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Updated Thu, February 2, 2012.
1051.www.iha.dk11600
1052.www.hum.ku.dk11500
1053.www.rasc.ca11400
1054.www.chemikalien.de11300
1055.www.psycho.ru11300
1056.www.lawrencehallofscience.org11300
1057.www.humnet.unipi.it11200
1058.www.n-t.org11200
1059.www.neumann-haz.hu11200
1060.www.droitdunet.fr11000
1061.www.lamarabunta.org11000
1062.www.sao.ru11000
1063.www.otrantonelmondo.com10900
1064.www.mgm.fr10900
1065.www.matematikk.org10900
1066.www.vein.hu10900
1067.www.dote.hu10800
1068.www.emode.com10600
1069.freegis.org10500
1070.www.lescienze.it10500
1071.www.bigai.ne.jp10300
1072.www.top100science.com10300
1073.www.construaprende.com10200
1074.kisd.de10100
1075.www.yrub.com10100
1076.www.nhm.org9960
1077.www.phys.ethz.ch9880
1078.www.mhr-viandes.com9780
1079.www.mygeo.info9750
1080.www.umwelt-schweiz.ch9750
1081.claweb.cla.unipd.it9700
1082.lnwme.blogspot.com9700
1083.www.iew.unizh.ch9630
1084.www.fas.forskning.se9580
1085.www.dist.unige.it9560
1086.www.diegm.uniud.it9560
1087.www.vsop.isas.ac.jp9540
1088.www.assessment.com9270
1089.www.fundacionsustentable.org9210
1090.www.djh.dk9200
1091.www.ish-lyon.cnrs.fr8940
1092.www.economia.unige.it8930
1093.www.deff.dk8920
1094.www.prim.net8880
1095.www.aps.nl8880
1096.www.wu-wien.ac.at8850
1097.www.zpok.hu8740
1098.www.tycho.dk8740
1099.www.napoleon.org8720
1100.www.kiae.ru8650
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1062. www.sao.ru

Rating: 11000 points*
*amount mentions of word 'www.sao.ru' on the other websites

www.sao.ru

SAO RAS home page

Description: Ñïåöèàëüíàÿ àñòðîôèçè÷åñêàÿ îáñåðâàòîðèÿ (ÑÀÎ) - íàó÷íî-èññëåäîâàòåëüñêèé èíñòèòóò Ðîññèéñêîé àêàäåìèè íàóê.

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A Nuclear Giant Moves Into Wind
Exelon, which recently backed away from building new nuclear plants, announced that it was buying John Deere Renewables.
feeds.nytimes.com
Family finds missing seismic buoy on beach
A family in north Queensland has discovered a seismic buoy that went missing from a deep ocean trench near New Zealand more than two years ago.
abc.net.au
Extinct Penguin Wore Earth Tones, Fossil Shows
Researchers say imprints left by the large bird, which lived in Peru more than 36 million years ago, contain evidence that its feathers were mostly reddish brown and shades of gray.
feeds.nytimes.com
Sleeping beast awakes on Science is Vital rally
Jenny Rohn, whose call to arms culminated in the Science is Vital rally outside the Treasury on Saturday, describes how she watched in awe as scientists took to the streetsLast Saturday, several thousand scientists and their supporters massed in front of the Treasury building in Westminster to speak out against proposed funding cuts for scientific research. Standing on the stage for my opening speech, I surveyed the sea of protestors in a state of awe.It was past the starting time of 2pm, but people were still streaming into King Charles Street from both ends of the road. I could see people of all descriptions: famous scientists, young students, families with small children. Many people sported white coats and held up placards or colourful accessories: a foam model of Jupiter; a buckyball on a stick; the international symbol for toxic irritants with a photo of Vince Cable superimposed within the yellow triangle. The mood was well-behaved and upbeat, but the opening cheer echoed with a mighty roar, driving home just how formidable people can be when many act as one.It had been only a month since I wrote a blog post proposing that scientists take to the streets – four short weeks from a crazy idea to its culmination. Along the way I received a whirlwind education in politics and grassroots organisation. My colleagues and I might be good at splicing genes or peering into the depths of the universe, but how many scientists does it take to assemble 300 placards in four hours while being faintly high on spray glue? (Answer: about a dozen.) These lessons and others occurred in a haze of distracted days and late nights, and go some way toward explaining the complaint that more scientists don't engage in policy activism: if they did, at least on this scale, research would grind to a halt.The big day finally arrived. Over the next two hours, speakers entertained the crowd in a line-up aimed at stimulating both hearts and minds. Colin Blakemore, Oxford neurobiologist and former head of the Medical Research Council, and Imran Khan, director of the Campaign for Science and Engineering, made the detailed case for the importance of research investment to maintain economic growth. Bad Science columnist and medic Ben Goldacre spoke about the perils of a cuts-fuelled brain drain, and Simon Denegri, chief exec of the Association of Medical Research Charities, explained how public funding is crucial for supporting its mission. Sex educator Petra Boynton described why cutting basic research would imperil collaborations with social scientists working in the developing world. Paul Noon, general secretary of Prospect, spoke on behalf research trade unions, while Michael Brooks explained why he set up a political party devoted to science.On a more personal note, cancer survivor Claire Daniels and former Alzheimer carer Vivienne Hill gave moving personal takes on the importance of research.But it wasn't all sober and serious. Materials scientist and broadcaster Mark Miodownik of King's College London spoke about the more inspirational aspects of science as a cultural endeavour, and stand-up science comics Timandra Harkness and Dean Burnett easily scored laughs. But Evan Harris, former MP and tireless champion for evidence-based policy, arguably stole the show with his singing and chanting stints – which are rapidly becoming YouTube classics. Crowd-sourced videos and images of all the speakers and antics have been flooding in.Now that we on the Science is Vital team have just about managed to catch up on our sleep, it's a good time for reflection. We achieved excellent media coverage, and our central message – that cutting science funding will harm, not help, the economy – seems to have been driven home. We know that our work is not yet finished: we have a parliamentary lobbytoday, and still need to urge people to sign our petition (the deadline passes at 13.30 BST on Wednesday) and write to their MPs.20 October will be the moment of truth, however. When the comprehensive spending review is announced, we will finally find out whether our efforts made a difference. But there is one thing, at least, about which we can already be certain: scientists in the UK will no longer take things lying down. The slumbering beast truly has awakened.This article was amended on Tuesday 12 October 2010. The original stated that the Science is Vital petition "closes at 13:30 BST today". This has been corrected.Science funding crisisScience policySpending review 2010Tax and spendingLiberal-Conservative coalitionConservativesResearch fundingJenny Rohnguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk
Glaxo to Pay $750 Million for Sale of Bad Products
Regulators say that GlaxoSmithKline, the British drug giant, knowingly sold tainted baby ointment and an ineffective antidepressant.
feeds.nytimes.com