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Updated Thu, February 2, 2012.
851.www.semarnat.gob.mx25000
852.www.econ.kuleuven.ac.be25000
853.www.mta.hu24900
854.www.ecoenergiasolar.com24700
855.www.onf.fr24500
856.www.hum.uva.nl24400
857.www.rummet.dk24400
858.www.jugendschutz.net24300
859.www.mathe-online.at24200
860.www.statbel.fgov.be24100
861.www.sophia-antipolis.net23900
862.www.mtas.ru23900
863.www.itk.ntnu.no23800
864.planetsave.com23800
865.www.xipolis.net23600
866.www.indec.mecon.ar23600
867.www.illustrertvitenskap.com23600
868.www.jncc.gov.uk23600
869.www.quackwatch.org23500
870.www.travail.gouv.fr23500
871.www.seds.org23400
872.www.in.tum.de23400
873.www.ecn.nl23200
874.www.tekno.dk23100
875.www.uni-miskolc.hu23000
876.www.keo.org22900
877.www.mhk.hu22900
878.www.rom.on.ca22800
879.www.royalsoc.ac.uk22800
880.www.diplomarbeiten24.de22700
881.hei.unige.ch22600
882.einstein.uab.es22600
883.www.palais-decouverte.fr22600
884.sociologiskforum.dk22400
885.www.complex.hu22200
886.www.kszgysz.hu22200
887.www.istc.cnr.it21900
888.www.molbiol.ru21800
889.www.sam.sdu.dk21800
890.wdcm.nig.ac.jp21700
891.www.cea.fr21600
892.www.cineca.it21500
893.quake.usgs.gov21400
894.www.slv.se21400
895.www.colorwize.com21300
896.www.ine.cl21300
897.dcbiz.dc.gov21200
898.www.gsf.de21200
899.www.chemlin.de21200
900.www.nias.affrc.go.jp21200
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876. www.keo.org

Rating: 22900 points*
*amount mentions of word 'www.keo.org' on the other websites

www.keo.org

Welcome to KEO

Description: To be launched in 2006, Keo will fly through time and space for 50,000 years before returning to Earth to deliver everyone's message to future generations

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© 2005-2011 www.Top100Science.com
Farming family gets gong for green innovation
A family of third generation cane growers in north Queensland has received a national sustainability award for their innovation in the industry.
abc.net.au
Six to watch: science shows
Some TV science series set off a chemical reaction to capture the public's imagination, so which are your favourites?The study of physics and science might be sadly declining, but television has a noble history of creating science shows that have a spirit of adventure and sense of wonder – and importantly don't make viewers cringe. So which science shows have proved to be the best televisual experiments? Here are six of our favourites – for grown-ups and kids. Let us know whether they'd have been your choices and which shows you'd add to the list.The Men in White: 2006Channel 4's much mourned and often very funny kids show where three funky scientists (Adam Rutherford, Basil Singer, and Jem Stansfield, the latter popping up later on bang Goes The Theory – see below) tried to solve average, everyday problems, consequently creating a fart detector and "pimping" a false leg.Horizon: 1964 –Popular wisdom insists that Horizon has gone downhill, but it was still water-cooler TV before offices had water coolers. Complex ideas were explained to audiences willing to understand, and scrolling down the list of titles reveals an innovative social conscience – such as the 1989 episode Black Schizophrenia. The moving 1991 episode Inside The Chernobyl Sarcophagus meanwhile, was terrifying, informative and beautiful. Richard Hammond's Blast Lab: 2009 –Yes I know – it stars Richard Hammond, but what could be better than persuading his "Ninja Nan" to help blow stuff up (or in this case to lie down peacefully as she gets splattered with eggs)? Add in the competitive element and miniaturised former science teacher Mini Miss, and you have informative chaos – although frankly, shouldn't these kids be in detention?Tomorrow's World: 1965 – 2003It could be a bit worthy, but featured Kraftwerk more than once, including an enthusiastic Maggie Philbin next to their dancing robots. Never embarrassingly hip and always informative, the guilty pleasure was waiting for the Heath Robinson-esque demonstrations to fail, epically. Presenter and cult-hero Raymond Baxter was a former second world war fighter pilot. (Brilliantly, there's a huge collection of Tomorrow's World programmes that you can watch via the BBC Archive.)Wonders of the Solar System: 2010Brian Cox is the new hero of getting "the kids" involved in science, and has had some endearingly human moments where even a boffin such as he struggles to explain quantum physics, making it all the more engaging. Cox is watchable, passionate, and you can imagine that younger viewers want to hang around with similar people. But in a good way.Bang Goes The Theory: 2009 -BGTT has shown magnetic cows, non-lethal weapons, and this latest series has already investigated Deepwater Horizon (described accurately as an engineering disaster) and the way "gloopy" crude oil especially has an impact on wildlife. A highpoint is 2009's sobering "Human Power Station", where a team of cyclists pedal-powered the energy consumption of an average home.TelevisionPenny Andersonguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk
Bull ants have right eye for the job
Worker bull ants have military-style night vision, while their higher status winged nest mates see best during the day, Australian researchers have discovered.
abc.net.au
Malaysia to use lab mosquitoes to fight dengue
By 2010-10-11T10:00:39ZPUTRAJAYA, Malaysia (AP) -- Malaysia could be the first country in Asia to use genetically modified mosquitoes to battle a rise in dengue fever, government authorities said Monday....
hosted.ap.org
Cloned meat safe to eat: scientists
An independent panel of British scientists has suggested that meat and milk from cloned cattle is safe to eat.
abc.net.au