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Updated Thu, February 2, 2012.
601.www.forumsocialmundial.org.br52900
602.www.er.doe.gov52800
603.www.aiab.it52500
604.www.uea.org52200
605.www.hmi.de52000
606.www.shom.fr52000
607.www.talkorigins.org51900
608.www.badastronomy.com51800
609.www.niaes.affrc.go.jp51800
610.www.dinosoria.com51700
611.www.dmu.dk51600
612.www.heiligenlexikon.de51400
613.www.informatik.uni-kl.de51400
614.www.lexum.umontreal.ca51400
615.www.roscosmos.ru51300
616.www.govexec.com51200
617.www.tlfq.ulaval.ca51100
618.www.archeologia.ru51100
619.www.delorme.com50900
620.www.systransoft.com50500
621.www.aaas.org50400
622.diwww.epfl.ch50300
623.www.physik.tu-muenchen.de50200
624.www.studyspanish.com50100
625.bioethics.net49800
626.www.agroinformacion.com49800
627.www.madsci.org49200
628.www.rinconesdelatlantico.com49100
629.www.netl.doe.gov49000
630.www.ecoportal.net48900
631.www.biodiversidadla.org48800
632.www.aplusmath.com48600
633.www.amf-france.org48600
634.www.cnil.fr48300
635.www.cnes.fr48300
636.www.binoculars.com48100
637.www.astrored.org47000
638.www.rws-verlag.de46800
639.www.keldysh.ru46700
640.www.acs.org46500
641.www.math.chalmers.se46300
642.www.bur.it46200
643.www.esf.org46100
644.www.sote.hu46000
645.www.astropa.unipa.it45400
646.www.ittiofauna.org45300
647.www.greenfo.hu45300
648.www.wzw.tum.de44900
649.www.herodote.net44900
650.www.ccas.ru44900
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647. www.greenfo.hu

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Lantern find sheds light on Roman in the gloamin'
An intact Roman lantern made of bronze, believed by experts to be the only one of its kind in Britain, has been unearthed in a field by a metal-detecting enthusiast.
abc.net.au
Yoga bear in Finland
Meta Penca, a visitor to Ahtari zoo, took these shots of a female brown bear doing her morning stretches
guardian.co.uk
Soyuz capsule lands in Kazakh steppe with 3 aboard
By PETER LEONARD 2010-09-25T19:26:25ZALMATY, Kazakhstan (AP) -- A Russian Soyuz capsule carrying three astronauts who lived six months on the International Space Station touched down safely, but one day late, Saturday morning in the cloudy, central steppes of Kazakhstan....
hosted.ap.org
Abu Dhabi shifts plans for $22B clean-energy city
By ADAM SCHRECK 2010-10-10T16:29:46ZDUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) -- A $22 billion clean-energy city being built in the desert outside Abu Dhabi will no longer aim to produce all its own power, the developer revealed Sunday following a wide-ranging review that retools some of the project's ambitions....
hosted.ap.org
Life through a high powered lens: the Nikon Small World awards
Every year, scientists enter their pictures in Nikon's Small World competition for photography on a microscopic scale. The results are never less than stunning, writes Robin McKieSmall but perfectly formed, some of the titchiest wonders of the natural world have been revealed in their full glory by groups of chemists, biologists, materials researchers and botanists working in laboratories round the world. These are the winners, and short-listed finalists, of one of science's longest-running imaging competitions: the Nikon Small World awards. This year, scientists from 63 countries sent in entries for the competition which this year is celebrating its 35th anniversary. These microscopic submissions are not merely judged for their informational content and their technical proficiency but for their visual impact. A selection of some of the most striking are displayed here.These works, selected by competition judges, include close-up photographs of iridescent crystals of the mineral cacoxenite; a starfish embryo; an extinct marine diatom; a butterfly egg nestling among the buds of a flower; trout alevin; and a caddis fly larva head. This year's first prize went to the image, shown at the centre of this article, of a close-up view of the heart of a mosquito. Taken by Jonas King, of the biological sciences department of Vanderbilt University, in Nashville, Tennessee, the image involved the use of a technique known as fluorescence microscopy which exploits the fact that certain substances can be made to emit one kind of light while being bathed in a different form of radiation. Typically the emitted radiation is of longer wavelength than that of the light shone on the specimen. For example, many minerals, crystals, resins and organic compounds emit light when bathed in ultraviolet radiation. By carefully tailoring the radiation shone on their sample, the Vanderbilt team were able to create a photograph that shows the delicate traceries of tissue inside a mosquito's heart.http://www.nikonsmallworld.com/gallery/year/2010/83PhotographyRobin McKieguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk