Archive

  • News Features, January 2008

    • Human behaviour: Killer instinctsP

      What can evolution say about why humans kill ? and about why we do so less than we used to? Dan Jones reports.

      30 January 2008

    • Genome studies: Genetics by numbersP

      Genomewide association studies are starting to turn up increasingly reliable disease markers. Monya Baker investigates where we are now and what comes next.

      30 January 2008

    • Virology: The battle withinP

      Viral and microbial interactions within living tissues are more complex than previously thought. Melinda Wenner explores whether a periodic table of the infectious could help sort out the mess.

      23 January 2008

    • Defence research: Still in the lead?P

      Half a century after its creation, the Pentagon's Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency is considered a paragon of government innovation. But some question whether it is still relevant. Sharon Weinberger reports.

      23 January 2008

    • Experimental cosmology: Cosmos in a bottleP

      Physicists often borrow techniques from other fields. But how far can this get you? Geoff Brumfiel asks if simple table-top experiments can provide new insights into the early Universe.

      16 January 2008

    • Chemistry: Power playP

      A German physicist and a hedge-fund magnate are competing to push protein simulations into the realm of the millisecond. Brendan Borrell finds out what is at stake.

      16 January 2008

    • Conservation: Providential outcomeP

      A winning combination of isolation, local involvement and a broad ecological remit are making the management of the seas around Colombia's San Andr�s islands a model for other conservationists, reports Mark Schrope.

      9 January 2008

    • Cell biology: Bacteria's new bonesP

      Long dismissed as featureless, disorganized sacks, bacteria are now revealing a multitude of elegant internal structures. Ewen Callaway investigates a new field in cell biology.

      9 January 2008

    • Capacity building: The road from Rio

      Are think-tanks staffed by scientists a luxury that only rich nations can afford? Ehsan Masood meets the founders of four institutes that set out to help poorer nations to think for themselves.

      2 January 2008

    • Geology: The next land rushP

      As countries race to file claims to areas of the sea floor before a United Nations deadline, geologists and geophysicists are getting caught up in the frenzy. Daniel Cressey reports.

      2 January 2008

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