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Volume 395 Issue 6702, 8 October 1998

Opinion

  • A report from the World Bank has highlighted the dangers of a growing knowledge gap between rich and poor nations. The issue needs to be placed at the heart of development aid strategies.

    Opinion

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News

  • washington

    A blast of gamma-rays and x-rays from a distant star has given scientists their best evidence yet for a 'magnetar'-- a neutron star with a magnetic field stronger than any other known object in the universe.

    • Tony Reichhardt
    News
  • washington

    Computer tycoon Gordon Moore has pledged $35 million for a new Center for Applied Biodiversity Science in Washington, the largest private gift ever for international biodiversity conservation.

    • Tony Reichhardt
    News
  • washington

    Major US science agencies are set to enjoy their healthiest budget increases in years following Congress approval of most of the budget requests from President Clinton.

    • Colin Macilwain
    • Tony Reichhardt
    News
  • paris

    The European commission has rejected a proposal that Europe should unilaterally adopt a 'grace period' allowing researchers to file for a patent up to a year after publishing a discovery.

    • Declan Butler
    • David Dickson
    News
  • munich

    Prosecutors in Germany are finding it more difficult than expected to bring legal charges against two scientists alleged to have perpetrated Germany's biggest scientific fraud.

    • Alison Abbott
    News
  • munich

    Germany's main university research funding agency is funding a task force to analyse around 500 publications that could have been affected by the scientific fraud.

    • Alison Abbott
    News
  • munich

    The Swiss National Science Foundation (NSF), is seeking to increase the role of university researchers in identifying the topics of national research programmes.

    • Quirin Schiermeier
    News
  • montreal

    The new Canadian Blood Services agency has gone into operation, committing 10 per cent of its Can$350 million budget to research.

    • David Spurgeon
    News
  • madrid

    The Spanish government plans to increase public spending on civilian research and development by between 8 and 10 per cent next year.

    • Xavier Bosch
    News
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News in Brief

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Correspondence

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News & Views

  • Between about 30,000 and 40,000 years ago, the Neanderthals in Europe were replaced by populations of behaviourally and biologically modern humans. What happened during that period?

    • Paul Mellars
    News & Views
  • Saturn's huge moon Titan is the only moon in the Solar System to have a thick atmosphere. Evidence for transient methane clouds supports the old idea that this atmosphere may support a methane cycle, akin to Earth's hydrological cycle.

    • F. Michael Flasar
    News & Views
  • Many members of the nuclear-receptor superfamily are turned on by ligands that, as yet, have not been identified. One such 'orphan' receptor, the constitutively active receptor, has now been 'adopted' by not one, but two ligands, leading it to be renamed the 'constitutive androstane receptor'. Moreover, the ligands turn the receptor off — just the opposite of what ligands usually do to nuclear receptors.

    • Didier Picard
    News & Views
  • A promising new type of solar cell makes use of an amorphous conducting material. More efficient than other solid-state organic devices, it could turn out to be a prototype for cheap, large-area cells.

    • Wim C. Sinke
    • Martijn M. Wienk
    News & Views
  • Studies of floral patterning took a big step forward with the proposal of the ABC model — whereby the identity of homeotic genes is determined by a combinatorial code of homeotic genes termed A, B and C. A new study shows how these genes are expressed at the right time and place, finding that expression of homeotic genes is tied to expression of the so-called meristem-identity genes by the LEAFY protein.

    • Ben Scheres
    News & Views
  • Last week, an extraordinary claim was published — that tiny fossil tunnels created by burrowing creatures about one billion years ago had been identified in rocks in central India. If true, this would double the time span of the animal fossil record. But apart from doubts over the interpretation of the structures as tunnels, the rocks may be only about half the age claimed.

    • Martin Brasier
    News & Views
  • After waiting almost 15 years since the first ribozyme (catalytic RNA molecule) was crystallized, the RNA community finds that such structures are a bit like buses, with two coming at once. One is the high-resolution structure of the hepatitis delta helper virus ribozyme, and the other, at slightly lower resolution, is the group I intron fromTetrahymena thermophila.

    • Daniel Herschlag
    News & Views
  • The question of whether water exists on the Moon has been highly controversial. Results from the Lunar Prospector mission, now analysed and published, provide the best evidence yet that there is indeed a considerable amount of water on the Moon, in the form of ice under the lunar poles. The instruments concerned detect hydrogen, which could, for instance, exist as H2. But H2O is the more likely form.

    • Timothy D. Swindle
    News & Views
  • Continuing his musings on Everett's 'many worlds' interpretation of quantum probabilities, this week Daedalus wonders whether physical communication between these worlds might not be possible. To do this, he plans to search for a lack of randomness in quantum events such as radioactive decay and quantum circuit noise.

    • David Jones
    News & Views
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Science and Image

  • Herschel the star-gazer with light around his head, Einstein's wild hair and vast brain, Hawking's interstellar mind transcending his earthbound body. It's not just that we've seen them so often: some scientists really look the part.

    • Martin Kemp
    Science and Image
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Scientific Correspondence

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Book Review

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Article

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Letter

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Erratum

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News

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