Table of contents


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Naturejobs

Prospects

Mixed fortunes in France p3

Paul Smaglik

doi:10.1038/35091282


movers

doi:10.1038/35091277


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Opinion

E-optimism on a tide of red ink p663

Telecommunications and semiconductor companies are suffering from a precipitous downturn. But researchers can be sure that a healthy, handy electronic future is on the way.

doi:10.1038/35089185


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News

Bush compromise raises doubts over stem-cell resilience p665

Jonathan Knight

doi:10.1038/35089187


Biologists officially welcome plan p665

Paul Smaglik

doi:10.1038/35089190


Nutritionists question study of organic food p666

David Adam

doi:10.1038/35089192


Wellcome Trust sets out fresh misconduct standards p667

Erica Klarreich

doi:10.1038/35089196


Academies called to task over human cloning débâcle p667

Laura Bonetta

doi:10.1038/35089199


Nigeria takes the initiative in African science p668

Alison Abbott

doi:10.1038/35089202


Feminized fish encourage Japan to test pollution links p668

David Cyranoski

doi:10.1038/35089205


Animal data jeopardized by life behind bars p669

Jonathan Knight

doi:10.1038/35089208


Chemistry journal reacts to dispute p669

David Adam

doi:10.1038/35089212


news in brief p670

doi:10.1038/35089214


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news feature

To boldly go p672

The nineteenth century scientists who studied the oceans were explorers, not hypothesis testers. Mark Schrope finds that modern-day oceanographers want to revive this pioneering spirit.

Mark Schrope

doi:10.1038/35089218


The best supporting actors p674

Glial cells were long thought to play a peripheral role in the theatre of the brain. But some neuroscientists now believe that they are intimately involved in the way the brain processes information. Bas Kast charts the cells' move into the limelight.

Bas Kast

doi:10.1038/35089223


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Correspondence

Organic movement reveals a shift in the social position of science p677

Since BSE, the public is less inclined to trust experts.

Annette Mørkeberg and John R. Porter

doi:10.1038/35089231


Politics defeats science at environment agency p677

Henry I. Miller

doi:10.1038/35089233


Cooperation among labs is appreciated p677

Judah Folkman

doi:10.1038/35089235


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Book Reviews

A quintessential pluralist p679

The life of a scientist, wartime strategist and adviser to government.

John Maddox reviews Solly Zuckerman: A Scientist out of the Ordinary by John Peyton

doi:10.1038/35089112


Signing on the genetic line p680

Ruth Chadwick reviews Your Genetic Destiny: Know Your Genes, Secure Your Health, Save Your Life by Aubrey Milunsky and Future Perfect: Confronting Decisions about Genetics by Lori B. Andrews

doi:10.1038/35089115


Physics for non-physicists p681

Peter Landsberg reviews Hidden Unity in Nature's Laws by John C. Taylor

doi:10.1038/35089119


Wonders of the shallows p681

doi:10.1038/35089121


For reference p681

doi:10.1038/35089124


The genetic complexity of life p682

Brian Charlesworth reviews The Misunderstood Gene by Michel Morange (translated by Matthew Cobb)

doi:10.1038/35089126


New in paperback p682

doi:10.1038/35089128


Top

words

Stranger than fiction p683

The tale of the epic voyage made to establish the metric system is an intriguing and exciting one.

Julyan Cartwright

doi:10.1038/35089149


Top

concepts

A purgative mastery p685

G. J. V. Nossal

doi:10.1038/35089152


Top

News and Views

Quantum ripples in chaos p687

The differences between quantum and classical chaos show up on the smallest of scales. Although tiny, these differences have implications for our understanding of quantum mechanics.

Andreas Albrecht

doi:10.1038/35089156


Aerodynamics: Flight of the robofly p688

Qualitative studies of airflow over insect wings have long been possible, thanks to the use of smoke trails. With a new robotic fly, flow and force can be analysed quantitatively, so theories of insect flight can be tested.

George V. Lauder

doi:10.1038/35089159


Quantum physics: Cooperation includes all atoms p689

Atom statistics is a fundamental property of all particles that dictates how they behave in certain situations. But behaviour previously attributed to atom statistics is equally likely to arise from cooperative effects.

Juha Javanainen

doi:10.1038/35089163


Neurobiology: Stem cells on the brain p690

Stem cells have great potential for treating a variety of diseases and seem to hit the headlines almost every week. An extremely pure population of brain stem cells has now been obtained from adult mice.

Robert Cassidy and Jonas Frisén

doi:10.1038/35089165


Earth science: Gas hydrates and deglaciations p691

Long ago, Earth experienced a series of especially severe glaciations. A new explanation for deposits laid down at the end of these events centres on the large-scale release of methane from solid gas hydrates.

Stein B. Jacobsen

doi:10.1038/35089168


100 and 50 years ago p692

doi:10.1038/35089171


Neuroscience: Dynamic categories p693

Neuroscientists often study brain function by presenting a stimulus many times and averaging the neural response. A trick for finding brain activity in single trials might reveal how animals mentally categorize information.

Michael P. Kilgard

doi:10.1038/35089173


Planetary science: A new model Moon p694

The most sophisticated simulations yet of the Moon's birth show that it could have been created from an impact of a large body with a fully formed, rather than half-formed, Earth.

Jay Melosh

doi:10.1038/35089176


Daedalus: Blood and iron p695

David Jones

doi:10.1038/35089179


Obituary: Donald J. Cram (1919–2001) p696

M. Frederick Hawthorne

doi:10.1038/35089181


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Brief Communications

Finer features for functional microdevices p697

Micromachines can be created with higher resolution using two-photon absorption.

Satoshi Kawata, Hong-Bo Sun, Tomokazu Tanaka and Kenji Takada

doi:10.1038/35089130


Sex determination: Viviparous lizard selects sex of embryos p698

Kylie A. Robert and Michael B. Thompson

doi:10.1038/35089135


Ancient chronology: Astronomical orientation of the pyramids p699

Dennis Rawlins and Keith Pickering

doi:10.1038/35089138


Ancient chronology: Astronomical orientation of the pyramids p699

Kate Spence

doi:10.1038/35089140


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Review

Structural mimicry in bacterial virulence p701

C. Erec Stebbins and Jorge E. Galán

doi:10.1038/35089000


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Letters to Nature

Deficiency of molecular hydrogen in the disk of beta Pictoris p706

A. Lecavelier des Etangs, A. Vidal-Madjar, A. Roberge, P. D. Feldman, M. Deleuil, M. André, W. P. Blair, J.-C. Bouret, J.-M. Désert, R. Ferlet, S. Friedman, G. Hébrard, M. Lemoine and H. W. Moos

doi:10.1038/35089006


Origin of the Moon in a giant impact near the end of the Earth's formation p708

Robin M. Canup and Erik Asphaug

doi:10.1038/35089010

See also: News and Views by Melosh


Sub-Planck structure in phase space and its relevance for quantum decoherence p712

Wojciech Hubert Zurek

See also: News and Views by Albrecht


Crystalline ion beams p717

T. Schätz, U. Schramm and D. Habs

doi:10.1038/35089045


A titanosilicate molecular sieve with adjustable pores for size-selective adsorption of molecules p720

Steven M. Kuznicki, Valerie A. Bell, Sankar Nair, Hugh W. Hillhouse, Richard M. Jacubinas, Carola M. Braunbarth, Brian H. Toby and Michael Tsapatsis

doi:10.1038/35089052


The timing of the last deglaciation in North Atlantic climate records p724

Claire Waelbroeck, Jean-Claude Duplessy, Elisabeth Michel, Laurent Labeyrie, Didier Paillard and Josette Duprat

doi:10.1038/35089060


Direct observation of a submarine volcanic eruption from a sea-floor instrument caught in a lava flow p727

Christopher G. Fox, William W. Chadwick, Jr and Robert W. Embley

doi:10.1038/35089066


Spanwise flow and the attachment of the leading-edge vortex on insect wings p729

James M. Birch and Michael H. Dickinson

doi:10.1038/35089071

See also: News and Views by Lauder


Change in pattern of ongoing cortical activity with auditory category learning p733

F. W. Ohl, H. Scheich and W. J. Freeman

doi:10.1038/35089076

See also: News and Views by Kilgard


Purification of a pluripotent neural stem cell from the adult mouse brain p736

Rodney L. Rietze, Helen Valcanis, Gordon F. Brooker, Tim Thomas, Anne K. Voss and Perry F. Bartlett

doi:10.1038/35089085

See also: News and Views by Cassidy & Frisén


Antibodies inhibit prion propagation and clear cell cultures of prion infectivity p739

David Peretz, R. Anthony Williamson, Kiotoshi Kaneko, Julie Vergara, Estelle Leclerc, Gerold Schmitt-Ulms, Ingrid R. Mehlhorn, Giuseppe Legname, Mark R. Wormald, Pauline M. Rudd, Raymond A. Dwek, Dennis R. Burton and Stanley B. Prusiner

doi:10.1038/35089090


Iron deficiency induces the formation of an antenna ring around trimeric photosystem I in cyanobacteria p743

Thomas S. Bibby, Jon Nield and James Barber

doi:10.1038/35089098


A giant chlorophyll–protein complex induced by iron deficiency in cyanobacteria p745

E. J. Boekema, A. Hifney, A. E. Yakushevska, M. Piotrowski, W. Keegstra, S. Berry, K.-P. Michel, E. K. Pistorius and J. Kruip

doi:10.1038/35089104


erratum: Elevated c-myc expression facilitates the replication of SV40 DNA in human lymphoma cells p748

Marie Classon, Marie Henriksson, Janos Sümegi, George Klein and Marie-Louise Hammarskjöld

doi:10.1038/35089110


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New on the Market

Peptides and proteins p749

Assay kits, centrifuges and other protein-friendly paraphernalia.

doi:10.1038/35089143


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