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Updated Thu, February 2, 2012.
801.sciences.nouvelobs.com28100
802.www.uncitral.org28100
803.www.memo.fr27900
804.www.ing.unitn.it27800
805.www.historia.nu27800
806.www.historia.se27700
807.www.zug.hu27700
808.www.comunicazione.uniroma1.it27600
809.neanderthalis.blogspot.com27600
810.www.kva.se27400
811.www.arianespace.com27300
812.www.populationdata.net27200
813.www.onera.fr27100
814.www.geo.uu.nl27100
815.www.ego4u.de27000
816.www.shema.ru27000
817.www.snv.jussieu.fr26900
818.www.dkpto.dk26900
819.www.inteligenciaartificial.cl26900
820.nauka.relis.ru26800
821.www.physik.uni-frankfurt.de26800
822.www.tierramerica.net26800
823.www.vigneron-independant.com26700
824.www.naturalsciences.be26700
825.www.na.astro.it26600
826.www.traducegratis.com26600
827.www.infoecologia.com26600
828.www.ihep.su26600
829.www.astronomie.de26500
830.www.infoscience.fr26500
831.www.dofbasen.dk26500
832.dc2.uni-bielefeld.de26300
833.www.experimentarium.dk26200
834.www.obspm.fr26100
835.www.ics-inc.co.jp26100
836.www.ideam.gov.co26000
837.www.analytik-news.de25900
838.www.imcce.fr25900
839.www.mke.hu25900
840.www.fzi.de25800
841.www.duei.de25800
842.www.allmetsat.com25700
843.www.whyville.net25600
844.www.nrpa.no25600
845.www.ksc.nasa.gov25200
846.www.mw.tum.de25200
847.www.coml.org25200
848.www.juve.de25100
849.www.chemistry.or.jp25100
850.www.ivir.nl25100
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811. www.arianespace.com

Rating: 27300 points*
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Scientists: We've cracked wheat's genetic code
By RAPHAEL G. SATTER 2010-08-27T16:13:36ZLONDON (AP) -- British scientists have decoded the genetic sequence of wheat - one of the world's oldest and most important crops - a development they hope could help the global staple meet the challenges of climate change, disease and population growth....
hosted.ap.org
Next-generation telescope may spot alien oceans
The next generation of telescopes could reveal the presence of oceans on planets beyond our Solar System.
bbc.co.uk
'Internal incubation' helps crack cuckoo egg puzzle
A cuckoo has a remarkable ability to hold its egg inside it for an extra 24 hours before releasing it into a host bird's nest, researchers have found.
bbc.co.uk
Claim: White flower has world's longest genome
By RAPHAEL G. SATTER 2010-10-07T21:43:31ZLONDON (AP) -- An ordinary-looking white flower from Japan may carry something quite extraordinary within its pale petals - the longest genome ever discovered....
hosted.ap.org
The collagen drinks that promise to fight the ageing process
Chinese women are drinking collagen to gain 'skin as soft as a baby's'Age may be respected in China, but wrinkles are definitely not – fighting the process is a boom industry. According to Euromonitor, the Chinese skincare sector was worth £3.3bn in 2007, while cosmetic surgery raked in an estimated £1.5bn last year and is thought to be growing at around 20% a year.Now women have added a new weapon to their armoury of facelifts and Botox injections: collagen. Most Brits associate it with lip injections and the resultant trout pouts, but Chinese women are drinking it instead. Wander around department stores in Shanghai and Beijing and advertising slogans bombard you with promises such as: "Take a collagen drink for 30 days and have skin as soft as a baby's."Cosmetics firm DHC China uses fish collagen in its drinks, but promises that they do not smell fishy. Sure enough, the pale yellow juice-like drink tastes a little sweet, a little sour, but certainly not of seafood."Sip it every night before sleep and you will see a clear improvement in skin texture after just 10 days," says a spokeswoman for DHC China. "And if you want to maintain good skin condition, you should not stop drinking it." Clearly women are taking that advice – sales of collagen-enriched drinks, powders and tablets are growing rapidly – and it's not a cheap investment. A bottle of DHC China's cherry-flavoured liquid – its bestseller – costs 29.8 yuan (£2.80), which means a month's course comes to around 900 yuan – more than half the average urban disposable income.Cao Lingzhi, a 22-year-old enthusiast, says her skin is "super smooth" after a six-month course, while 30-year-old Tian Jing thinks her pores are less visible after two years. "My skin is better than before. But I am not sure whether it is because of collagen or because now I sleep more than I used to," she admits.Bian Huawei, vice-director of nutrition studies at the Sun Yat-Sen university hospital in Guangzhou, doesn't believe that the drinks are working any wonders. The amount of collagen that is absorbed through the digestive system is "extremely little. Eating more vegetables and fruits may be more helpful because they have  antioxidants," advises Huawei.However, if you still want to give collagen a try, you don't have to fly all the way to China: Gilgamesh, the pan-Asian restaurant in Camden, London is promising to serve collagen-infused dishes this autumn.Hope springs eternal, it seems – even if youth does not.BeautyChinaAgeingguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk