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Volume 412 Issue 6843, 12 July 2001

Prospects

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Movers

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Opinion

  • The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has a creditable record of developing a scientific consensus and delivering it to policy-makers. What its critics really object to are the facts.

    Opinion
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News

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News in Brief

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News Feature

  • To some, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change represents the pinnacle of scientific collaboration. To others, it is a victory for politics over science. Mark Schrope talks to the experts debating our planet's future.

    • Mark Schrope
    News Feature
  • Can invasive species be controlled by introducing their natural enemies? The idea has a chequered history. But as safety testing improves, it is now gaining currency. Jonathan Knight reports.

    • Jonathan Knight
    News Feature
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Correspondence

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Book Review

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Words

  • Charles Darwin may have had the science, but Richard Owen could write a lethal letter.

    • Kevin Padian
    Words
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Concepts

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News & Views

  • Chemical and heat exchange at vents on deep ocean floors has a large influence on marine chemistry. The discovery of a spectacular new type of venting system has given the story another twist.

    • Karen L. Von Damm
    News & Views
  • Functional magnetic resonance imaging tracks changes in oxygen levels in the brain in response to different stimuli. The neural basis of these changes has, at last, been pinned down.

    • Marcus E. Raichle
    News & Views
  • Some theories of high-energy physics require extra spatial dimensions, beyond the three we know. A radical proposal turns this idea on its head, and suggests that dimensions may disappear at higher energies.

    • Joseph D. Lykken
    News & Views
  • Fossil evidence of human evolutionary history is fragmentary and open to various interpretations. Fossil evidence of chimpanzee evolution is absent altogether.

    • Henry Gee
    News & Views
  • Advances in detector technology have led to a rash of newly discovered moons around the giant planets. Saturn currently has the most known satellites — but for how long?

    • Douglas P. Hamilton
    News & Views
  • It has always been thought that once the process of cell suicide has passed a certain point, it is irreversible. Yet it seems that cells can recover — but only if they are not eaten by nearby 'phagocytic' cells.

    • Douglas R. Green
    • Helen M. Beere
    News & Views
  • Creating a structure as simple as a hole can be a challenge — when the hole is just a few nanometres wide. The trick is to start small and then get smaller.

    • J. Tersoff
    News & Views
  • Why, before they fall, do the leaves of deciduous trees take on such vivid autumn hues? A provocative proposal has it that the colours are not simply a side-effect of senescence.

    • John Whitfield
    News & Views
  • The distinction between cell biology and developmental biology is becoming increasingly blurred. The latest example involves a signalling pathway switched on in the developing spinal cord.

    • Juhee Jeong
    • Andrew P. McMahon
    News & Views
  • Hospitals accused of infecting patients with bugs they didn't have when they arrived could try disinfecting the wards (when the patients are absent) with an old American remedy.

    • David Jones
    News & Views
  • Exceptional talent and influence in developmental biology.

    • Sohaila Rastan
    • Elizabeth Robertson
    News & Views
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Brief Communication

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Hypothesis

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Article

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Letter

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Foreword

  • Foreword
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Introduction

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Review Article

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Commentary

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Corporate Support

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Insight

  • Much of our fascination with Mars relates to the possibility that liquid water exists at or near the martian surface, and therefore that life may have taken hold or even exists there today. A series of interrelated reviews describes the evolution of this most Earth-like of the planets in our Solar System, from the differentiation and solidification of the martian core to the dynamics of its atmosphere.

    Insight
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