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Animal Pictures - National Geographic - 0 views

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    National Geographic Animal Photos- huge selection of high quality images; use for phenotypes
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Theories About Life's Beginnings - National Geographic Channel - 0 views

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    Origin of life - volcanic pools - ocean floor - outer space
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The Toxic Toll of Indonesia's Gold Mines - 0 views

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    Millions of people in 70 countries across Asia, Africa, and South America have been exposed to high levels of mercury as small-scale mining has proliferated over the past decade. The United Nations Environment Programme estimates that at least 10 million miners, including at least four million women and children, are working in small "artisanal" gold mines, which produce as much as 15 percent of the world's gold.
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Long-Dreaded Superbug Found in Human and Animal in U.S. - Phenomena: Germination - 0 views

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    Department of Defense researchers disclosed Thursday in a report placed online by the journal Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy that a 49-year-old woman who sought medical care at a military-associated clinic in Pennsylvania last month, with what seemed to be a urinary tract infection, was carrying a strain of E. coli resistant to a wide range of drugs. That turned out to be because the organism carried 15 different genes conferring antibiotic resistance, clustered on two "mobile elements" that can move easily among bacteria. One element included the new, dreaded gene mcr-1.
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Genetics Overview - Science Behind the Genographic Project - National Geographic - 0 views

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    Text and interactives on human evolution and genetic structure
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Big Cats Education - National Geographic Education - 0 views

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    National geographic site with high school lessons on: - captive breeding, species survival, and case studies. -Video clips are also available
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A Way Forward: Facing Climate Change - 0 views

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    7 min documentary on climate change
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Special Series: 7 Billion - National Geographic Magazine - 0 views

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    A special year-long series on population from National Geographic magazine
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New Species of Orangutan Is Rarest Great Ape on Earth - 0 views

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    Scientists have discovered that the newly found Tapanuli orangutan of Sumatra is more closely related to its cousins in Borneo than it is to its fellow Sumatran apes. The Tapanuli population numbers only around 800 individuals.
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Now We Know Why Poison Frogs Don't Poison Themselves - 0 views

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    Their nervous systems have changed over time to fight off the powerful chemicals-an extraordinary example of evolution in action, according to a new study. "I've been wanting to understand how organisms could acquire neurotoxins, [which] requires an animal to reorganize their nervous system," says study coauthor Rebecca Tarvin, a biologist at the University of Texas at Austin and National Geographic Society grantee.
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He may have found the key to the origins of life. So why have so few heard of him? - 0 views

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    But if Gánti's theories had been more widely known during the communist era, he might now be acclaimed as one of the most innovative biologists of the 20th century. That's because he devised a model of the simplest possible living organism, which he called the chemoton, that points to an exciting explanation for how life on Earth began.
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There's No Scientific Basis for Race-It's a Made-Up Label - 1 views

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    Over the past few decades, genetic research has revealed two deep truths about people. The first is that all humans are closely related-more closely related than all chimps, even though there are many more humans around today. Everyone has the same collection of genes, but with the exception of identical twins, everyone has slightly different versions of some of them. Studies of this genetic diversity have allowed scientists to reconstruct a kind of family tree of human populations. That has revealed the second deep truth: In a very real sense, all people alive today are Africans.
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Video -- How Flu Viruses Attack -- National Geographic - 0 views

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    3:48 video flu virus video Discusses history of flu virus.
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Transforming Ocean Trash Into Beautiful Art - YouTube - 0 views

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    In the past, sailors on whaling ships would carve whale teeth into works of art in a process called scrimshaw. These pieces would be brought home to loved ones as mementos of the voyage. Design incubator Studio Swine is attempting to recycle found materials and turn this aged art form into a more sustainable practice. In this short film, travel to remote parts of the ocean, where "the closest people are in a space station," and watch as the process of collecting ocean trash and transforming it into beautiful treasure unfolds.
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'Brainbow' paints individual neurons with different colours - Phenomena - 0 views

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    neurons painted with different colors
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Lab Spins Artificial Spider Silk, Paving the Way to New Materials - 0 views

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    transgenic expression of spider silk in milk
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Feeding 9 Billion | National Geographic - 0 views

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    article 
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Human Body, Human Body Information, Facts, News, Photos -- National Geographic - 0 views

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    Interactive website to explore the brain, heart, digestive system, lungs, and skin
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