Review : The drying of America
10 January 1998
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See how they glow - What do you get if you cross a jellyfish, a human and a caterpillar? Bright green creepy crawlies stuffed full of life-giving drugs, says Eric Baehrecke
10 January 1998
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Bestsellers : from Oxford
10 January 1998
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Forum : Superstars need not apply - Mediocrity rules too often when it comes to appointing academics, says Craig Loehle
10 January 1998
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On wings of light - Tiny spacecraft are flying through the atmosphere on beams of laser light. Leonard David reports on the start of a new age of cleaner, cheaper space flight
10 January 1998
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Review : Atomic views
10 January 1998
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Technofile : Dressing up
03 January 1998
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Technofile : Mirror, mirror
03 January 1998
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Technofile : Fighting rotaviruses
03 January 1998
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Focus : Out of the frying pan - Food irradiation should help to reduce food poisoning, and fears over its safety have proved unfounded. But could it also be used to cover up sloppy hygiene in the preparation of food?
03 January 1998
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Sonic the sniffer - In a crisis you need to spot deadly chemicals fast
03 January 1998
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Netropolitan : Hot stuff
03 January 1998
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Netropolitan :
03 January 1998
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Netropolitan :
03 January 1998
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Technofile : Small talk
03 January 1998
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They think it's not moving…
03 January 1998
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Chateau hormone - The life-giving properties of red wine may lie in a chemical that works like oestrogen
03 January 1998
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In brief : Doctor sparrow
03 January 1998
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In brief : Prey is in the eye of the beholder
03 January 1998
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Fascinating rhythm – If you thought a heart that beats like clockwork is a sign of rude
03 January 1998
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Newswire : ...as Pegasus is grounded
03 January 1998
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Newswire : Animal alert
03 January 1998
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It's a dog's life - National parks do more for lions than endangered wild dogs
03 January 1998
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Newswire : Shuttle is shielded...
03 January 1998
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The force is with them - Are the most energetic cosmic rays neutrinos in disguise?
03 January 1998
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Add oxygen
03 January 1998
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All too much - Do-it-yourself CDs will hit the music business where it hurts
03 January 1998
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Patents : Feel the noise
03 January 1998
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Fear not - Help is at hand for people paralysed by panic
03 January 1998
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Editorial : We are what we eat - Simple is still best when it comes to fighting food poisoning
03 January 1998
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Is anything safe to eat? - More Britons were poisoned by their food in 1997 than ever before
03 January 1998
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In cold blood - Are health officials doing enough to protect haemophiliacs?
03 January 1998
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Junk science thrown out of court
03 January 1998
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Newswire : No more cannibals
03 January 1998
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Newswire : London's nukes
03 January 1998
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Patents : Floating fleet
03 January 1998
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Patents : Voice over
03 January 1998
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Risky business
03 January 1998
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Fallow ground - Farmers need better incentives to foster plants and wildlife
03 January 1998
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Dowsing on the Moon - An American probe returns to the Moon in search of ice
03 January 1998
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Platypus sting spurs on painkiller hunt
03 January 1998
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Vicious circles - Rings of DNA can throw a spanner in the workings of the cell and make you old before your time
03 January 1998
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Spot the fibre - Keeping track of an airborne killer
03 January 1998
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Say it like it is - A special palate makes speech problems melt away
03 January 1998
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High anxiety
03 January 1998
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Newswire : Shark sanctuary
03 January 1998
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In brief : Food in the womb
03 January 1998
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In brief : Ever outward
03 January 1998
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Feedback
03 January 1998
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Letters : Justice for apes
03 January 1998
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Letters : Petrol and pollution
03 January 1998
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Letters : . . .
03 January 1998
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Letters : . . .
03 January 1998
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Letters : Glory of gloop
03 January 1998
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Letters : Paper power
03 January 1998
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Thistle diary : - More comment from Westminster by Tam Dalyell
03 January 1998
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Letters : Criminals and chemists
03 January 1998
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Letters : Juicy analogy
03 January 1998
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Letters : Pooling probabilities
03 January 1998
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Letters : . . .
03 January 1998
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Letters : . . .
03 January 1998
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Letters : . . .
03 January 1998
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Letters : . . .
03 January 1998
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Letters : A special moment
03 January 1998
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Letters : Some way to go
03 January 1998
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Letters : Tiananmen taint
03 January 1998
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Forum : Cosmic insurance - What is the chance that there is a large asteroid with our number on it? asks
Duncan Steel 03 January 1998
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Review : Money-spinner
03 January 1998
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Review : They made it
03 January 1998
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Review : Worlds on the edge
03 January 1998
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Sniff 'n' shake - How do we distinguish between the sweet smell of a rose and the reek of rotten eggs? One man thinks it comes down to picking up good vibrations, says
Stephen Hill 03 January 1998
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Thumbing a ride into space - If you can't afford your own rocket, try hitching a lift on someone else's.
Helen Gavaghan finds out how it's done03 January 1998
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Can we tame wild medicine? - To save a rare species, Western conservationists may have to make their peace with traditional Chinese medicine. Rob Parry-Jones and Amanda Vincent report
03 January 1998
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Late bloomers live long and prosper
03 January 1998
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In brief : Wasting away
03 January 1998
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In brief : TB laid bare
03 January 1998
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Review : Collected works - Barry Forshaw picks out the time travel plums
03 January 1998
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Forum : Catch them younger - There is new hope for women with breast cancer, says
Debora MacKenzie , but we must act now03 January 1998
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Review : Mystic machinery
03 January 1998
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Bestsellers : from San Francisco
03 January 1998
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Review : Striking back
03 January 1998
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Review : Web trotters . . .
03 January 1998
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Review : . . . and dataloggers
03 January 1998
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Review : Glowing times
03 January 1998
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Review : Academic fiefdom
03 January 1998
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Review : Flesh on the bones
03 January 1998
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The Last Word
03 January 1998