Table of contents


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Opinion

Blessings of mixed neutrinos p1

The confirmation that neutrinos have mass and can switch identity is a triumph of careful experiment that opens doors for theoretical physicists. It is not a crisis for existing models, but a route to deeper ones.

doi:10.1038/35083704


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News

Pentagon offers deal on nuclear weapons book p3

Irwin Goodwin

doi:10.1038/35083706


Los Alamos loses physics archive as preprint pioneer heads east p3

Declan Butler

doi:10.1038/35083708


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Naturejobs

prospects

Biotech's head of steam p3

Paul Smaglik

doi:10.1038/35108155


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News

Imported stem cells deepen Germany's ethical divide p4

Quirin Schiermeier

doi:10.1038/35083712


Quota offered as solution to gender imbalance p4

Katja Henssel

doi:10.1038/35083715


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Naturejobs

Special Report

Science shops provide non-profit alternative p4

After years of decline, non-profit consultancies — science shops — are starting to reinvent themselves, says Alexander Hellemans.

Alexander Hellemans


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News

Europe plots comeback in neutron science p5

David Adam

doi:10.1038/35083718


Gene screens for nuclear veterans p5

Peter Pockley

doi:10.1038/35083721


University reforms fail to quell fears of 'inbreeding' p6

Xavier Bosch

doi:10.1038/35083724


Utopian dream in tatters as Starlab crashes to Earth p6

Jim Giles

doi:10.1038/35083727


US blood ban underlines CJD fears p7

Meredith Wadman

doi:10.1038/35083730


Hong Kong seeks secrets of Chinese medicine p7

David Cyranoski

doi:10.1038/35083732


news in brief p8

doi:10.1038/35083735


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news feature

'Which side are you on?' p10

Chinese-Americans form a cornerstone of the US scientific workforce. Yet recent developments have led some to question whether they are fully accepted by their colleagues. Josette Chen reports.

Josette Chen

doi:10.1038/35083739


Meet the Herod bug p12

A parasitic bacterium that uses an array of dastardly tricks to favour female hosts over males is holding evolutionary biologists in thrall. Jonathan Knight enters the strange world of Wolbachia.

Jonathan Knight

doi:10.1038/35083744


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Correspondence

Identifying dangers in an uncertain climate p15

We need to research all the potential outcomes, not try to guess which is likeliest to occur.

Arnulf Grübler and Nebojsa Nakicenovic

doi:10.1038/35083752


Attention to bioweapons obscures the real threats p15

Sebestyén Gorka and Richard Sullivan

doi:10.1038/35083754


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Book Reviews

Quest for the ancient fire-breathers p17

Those who pursued dinosaurs could be as fascinating as their discoveries.

Eric Buffetaut reviews Dragon Hunter: Roy Chapman Andrews and the Central Asiatic Expeditions by Charles Gallenkamp and The Dragon Seekers: How an Extraordinary Circle of Fossilists Discovered Dinosaurs and Paved the Way for Darwin by Christopher McGowan

doi:10.1038/35083633


Delving into the material world p18

Jacques Livage reviews The Coming of Materials Science by R. W. Cahn

doi:10.1038/35083638


Cajal made clear in translation p19

Edward G. Jones reviews Texture of the Nervous System of Man and Vertebrates: Volume II by Santiago Ramón y Cajal

doi:10.1038/35083642


Top

words

What are clones? p21

They're not what you think they are.

Lee M. Silver

doi:10.1038/35083650


Top

concepts

The Sirens' song p23

Gerry Melino

doi:10.1038/35083653


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News and Views

Signs of galactic cannibalism p25

Theories predict that galaxies grow by swallowing smaller galaxies, which may then show up as galactic debris. Astronomers think they have found one such tell-tale structure in a nearby galaxy.

Amina Helmi

doi:10.1038/35083656


Biogeochemistry: The nitrogen fix p26

At some time in life's history, microorganisms started to make metabolically usable nitrogen from N2 in the atmosphere. A provocative proposal accounts for the 'why and when' of that event.

James F. Kasting and Janet L. Siefert

doi:10.1038/35083660


Apoptosis: DNA destroyers p27

Proteins with quite mundane functions in healthy cells often behave very differently during cell suicide. One protein normally involved in copying mitochondrial DNA actually degrades nuclear DNA in dying cells.

Michael O. Hengartner

doi:10.1038/35083663


High-energy physics: Neutrinos reveal split personalities p29

For more than 30 years scientists have puzzled over the mystery of the missing neutrinos emitted from the Sun. Data from underground detectors in Canada and Japan combine to provide the answer.

John N. Bahcall

doi:10.1038/35083665


100 and 50 years ago p30

doi:10.1038/35083667


Evolutionary biology: Searching for speciation genes p31

The formation of new animal species often results from divergence in male sexual behaviours and female preferences. The genetic basis of this sexual isolation in fruitflies is gradually being revealed.

Roger Butlin and Michael G. Ritchie

doi:10.1038/35083669


Quantum physics: Air juggling and other tricks p33

Quantum tunnelling breaks the rules of classical physics — and leads to ghost-like transfer of matter through barriers. Demonstrations of a new type of quantum tunnelling have the ghosts taking new liberties.

Eric J. Heller

doi:10.1038/35083672


Ecology: Price put on biodiversity p34

The greater the plant diversity in an ecosystem, the greater the ecosystem's productivity. A new analysis indicates that the higher productivity results from complementary patterns of species resource use.

Osvaldo E. Sala

doi:10.1038/35083676


Planetary science: Climate change on Venus p36

Earth's climate has changed significantly over the past several million years. New theoretical work suggests that the climate of our nearest neighbour, Venus, may have also changed on similar timescales.

Ronald G. Prinn

doi:10.1038/35083679


Daedalus: Learning to forget p37

David Jones

doi:10.1038/35083682


Obituary: Wang Ying-lai (1907–2001) p38

L. Ling-chi Wang


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Brief Communications

Surrogate mother for endangered Cupressus p39

A rare cypress tree increases its chances by using a clever reproductive strategy.

Christian Pichot, Mohamed El Maâtaoui, Sabrina Raddi and Paolo Raddi

doi:10.1038/35083687


Pathogen reservoirs: Chironomid egg masses and Vibrio cholerae p40

Meir Broza and Malka Halpern

doi:10.1038/35083691


Carbon fixation: Photosynthesis in a marine diatom p40

Andrew M. Johnston, John A. Raven, John Beardall and Richard C. Leegood

doi:10.1038/35083694


reply: Carbon fixation: Photosynthesis in a marine diatom p41

John R. Reinfelder

doi:10.1038/35083696


Aerodynamics: Insects can halve wind-turbine power p41

Gustave P. Corten and Herman F. Veldkamp

doi:10.1038/35083698


correction: Thin solid films roll up into nanotubes p42

doi:10.1038/35083701


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Article

Dopamine responses comply with basic assumptions of formal learning theory p43

Pascale Waelti, Anthony Dickinson and Wolfram Schultz

doi:10.1038/35083500


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Letters to Nature

A giant stream of metal-rich stars in the halo of the galaxy M31 p49

Rodrigo Ibata, Michael Irwin, Geraint Lewis, Annette M. N. Ferguson and Nial Tanvir

doi:10.1038/35083506

See also: News and Views by Helmi


Dynamical tunnelling of ultracold atoms p52

W. K. Hensinger, H. Häffner, A. Browaeys, N. R. Heckenberg, K. Helmerson, C. McKenzie, G. J. Milburn, W. D. Phillips, S. L. Rolston, H. Rubinsztein-Dunlop and B. Upcroft

See also: News and Views by Heller


Quantum interference of superfluid 3He p55

R. W. Simmonds, A. Marchenkov, E. Hoskinson, J. C. Davis and R. E. Packard

doi:10.1038/35083518


Coexistence of superconductivity and ferromagnetism in the d-band metal ZrZn2 p58

C. Pfleiderer, M. Uhlarz, S. M. Hayden, R. Vollmer, H. v. Löhneysen, N. R. Bernhoeft and G. G. Lonzarich

doi:10.1038/35083531


A possible nitrogen crisis for Archaean life due to reduced nitrogen fixation by lightning p61

Rafael Navarro-González, Christopher P. McKay and Delphine Nna Mvondo

doi:10.1038/35083537

See also: News and Views by Kasting & Siefert


Annual monsoon rains recorded by Jurassic dunes p64

David B. Loope, Clinton M. Rowe and R. Matthew Joeckel

doi:10.1038/35083554


Morphological and ecological complexity in early eukaryotic ecosystems p66

Emmanuelle J. Javaux, Andrew H. Knoll and Malcolm R. Walter

doi:10.1038/35083562


The impact of ultraviolet radiation on the vertical distribution of zooplankton of the genus Daphnia p69

Stephan C. Rhode, Markus Pawlowski and Ralph Tollrian

doi:10.1038/35083567


Partitioning selection and complementarity in biodiversity experiments p72

Michel Loreau and Andy Hector

doi:10.1038/35083573

See also: News and Views by Sala


Cryptic evolution in a wild bird population p76

J. Merilä, L. E. B. Kruuk and B. C. Sheldon

doi:10.1038/35083580


Cortical remodelling induced by activity of ventral tegmental dopamine neurons p79

Shaowen Bao, Vincent T. Chan and Michael M. Merzenich

doi:10.1038/35083586


The glyoxylate cycle is required for fungal virulence p83

Michael C. Lorenz and Gerald R. Fink

doi:10.1038/35083594


Insights into Wnt binding and signalling from the structures of two Frizzled cysteine-rich domains p86

Charles E. Dann, Jen-Chih Hsieh, Amir Rattner, Divya Sharma, Jeremy Nathans and Daniel J. Leahy

doi:10.1038/35083601


Mitochondrial endonuclease G is important for apoptosis in C. elegans p90

Jay Parrish, Lily Li, Kristina Klotz, Duncan Ledwich, Xiaodong Wang and Ding Xue

doi:10.1038/35083608

See also: News and Views by Hengartner


Endonuclease G is an apoptotic DNase when released from mitochondria p95

Lily Y. Li, Xu Luo and Xiaodong Wang

doi:10.1038/35083620

See also: News and Views by Hengartner


correction: Timing of the Last Glacial Maximum from observed sea-level minima p99

Yusuke Yokoyama, Kurt Lambeck, Patrick De Deckker, Paul Johnston and l. Keith Fifield

doi:10.1038/35083629


correction: The role of interleukin-1 polymorphisms in the pathogenesis of gastric cancer p99

Emad M. El-Omar, Mary Carrington, Wong-Ho Chow, Kenneth E. L. McColl, Jay H. Bream, Howard A. Young, Jesus Herrera, Jolanta Lissowska, Chiu-Chin Yuan, Nathaniel Rothman, George Lanyon, Maureen Martin, Joseph F. Fraumeni, Jr and Charles S. Rabkin

doi:10.1038/35083631


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New on the Market

The heat is on p101

Thermocycling and PCR in general are the themes for this week's selection.

doi:10.1038/35083645


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