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Volume 434 Issue 7035, 14 April 2005

Editorial

  • European regulators should pursue their own investigation into how the ‘wrong’ genetically modified corn was allowed on the market for years. Unfortunately, their US equivalents show little sign of rising to the challenge.

    Editorial

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News

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News in Brief

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News Feature

  • Dust clouds can cool the Earth and halt hurricanes. But the world's biggest dust source was until recently a war zone. Jim Giles joins one of the few research teams to make the trip.

    • Jim Giles
    News Feature
  • When a magician uses science to present his tricks, the effects are seductive. Alison Abbott takes a masterclass in sorcery.

    • Alison Abbott
    News Feature
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Correspondence

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Books & Arts

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Turning Points

  • How an ‘eccentric’ line of research proved its worth.

    • Carol Robinson
    Turning Points
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News & Views

  • Can cells sense and stop uncontrolled division driven by cancer-promoting stimuli? Perhaps so, given evidence that aberrant division can trigger the cellular response to DNA damage — blocking growth — at early stages in human cancer.

    • Ashok R. Venkitaraman
    News & Views
  • Various studies indicate that the hydrological cycle is speeding up at high northern latitudes. The resulting increase in freshwater flow into the Arctic Ocean is predicted to have long-range effects.

    • Thomas F. Stocker
    • Christoph C. Raible
    News & Views
  • Our ideas about how crocodiles evolved have just taken a battering. It seems that these cold-blooded creatures, with their limited capacity for prolonged activity, might have had active, warm-blooded ancestors.

    • Adam P. Summers
    News & Views
  • An idea that a mineral phase transition may occur not once, but twice, close to the core–mantle boundary has been tested with seismic data. The resulting picture of the deep Earth is sure to provoke debate.

    • Michael E. Wysession
    • Viatcheslav S. Solomatov
    News & Views
  • TRP channels are best known for their role in sensory systems: detecting heat and cold, taste, pain and so on. Unexpectedly, they have also been shown to help the growing axons of nerve cells find their way.

    • Timothy Gomez
    News & Views
  • The matter from which the first stars formed was that left behind by the Big Bang. Stars containing extremely small amounts of heavy elements such as iron provide clues to the chemical composition of this matter.

    • Roger Cayrel
    News & Views
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Research Highlights

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Brief Communication

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Review Article

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Article

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Letter

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Prospects

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Careers and Recruitment

  • As supplies of fossil fuels dwindle, the world is searching for alternative energy supplies. Materials scientists are in demand, says Virgina Gewin, but there are jobs in many areas.

    • Virginia Gewin
    Careers and Recruitment
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Career View

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Futures

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