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Volume 409 Issue 6823, 22 February 2001

Opinion

  • As the US budget looms, the repercussions that President Bush's campaign promises will have on research and on other government programmes are becoming all too clear. Researchers face a tough struggle in lobbying Congress.

    Opinion

    Advertisement

  • Despite expectations to the contrary, the European Commission has failed to back research facilities for the long term.

    Opinion
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News

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News in Brief

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News Feature

  • A silicon laser would revolutionize telecommunications, electronics and computing. Squeezing light out of silicon is no easy task, but Philip Ball discovers that researchers are becoming more optimistic about its light-emitting abilities.

    • Philip Ball
    News Feature
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Correspondence

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Book Review

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Words

  • An anthropologist's unwitting gift to literature.

    • Paolo Mazzarello
    Words
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Concepts

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Correction

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News & Views

  • A combination of analytical methods used in engineering and scanning techniques from medicine can be applied in some surprising areas of research — the biomechanics of dinosaur feeding, for instance.

    • Gregory M. Erickson
    News & Views
  • The voltage-gated sodium channel is essential for nerve cells to function. But how does it work? A low-resolution, three-dimensional structure provides some provocative insights.

    • William A. Catterall
    News & Views
  • Celestial mechanics has long been used as an aid for interpreting geological records. The compliment is being repaid through analysis of Mediterranean sediments.

    • Marie-France Loutre
    News & Views
  • New techniques for analysing the dynamics of moth populations in captivity could have broad implications for biodiversity and conservation research in general.

    • Michael E. Hochberg
    • Arthur E. Weis
    News & Views
  • Traditional devices for measuring turbulence have been unable to keep up with the latest developments in theory. But detectors derived from high-energy physics may narrow the gap between experiment and theory.

    • Itamar Procaccia
    News & Views
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Brief Communication

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Article

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Letter

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Foreword

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Commentary

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Review Article

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Progress

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Commentary

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New on the Market

  • Recent launches include kits to detect senescence in cells, and apoptosis.

    New on the Market
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Insight

  • Astrobiology - the study of life in the Universe - encompasses fields as diverse as geology, astronomy, evolutionary and developmental biology, human physiology and palaeontology. Although many ventures labelled as astrobiology are perhaps some way from the usual stuff of science, this eclectic selection of articles shows how invigorating it can be to consider life in its broadest sense.

    Insight
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