| Jackhammer 'superdrill' could speed mine rescues 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-4-15 1:54) | 
  | A drill now in development could reach miners trapped underground much more quickly than is possible with today's equipment 
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  | Zoologger: Robin Hood meets his underwater match 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-4-15 1:42) | 
  | Archerfish may not carry a bow and arrow, but all they need to shoot like a merry man is the chance to watch an expert at target practice 
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  | Do Dartmoor's ancient stones have link to Stonehenge? 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-4-15 1:15) | 
  | Striking similarities between a southern English monument and Stonehenge, 180 kilometres to the east, suggest they may be the work of the same people 
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  | Climategate scientists chastised over statistics 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-4-15 0:06) | 
  | The third independent inquiry into climatologists at the University of East Anglia finds no wrongdoing, but says they should brush up their statistics 
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  | First blood to Atlas at the Large Hadron Collider 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-4-14 23:56) | 
  | The massive detector has beaten a rival instrument to the LHC's first sighting of W boson particles, a milestone on the road to fresh discoveries 
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  | The science in the Liberal Democrat election manifesto 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-4-14 22:45) | 
  | The last of the major UK parties' manifestos has been published. Nick Dusic sorts through their promises to scientists 
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  | Does psychiatry make us mad? 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-4-14 22:40) | 
  | In Anatomy of an Epidemic, Robert Whitaker argues that medical incompetence and self-interest are behind rocketing rates of mental illness in the US 
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  | We can help stop nuclear theft, say science groups 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-4-14 22:26) | 
  | A major meeting on nuclear security in Washington DC could have benefited from our input, say scientific organisations 
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  | NASA capsule to win new life as escape pod 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-4-14 22:25) | 
  | NASA's crew capsule Orion, cancelled along with the rest of the agency's moon plans earlier this year, is set to be reborn as an emergency escape vehicle 
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  | E. O. Wilson: Why I wrote a novel– about ants 
    from New Scientist - Online News 
          (2010-4-12 23:57) | 
  | He's defined the field of entomology and influenced generations of naturalists. But though his tale is seen through insect eyes, it's really about us 
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