The Grand Unified Theory of Rogue Waves | Quanta Magazine - 0 views
New insights into the global silicon cycle - 0 views
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Silicon is the second-most abundant element in Earth's crust and it plays a vital role in plant life, both on land and in the sea. Silicon is used by plants in tissue building, which helps to ward off herbivorous animals. In the ocean, phytoplankton consume enormous amounts of silicon; they get a constant supply courtesy of rivers and streams. And silicon winds up in rivers and streams due to erosion of silicon-containing rocks. Land plants also use silicon. They get it from the soil. In this new effort, the researchers began by noting that the terrestrial biogeochemical cycling of silicon (how it moves from plants back to the soil and then into plants again) is poorly understood. To gain a better understanding of how it works, they ventured to a part of Western Australia that, unlike other parts of the world, has not been impacted by Pleistocene glaciations. The soil there gave the researchers a look at the silicon cycle going back 2 million years.
Relief for people who struggle with CPAP masks - 1 views
I Did a Data Check on the World Model that Forecast Global Collapse. Here's What I Found. - 0 views
The Age of Needless Catastrophe - 0 views
On Serbia, Kosovo, and Kicking the Can Down the Road - Ordinary Times - 0 views
Dark Matter Experiment Finds Unexplained Signal | Quanta Magazine - 0 views
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The physicists who run the world's most sensitive experimental search for dark matter have seen something strange. They have uncovered an unexpected excess of events inside their detector that could fit the profile of a hypothetical dark matter particle called an axion. Alternately, the data could be explained by novel properties of neutrinos. More mundanely, the signal could come from contamination inside the experiment.
How Pseudoscientists Get Away With It - 0 views
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relentless and often unpredictable coronavirus has, among its many quirky terrors, dredged up once again the issue that will not die, science versus pseudoscience. The scientists, experts who would be the first to admit they are not infallible, are now in danger of being drowned out by the growing chorus of pseudoscientists, conspiracy theorists, and just plain troublemakers who seem to be as symptomatic of the virus as fever and weakness.
Rebalancing act - Can Japan Inc navigate the rift between China and America? | Business... - 0 views
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