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- 1From: Nature. (Vol. 418, Issue 6893) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Wolfgang Lutz [1]; Mahendra Shah [1] Sir On 26 August, the United Nations (UN) World Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg will consider strategies with a far broader mandate for action than...
- 2From: Nature. (Vol. 418, Issue 6893) Peer-ReviewedEarthScope drillers seek hole truth about San Andreas fault San Diego [illus. 1] In the next few weeks, an international team will finishing drilling a 2.2-kilometre borehole in a seismically active zone of...
- 3From: Nature. (Vol. 418, Issue 6893) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Vincent J. M. Salters (corresponding author) [1]; Henry J. B. Dick [2] Inferring the melting process at mid-ocean ridges, and the physical conditions under which melting takes place, usually relies on the...
- 4From: Nature. (Vol. 418, Issue 6893) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): David Cyranoski Tokyo Japan's High Energy Accelerator Research Organization (KEK) has chosen its next director -- Yoji Totsuka, a globally renowned neutrino scientist with wide experience of running large...
- 5From: Nature. (Vol. 418, Issue 6893) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): John Robertson (corresponding author) Amorphous silicon is the leading electronic material for large-area applications, used in solar cells and in the thin-film transistors that make up liquid-crystal...
- 6From: Nature. (Vol. 418, Issue 6893) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Alexander A. Prokopenko (corresponding author) [1, 2]; Douglas F. Williams [1]; Mikhail I. Kuzmin [3]; Eugene B. Karabanov [1, 3]; Galina K. Khursevich [4]; John A. Peck [5] The large difference in carbon...
- 7From: Nature. (Vol. 418, Issue 6893) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): César Miquel [1]; Juan Pablo Paz (corresponding author) [1]; Marcos Saraceno [2]; Emanuel Knill [3]; Raymond Laflamme [4, 5]; Camille Negrevergne [3] It is important to be able to determine the state of a...
- 8From: Nature. (Vol. 418, Issue 6893) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Helen Pearson [1] Your world was shaped in the first 24 hours after conception. Where your head and feet would sprout, and which side would form your back and which your belly, were being defined in the...
- 9From: Nature. (Vol. 418, Issue 6893) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Stephen Oliver (corresponding author) Metabolic engineering is a frustrating occupation. The aim is to genetically manipulate a cell -- usually a microorganism -- so that it overproduces some desired...
- 10From: Nature. (Vol. 418, Issue 6893) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): T. L. Raoul Tan [1]; Simone Lohner [2] Sir We agree with your Opinion article "Selling science to the young" (Nature 417, 1; 200210.1038/417001b) that science should highlight those who turn their...
- 11From: Nature. (Vol. 418, Issue 6893) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Declan Butler Paris A row over the availability of visas for visitors from developing nations is casting a shadow over the 14th International AIDS Conference, which opens in Barcelona on 7 July....
- 12From: Nature. (Vol. 418, Issue 6893) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Philip Ball [1] [illus. 1] Ralph Kahn's office at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, has a unique line in interior decor. Brightly coloured charts cover the walls. Red is a favourite...
- 13From: Nature. (Vol. 418, Issue 6893) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Jonathan Knight San Francisco The scandals and stock-market woes that have left the biotechnology industry reeling this year are beginning to take their toll on campuses, according to early indicators....
- 14From: Nature. (Vol. 418, Issue 6893) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Elizabeth Cashdan [1] A Mind of Her Own: The Evolutionary Psychology of Women by Anne Campbell Oxford University Press: 2002. 402 pp. £21.99, $40 This provocative book argues that competition among...
- 15From: Nature. (Vol. 418, Issue 6893) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Paul Smaglik [1]; Adam Smith [2] Biotechnology and job security look as though they're mutually exclusive, judging by the business news of the past few months. In Seattle, for example, Immunex employees are...
- 16From: Nature. (Vol. 418, Issue 6893) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Bryon MacWilliams Moscow Dozens of scientists trekked more than 130 kilometres over three days, through heavy wind and rain, in a bid to hold Russian President Vladimir Putin to a promise on research...
- 17From: Nature. (Vol. 418, Issue 6893) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Henry Rishbeth [1] [illus. 1] We have come far in the 100 years since Oliver Lodge gave the first physical explanation of why Marconi could send radio waves around the curved Earth. Using the new knowledge...
- 18From: Nature. (Vol. 418, Issue 6893) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Yuehua Jiang [1, 2]; Balkrishna N. Jahagirdar [1, 2, 3]; R. Lee Reinhardt [4]; Robert E. Schwartz [1]; C. Dirk Keene [5]; Xilma R. Ortiz-Gonzalez [5]; Morayma Reyes [1]; Todd Lenvik [1]; Troy Lund [1]; Mark...
- 19From: Nature. (Vol. 418, Issue 6893) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Tony Reichhardt Washington As almost a million acres of American forest burned out of control last week, senators representing western states proposed setting up three wildfire research institutes to study...
- 20From: Nature. (Vol. 418, Issue 6893) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Jerry A. Coyne [1] Of Moths and Men: Intrigue, Tragedy and the Peppered Moth by Judith Hooper Fourth Estate: 2002. 397 pp. £15.99 [illus. 1] A colleague described the physician and naturalist Bernard...