www.Top100Science.com - TOP 100 SCIENCE SITES
TOP 100 SCIENCE SITES
 Main  |  Add a Site  |  FREE Content for Your Web-site  |  Bookmark this site  |  Webmaster 
Updated Thu, February 2, 2012.
1151.www.videnskabsministeriet.dk6390
1152.www.cfje.dk6340
1153.www.forschungsportal.net6310
1154.www.ing.unirc.it6300
1155.www.tsc.ru6290
1156.www.dreams.ca6210
1157.www.romfart.no6130
1158.www.deit.univpm.it6110
1159.www.realmeaningofdreams.com6110
1160.www.scphys.kyoto-u.ac.jp6060
1161.www.ifi.uni-klu.ac.at5990
1162.www.skalman.nu5990
1163.www.censolar.es5940
1164.www.u-bordeaux4.fr5920
1165.www.kemi.dtu.dk5760
1166.kotenik.wordpress.com5730
1167.www.kvl.dk5610
1168.espanol.agriscape.com5600
1169.www.repoweringsolutions.com5440
1170.www.poli.hu5430
1171.www.elementy.ru5420
1172.www.science.no5410
1173.www.mprize.org5390
1174.www.gandalf.it5350
1175.www.disca.upv.es5350
1176.www.iss.u-tokyo.ac.jp5330
1177.www.fusoorario.it5310
1178.www.banki.hu5300
1179.www.dhs.ch5270
1180.www.isc.cnrs.fr5220
1181.www.disco.unimib.it5050
1182.www.e-technik.uni-dortmund.de4990
1183.science-student.com4910
1184.www.gfi.uib.no4680
1185.www.imv.au.dk4650
1186.www.ien.it4630
1187.www.pnpi.spb.ru4610
1188.www.mtesz.hu4590
1189.www.byggforsk.no4560
1190.www.informatik.fh-kl.de4520
1191.www.buildup.it4520
1192.www.aitel.hist.no4490
1193.www.uda30.com4450
1194.www.progettomeg.it4360
1195.freescience.info4340
1196.www.ciencia.net4270
1197.www.imag.fr4240
1198.www.skepp.be4240
1199.www.vieartificielle.com4230
1200.www.ambiente.it4200
Pages:  1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9  10  11  12 
 13  14  15  16  17  18  19  20  21  22  23 
 24  25  26  27 



Subscribe to RSS feed Subscribe to Feed Burner feed Add to Del.icio.us Add to Yahoo Add to Google Add to Reddit Add to Blink Add to Meneame Add to Fark Add to Newsvine

1162. www.skalman.nu

Rating: 5990 points*
*amount mentions of word 'www.skalman.nu' on the other websites

www.skalman.nu

Skalman.nu

Description: Skalman.nu

Google

© 2005-2011 www.Top100Science.com
Experts: Exoplanet could be smallest ever found
By RAPHAEL G. SATTER and FRANK JORDANS 2010-08-25T00:47:49ZGENEVA (AP) -- Scientists say they've identified a sun-like star with as many as seven different planets - including one that might be the smallest ever found outside the solar system....
hosted.ap.org
G Force
High performance plane used to simulate effects of land speed record attempt
bbc.co.uk
Letters: Fructose Farmers (1 Letter)
A letter to the editor.
feeds.nytimes.com
Novelties: Wider Streets for Internet Traffic
With Internet usage quickly growing, scientists are tapping certain characteristics of light to satisfy our deep bandwidth hunger.
feeds.nytimes.com
Notorious malaria mosquito strains evolving
New research finds two malaria mosquito strains could become immune to effects to control themTwo strains of Africa's most notorious malaria mosquito are evolving into new species, research has shown.The discovery has implications for combating malaria, since it means the insects could become immune to control strategies.Scientists studying the mosquito anopheles gambiae, which is chiefly responsible for spreading malaria in sub-Saharan Africa, found two strains were rapidly diverging in their genetic make-up, despite appearing physically identical.Dr Maria Lawniczak, a member of the team from Imperial College London, said: "From our new studies, we can see that mosquitoes are evolving more quickly than we thought and that unfortunately, strategies that might work against one strain of mosquito might not be effective against another. It's important to identify and monitor these hidden genetic changes in mosquitoes if we are to succeed in bringing malaria under control by targeting mosquitoes." Genetic differences between the two strains, known as M and S, were scattered throughout the insects' DNA, said the researchers, writing in the journal Science.The changes had occurred in areas likely to affect development, feeding behaviour, and reproduction.A further study comparing the two strains showed they seemed to be evolving differently.This was thought to be in response to different environmental factors such as larval habitats, infectious agents and predators.Co-author Professor George Christophides, also from Imperial College, said: "Malaria is a deadly disease that affects millions of people across the world and amongst children in Africa, it causes one in every five deaths. We know that the best way to reduce the number of people who contract malaria is to control the mosquitoes that carry the disease. Our studies help us to understand the makeup of the mosquitoes that transmit malaria, so that we can find new ways of preventing them from infecting people."MalariaBiologyImperial College Londonguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk