8.31.2016

Drone captures stunning views of Uluru

One of the most famous images of Australia, Uluru - or Ayers Rock, was filmed from a new perspective.

A drone captured stunning images of the previous page under a specific mandate from the Aboriginal leadership in Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park license.

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8.30.2016

Reno thunderstorm dead in Norway

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More than 300 deer were killed in a storm on a mountain plateau in Norway.

Life on Mars: NASA Crew moment evidence emerges one year

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A NASA team originated from a simulated Mars in Hawaii, where she lived for nearly a year in isolation.

new wind tunnel reveals the secrets of bird flight

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Researchers at Stanford University have seen a tunnel only bird, designed like small birds fly.

8.29.2016

Crew exits the sample Year March

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A team of six people have emerged from a simulated Mars in Hawaii, where she lived for nearly a year in isolation.

8.26.2016

Meet the Octobot: For the first time in soft robotics

For the first time a soft robot was built that moves without batteries or cables on your own.

It comes from the Faculty of Applied Sciences (SEAS) and engineering sciences at Harvard University - and takes the form of a tire 7cm octopus.

The "octopodes" can not run or swim, but it poses sets of legs of a slow, eight-legged can-can alternate.

The researchers say it is an important step on the way to the flexible robot that can help messy. real situations - such as surgery - where rigid robots fail.

Video: Lori Sanders, Ryan Truby, Michael Wehner, Robert Wood and Jennifer Lewis - Harvard SEAS.

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Italy earthquake: 98 aftershocks in 36 hours

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As 98 aftershocks rocked the devastated areas in central Italy, in the first 36 hours after the earthquake.

8.25.2016

Yuval Noah Harari: "We are probably one of the last generations of Homo sapiens."

The historian and author of the international bestseller Sapiens: A brief history of mankind, says Yuval Noah Harari the future of humanity.

"We are probably one of the last generations of Homo sapiens," he told the Today - program on the BBC Radio 4 .

Cognitive animation.

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Depression is a state of the body does not care?

Depression is the second leading cause of disability worldwide and may soon be the first.

However, drug treatments do not work for many, according to the scientists for radically new approaches for this debilitating disease search.

Professor Ed Bullmore at the University of Cambridge, explained how the immune system may be defective.

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Five ways Proxima b knowledge is important,

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Scientists have a planet similar to Earth orbiting around the nearest neighbors of our sun, Proxima Centauri discovered.

8.24.2016

Hundreds of thousands of dead fish washed in New Jersey

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Hundreds of thousands of fish, fish often called peanut bunker, did not die in a stream of New Jersey.

8.23.2016

They are recycling waste?

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It was refused a significant increase in the amount of recycling.

8.19.2016

Tourists flock to Kilauea volcano lava flow

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Tourists flock to Hawaii Kilauea Volcano lava to the sea achieved for the first time in three years. Antennas - Lava Ocean Tours.

A worldwide audience Professor Michael Sandel came to discuss # 039 in the world &; s response to climate change.

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A worldwide audience Professor Michael Sandel joined the world's response to climate change to be discussed.

8.17.2016

The climate skeptics Cox

Professor Brian Cox has verbally sparred with a newly elected Australian politician who believes that climate change is a global conspiracy.

British physicist behind the wonders of the universe was a guest on BBC panel show Q & A confrontation ABC.

Also in the Australian television program he was elected Senator Malcolm Roberts, the anti-immigration One Nation party.

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Scientists say pesticides are linked to decline in bees

A large-scale, has long-term decline in wild bees in England, the use of insecticides, neonicotinoids linked in a new study.

Over 18 years, the researchers analyzed the bees that feed largely on rape, a widely treated with culture "neonics".

Rebecca Morelle reported.

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8.13.2016

Secret as the land of fish in Banff garden

A man from Banff asked for help to identify fish that appeared in his garden in Banff.

Kevin Bain believes that the fish could be submitted 75 sandeels by a waterspout.

Mr. Bain, who lives about 500 meters from the sea, publish pictures Series periscope hoping someone light on the appearance of fish could two customs sheds.

Video: Kevin Bain

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Chester Zoo breeds Montserrat world premiere tarantulas

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Chester Zoo keepers have to be the first in the world to breed successfully in captivity tarantulas Montserrat.

stunning images of Perseids meteor shower

Observers say that the annual Perseid meteor shower was more active in the UK in the early morning hours of Friday as usual.

The annual event is caused by a trail of debris from a comet called Swift-Tuttle, which orbits the Sun - but this year, the scientists say a sudden gravitational Jupiter elbow has become more intense.

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8.10.2016

Beware of walruses

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Scotland Greenland paddle a canoe is a risky business.

Britain & # 039; The highest mountain is under water

Scientists at the University of Plymouth visited the highest mountains in the UK - more than 100 meters below sea level.

His visit was only the second in this area of ​​seamounts, the 200 km west of Scotland.

They found the pristine coral reefs that extend for miles and an abundance of fish, sponges, crabs and other marine animals.

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Orcas can solve the mystery of menopause?

Scientists at the University of Exeter and York, which examines the evolution of menopause and found evidence of its origin in the Orcas.

Humans and orcas beings are two of only three species that have evolved to stop to halfway through their lives with children - something that in the long term is not even the great apes and elephants. While some have suggested that menopause is a side effect of our longer life span, the researchers say that whales the key to what could be a long time been a mystery of evolution.

Science reporter Victoria Gill BBC joined the scientists in an unusual observation tour whales on the coast north Pacific.

Filmed and edited by David Cheeseman and Victoria Gill

Hear more on this story and the BBC - meeting with the southern resident orca menopause, BBC Radio 4, Wednesday at 2100 BST

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8.09.2016

Giant Panda rare baby born in Vienna Zoo - Mother & # 039; s fourth

Another baby giant panda was born in Schoenbrunn Zoo in Vienna - the fourth time that Yangyang mother conceived naturally.

Such an event is very rare - most panda breeding centers artificial insemination are used.

The sex of the puppy is not yet known. The little pink creature - born at 5:05 local time (03:05 GMT) - is only 10 cm (four inches) long and weighs 100 grams (3.5 ounces).

Yang Yang of other puppies are in China, where the estimated 1,864 live in the wild.

Panda Zoo area was closed, long to leave behind their small Hui Yang Yang in peace and father, it is pushed to the safety of the bear to the sidelines.

Zoo director Dagmar Schratter said Yang Yang "takes good care of their offspring, but remember that the rate of giant pandas is in her first year mortality of about 40%."

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8.06.2016

Disappointment for LHC physicists

For six months, LHC physicists at CERN near Geneva irregularities analyzed data from two large experience of the machine.

The "coup" in the results of the LHC has the potential to revolutionize physics; He suggested that the team have a new particle found.

But as the experiments continue to function, the bump flattened - and eventually disappears.

This video is a special edition of BBC2 Horizon Research program of the new particle tracking.

Within CERN August 10 will be broadcast on BBC2 at 20:00 Wednesday.

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8.05.2016

Vibration brings back images to life

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Stills where objects are manipulated developed in Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Two rare Amur leopards born at Twycross Zoo

Two leopards love - considered the rarest cat in the world - born in Twycross Zoo in Leicestershire.

The small, yet unnamed, are only a few weeks and ventured out of their holes only recently.

There is love only about 200 leopards in the world, which are mainly in captivity, said the zoo.

The parents of young children, Kristen and Davidoff, "real asset" for the breeding program in the world by a speaker also produced two boys in 2014, one less.

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8.03.2016

& # 039; Science gives us hope in a troubled world & # 039;

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Professor Brian Cox in an interview with the BBC about why science can give us in a troubled world hope.

The deadly trade around exotic fish

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Emily Voigt spent three years of his life and visited fifteen countries in search of rare Asian Arowana.

Two rare snow leopards born in Twycross Zoo

Two snow leopards love - the world's rarest cat considered - born in Twycross Zoo in Leicestershire.

The small, but not by name, they are between a few days and still have not ventured out of their shelters.

There is love only about 200 snow leopards in the world, which are mainly in captivity, said the zoo.

The parents of young children, Kristen and Davidoff, "real asset" for the breeding program in the world by a speaker also produced two boys in 2014, one less.

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8.02.2016

Life & # 039; Pokemon Go & # 039; Transformed & # 039 adolescents;

A mobile game that seems caught the attention of the world to have caused a breakthrough in people with autism.

Pokemon Go, launched in the UK earlier this month to life, the one walking users played in the real world Pokémon to catch virtual animals.

It seems that the mix the game of virtual reality and real-helped many social obstacles feel autistic people break when they are in public.

Victoria Derbyshire , Monday to Friday 0900-1100 BST on BBC Two and BBC News Channel. Follow the program on Facebook and Twitter , and you can find all of our content online.

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Dissect the brains for medical research

What is a brain bank and why we need them in the era of high-tech scanner?

Dr. Laura Palmer, director of the Brain Bank of Bristol explains how and why the researchers still have a real substance neurological diseases Alzheimer's disease and autism "Schizophrenia and Multiple Sclerosis to understand.

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Dartmoor Lynx back to the zoo after weeks on the run

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A bobcat escaped from Dartmoor Zoo is back in his pen after more than three weeks in operation.