Scientists Redraw the Blueprint of the Body's Biological Clock!We implemented digital timers in 20'th century,in our PC's,little bit later than Creator.(8-10Hz cycle clock we have?!?)Read it: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/04/120405224456.htm
Fetal Exposure To Antipsychotics Results In Lower Neuromotor Test Scores
"...A study published Online First by Archives of General Psychiatry, a JAMA
Network publication, reveals that infants born to mothers who take
intrauterine antipsychotic medications during pregnancy, have
considerably lower scores on a standard test of neuromotor performance.... ..."...
"The results from the current study show that 6-month-old infants
exposed prenatally to an antipsychotic demonstrated significantly lower
scores on standardized neuromotor screening measure compared with both
antidepressant-exposed infants and infants with no psychotropic
exposure.
Only 19 percent of infants prenatally exposed to an antipsychotic demonstrated normal neuromotor performance."
This time, members of the expedition took Cameron's lime-green Deepsea Challenger to a depth of 3,600 feet (1,100 meters) off the coast of the tiny island of Ulithi, part of Micronesia.
The spot isn't far from place where Cameron made his historic dive on March 26, although it is only about a tenth as deep.
Written By Peter Gwynne-Published April 08, 2012-Inside Science News Service
A technique that monitors whales through the sounds they emit has answered a key issue raised by the explosion of the Deepwater Horizon oil rig in the Gulf of Mexico two years ago this month.
The sound-monitoring technique revealed that sperm whales retreated from the immediate area around the spill caused by the explosion.
"There's obvious evidence of relocation," said team member Azmy Ackleh, professor and head of mathematics at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette.
The discovery is important because it provides information about a species almost hunted to extinction for its valuable oil in the 19th century.
Sperm whales are listed as endangered under the terms of the United States Endangered Species Act, and estimates of their population vary between 200,000 and 1.5 million worldwide.
Amazing photo captures robot cargo ship's Space Station arrival
Published April 09, 2012-Space.com
Astronauts aboard the International Space Station captured an extraordinary photo of an unmanned European cargo ship as it docked to the orbiting outpost last week.
The European Space Agency's third Automated Transfer Vehicle (ATV-3) launched into orbit on March 23, and arrived at the space station five days later, on March 28. The robotic cargo ship delivered about 7 tons of supplies, including water, oxygen, food, clothing, experiments and propellant.
The robotic ATV vehicles are designed to automatically dock to the space station. In this photo, the ATV-3 is approaching its parking spot at the Zvezda service module on the Russian segment of the orbiting complex.
The photo shows the ATV-3's distinctive x-wing solar arrays bathed in light from the spacecraft's sophisticated laser guidance system. The starry night sky and the glow of lights from Earth below make up the remarkable backdrop, as the two vehicles fly 240 miles (386 kilometers) above the planet.
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