Scientific Chicago

For the curious-minded Chicagoan

Main Menu

Skip to content
  • About
  • Contact

Category Archives: Science News

Bats may have the key to treating AIDS

December 12, 2012by Lindsey Reiser 1 Comment

Bats can’t contract AIDS, but a disease that’s destroying their populations creates a similar problem experienced by those with the virus. We’ve written about white nose syndrome before and the […]

Read Article →
Animals, Medicine, Science News

Watch an asteroid fly-by this afternoon

December 11, 2012by Lindsey Reiser Leave a comment

The lumpy, peanut-like 4179 Toutatis will pass within 37 million miles of the Earth this afternoon, and Slooh is all over it. Toutatis passes us by about once every four years, […]

Read Article →
Science News, Space

Shape-shifting gel could change how doctors administer drugs

December 10, 2012by Lindsey Reiser Leave a comment

Imagine pouring a liquid gel into a wound that solidifies, stays where you pour it, and slowly dispatches drugs to the area. It wasn’t what researchers at Cornell University were going for, but […]

Read Article →
Medicine, Science News, Technology

Extroverted gorillas live longer

December 7, 2012by Lindsey Reiser Leave a comment

Those popular kids may be onto something. Researchers at American zoos spent the last 18 years watching their resident gorillas for certain trends. They observed who was outgoing and playful […]

Read Article →
Animals, Science News

Could this be the earliest dinosaur?

December 6, 2012by Lindsey Reiser Leave a comment

Nyasasaurus isn’t a new discovery, but this is the first time it’s been considered a dinosaur. Bits of the small dino were discovered in the 1930’s in Tanzania’s Manda Beds and […]

Read Article →
Animals, Natural History, Science News

MIT makes a tiny Transformer

December 6, 2012by Lindsey Reiser 1 Comment

No, not a power converter. We’re talking about Optimus Prime and the like. Researchers at MIT’s Center for Bits and Atoms have created a tiny robot that assembles itself into […]

Read Article →
Science News, Technology

Voyager 1 is almost in interstellar space

December 5, 2012by Lindsey Reiser Leave a comment

Very soon, space probe Voyager 1 will be probing outside our solar system. According to the team at NASA, the probe is sending back some very strange data from its […]

Read Article →
Science News, Space

The robot fake-out

December 5, 2012by Lindsey Reiser Leave a comment

You would expect living creatures to try and pull the wool over one another’s eyes, but robots seem a bit more straightforward. Still, researchers have taught bots to fake out […]

Read Article →
Science News, Technology

Goodnight, sweet spidernaut

December 4, 2012by Lindsey Reiser Leave a comment

Nefertiti was a spider that boldly went where only a few spiders went before, so it’s safe to say she had a pretty full life. The 10-month old “Johnson jumper” died […]

Read Article →
Animals, Science News, Space

So, what exactly did Curiosity find?

December 4, 2012by Lindsey Reiser Leave a comment

In short, carbon. Specifically, chlorinated methane gas, which contains carbon. Curiosity’s Sample Analysis at Mars (SAM) instrument also found traces of water, sulfur, and perchlorate salts, but naturally the building blocks […]

Read Article →
Chemistry, Geology, Science News, Space

Post navigation

← Previous 1 … 11 12 13 … 23 Next →

Scientific Chicago on Facebook

Scientific Chicago on Facebook

Scientific Chicago on Twitter

Tweets by chiscience

Recent Posts

  • Why is the U.S. Navy interested in Cicadas?
  • The lifelong self-experiment of Santorius Santorius
  • Moon or frying pan?
  • The oldest light in the universe gets its closeup
  • Car traffic driving micro-evolution?

Archives

  • June 2013
  • April 2013
  • March 2013
  • February 2013
  • January 2013
  • December 2012
  • November 2012
  • October 2012
  • September 2012

Categories

  • Animals
  • Anthropology
  • Behavior
  • Botany
  • Chemistry
  • Ecology
  • Evolution
  • Genetics
  • Geology
  • Health
  • How Things Work
  • Medicine
  • Natural History
  • Nature
  • Nutrition
  • Our Environment
  • Physics
  • Science History
  • Science in Chicago
  • Science News
  • Space
  • Technology
  • Uncategorized
  • Weather
  • Weird Science

RSS NBC Science News

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS Scientific American

  • Why firstborns may be more likely than secondborns to be autistic or to have allergies
  • Trump’s order on psychedelics could have far-reaching science consequences
  • NASA’s 2028 moon landing may be delayed because of lack of space suits, watchdog report warns
  • Astronauts’ brains don’t fully adapt to life in microgravity, new study finds
  • Risk of ‘megaquake’ in Japan higher after powerful earthquake strikes
  • NASA’s Voyager 1 spacecraft down to just two working science instruments
  • The strange way cocaine water pollution is changing salmon
  • See Bruce the parrot wield his broken beak like a deadly weapon
  • Magnetic muon measurements and gene-therapy advances win $3 million Breakthrough prizes
  • Ancient Roman ‘machine-gun’ damage discovered on Pompeii walls

RSS TIME Science

  • Don’t Confuse Me With Facts: When Misinformation Kills
  • A Bright Year for Solar in the U.S.—But There Are Clouds on the Horizon
  • Famous Scientist Will Make You Smart. Click Here
  • Window on Infinity: From Saturn to Mars to Deep Space to Home
  • Our Global Diet Is Becoming Increasingly Homogenized—and That’s Risky
  • Cosmos Reboot: Geek TV at Its Very Best
  • Virus Resurrected After Chilling in Siberia for 30,000 years
  • How to Know If Someone’s Really Dead
  • Thanks to Climate Change, West Nile Virus Could Be Your New Neighbor
  • This Is What Life Is Like From a Shark’s Perspective

RSS Museum of Science and Industry blog

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS BBC Science and Environment News

  • Electricity bills targeted in planned shakeup to energy pricing
  • Fears for 1,000 breeding toads after reservoir drained by water company
  • Artemis II crew: 'We left as friends - we came back as best friends'
  • Why cheap power could matter more than clean power in the push for net zero
  • Butterfly numbers are dropping but here are five species you may see more of
  • New footage shows moment Orion capsule hatch is opened at sea
  • Golden eagles' return to English skies gets government backing
  • Group behind Galloway National Park campaign disbanded
  • Can a nature corridor increase London's biodiversity?
  • Fire at protected nesting site treated as arson

Blogroll

  • Bill Nye the Science Guy
  • Grist Climate & Energy
  • National Geographic
  • Nature
  • NBC Science
  • PBS Nature
  • Popular Science
  • Scientific American
  • Wired Science

Meta

  • Create account
  • Log in
Blog at WordPress.com.
Scientific Chicago
Blog at WordPress.com.
Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy
  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Scientific Chicago
    • Join 72 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Scientific Chicago
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...