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Updated Thu, February 2, 2012.
501.www.mises.org73400
502.www.hispaseti.org73200
503.www.pd.astro.it73100
504.www.ocde.org73000
505.www.math.uni-frankfurt.de72000
506.www.glocom.ac.jp71900
507.sciencenow.sciencemag.org71500
508.www.fraunhofer.de71400
509.www.bibl.u-szeged.hu70800
510.www.cartesia.org69900
511.www.ioc.u-tokyo.ac.jp69800
512.www.scienceblogs.com69700
513.www.civilisations.ca69600
514.www.kjemi.uio.no69300
515.www.unfccc.int68500
516.www.e-recht24.de68400
517.www.jgytf.u-szeged.hu68300
518.www.rivm.nl68300
519.www.irit.fr68200
520.www.membrana.ru68100
521.www.ined.fr67800
522.www.biographie.net67600
523.www.dtu.dk67000
524.www.astrobio.net66700
525.www.molecularlab.it66600
526.www.cepis.ops-oms.org66500
527.sandwalk.blogspot.com66500
528.www.nat.vu.nl66400
529.www6.uniovi.es66300
530.www.gi.alaska.edu66300
531.www.inegi.gob.mx66200
532.www.head-fi.org66100
533.www.lelectronique.com66000
534.www.cosmosmagazine.com66000
535.www.springeronline.com65500
536.www.sciencenews.org65300
537.eucd.info65200
538.www.lanl.gov65000
539.thales.cica.es64900
540.www.mai.liu.se64800
541.www.lenntech.com64400
542.www.humboldt.org.co63900
543.www.energy.gov63700
544.publish.aps.org63200
545.www.risoe.dk62300
546.www.mobot.org61500
547.www.newscientistspace.com61400
548.marsrover.nasa.gov61400
549.www.skepdic.com61200
550.www.ogyk.hu61100
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503. www.pd.astro.it

Rating: 73100 points*
*amount mentions of word 'www.pd.astro.it' on the other websites

www.pd.astro.it

INAF-OAPD Home Page

Description: The main goal of the Astronomical Observatory of Padua is scientific research in Astronomy and Astrophysics

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Man fined after hitting whale with boat
A fisherman has been fined for taking his boat too close to whales off the south coast of South Australia.
abc.net.au
Kenyan government warns public of Miracle Mineral Solutions danger | Martin Robbins
As a result of skeptic bloggers, Kenyans are now being warned about the man treating sick people with "industrial bleach"A few days ago I wrote about Jim Humble and his product Miracle Mineral Solutions, described by the FDA as "industrial bleach" ("The man who encourages the sick and dying to drink industrial bleach"). MMS was brought to wider attention by the work of 15-year-old Rhys Morgan, and its use in the developing world to treat patients with cancer, Aids and malaria was investigated by the blogger 'Noodlemaz'. Since then I'm thrilled to report that journalists in Kenya have picked up the story, exposing Humble and his dangerous "drug" in The Daily Nation, a top newspaper in the region ("Malaria 'drug' endangers Kenyan lives"):"The lives of thousands of Kenyans could be in danger from an untested and unregistered malaria drug recently exposed as industrial bleach."Reports on Wednesday in the UK's Guardian newspaper said Kenyans were among about 100,000 malaria patients treated with the Miracle Mineral Supplement in several African countries, including Uganda, Sierra Leone, Tanzania and Malawi."Journalists at the Nation brought the matter to the attention of the Health Ministry, who have now warned Kenyans against using the product:"On Thursday, the head of the malaria control division in the Health ministry, Dr Elizabeth Juma, said sodium chlorite was bleach and should not be used as medicine."Sadly, it turns out that the product is still being sold in the country, with the St James Ematsayi Clinic in Kakamega a major distribution hub:"Bishop Javan Ommani, in charge of the Christian mission, confirmed having the product. 'We still have a lot of stocks and can send you as much as you want,' he said."So there is much work to be done, and I plan to chase up the Health Ministry and local authorities where possible in the near future. Still, Rhys, Noodlemaz and skeptic bloggers who helped to dig out the truth about Jim Humble and his "miracle cure" should be immensely proud. Thanks to one inquisitive schoolboy in Wales, health authorities in Africa have been alerted to a real menace in their country. It's a powerful demonstration of what citizen journalism can achieve.Update:The Nation has followed up its mid-week reporting with an editorial in the Sunday paper. It throws more attention on the activities of the Kakamega-based church at the heart of distribution in Kenya, who claim to have treated more than 10,000 Kenyans since 2004. The paper suggests that the product hasn't been registered with officials in Nairobi (a process which requires data from clinical trials), making the treatment technically illegal. It goes on to criticise medical regulatory authorities in the country for perceived impotence in the face of dodgy medicines:"... most puzzling is why the government is so impotent when it comes to taking action against people who break the law. The only thing the medical regulatory authorities have done is to issue regular threats of legal action, which almost always go unheeded. With this kind of inept policing, it is little wonder that the country is a haven for fake, substandard, counterfeit and even demonstrably dangerous medicines."It's a subject I'll be returning to soon.Martin Robbinsguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk
Census shows connectedness of world's marine life
By SETH BORENSTEIN 2010-10-04T12:31:13ZWASHINGTON (AP) -- The world's oceans may be vast and deep, but a decade-long count of marine animals finds sea life so interconnected that it seems to shrink the watery world....
hosted.ap.org
From Junk to Collectible, Shaped by Time and Tide
The North American Sea Glass Association celebrates a mix of amateur archaeology, environmental monitoring and antique collecting, with a little chemistry thrown in.
feeds.nytimes.com
Global Update: Sierra Leone: Outbreak of Mysterious Blisters Is Case Study in Spread of Panic
An outbreak of mysterious blisters illustrates how panic can be stirred by a combination of overwrought journalism, listless government and traditional witchcraft.
feeds.nytimes.com