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The scientists marked the dogs' faces with blue tape to pinpoint their facial tics.
The scientists marked a nest, a domed structure of woven grasses close to the ground, as "attacked" if the eggs or chicks vanished before they were capable of fledging, a developmental period requiring at least 25 days. . Adult superb fairywrens are socially monogamous, and both males and females produce what scientists call a "chatter song" to defend their territory.
Monday's announcement by American and European scientists, marked with news conferences and the publication of dozens of research papers, represents another huge leap forward in our understanding of the universe.
As for the third member of the present day Queen, here is Dr Brian May at the Science Museum in London, leading a live satellite link with fellow scientists to mark the launch of World Asteroid Day (30 June 2015).
Many scientists have marked fructose as the ring leader in the team of monosaccharides.
This will allow the collisions between protons on the machine to give insights into dark matter and what gives mass to other particles, and to show what matter was in the microseconds of rapid cooling after the Big Bang that many scientists theorise marked the creation of the universe billions of years ago.
The question of whether the world should aim for a 2C limit, which scientists say marks the point beyond which the effects of climate change become catastrophic and irreversible, or a more stringent 1.5C limit, which would provide greater safety, is a sore point in the long-running UN negotiations.
Women athletes and scientists today marked the 37th anniversary of a U.S. law prohibiting discrimination against women in education at a White House event during which young women were urged to go for the gold.
Humanity is on pace this century to produce enough greenhouse gases, which trap heat and warm the planet, to send global temperatures soaring past the 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit above pre-industrial levels that scientists say marks the point of no return, after which violent weather, surging sea levels, drought and environmental destruction become irreversible.
Atomic clocks built at the official U.S. timekeeping laboratory tick with record-breaking regularity, scientists said — marking an advance that may someday allow researchers to perform new tests of the laws of physics and engineers to perfect technologies such as GPS systems.
Now one lucky scientist--Mark Westhusin, director of the cloning lab at Texas A&M University in College Station--is realizing the dream.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com