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Base level and lithology affect fluvial geomorphic evolution at a tectonically active area

Eurekalert - May 26 2021 - 00:05
Previous researches had emphasized tectonic impacts on the fluvial system at the tectonically active areas, while the effects of lithology and local base level change have received relatively rare attention. Newly study at the NE Tibet Plateau shows that base level change and lithology play a crucial role in landscape evolution, even in a tectonically active region. Besides, there exits an autogenic positive feedback in the transition from parallel to dendritic drainage patterns.
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Skeletal muscle loss exacerbated by diabetes improved with oligo DNA

Eurekalert - May 26 2021 - 00:05
A group of researchers led by Tomohide Takaya of Shinshu University succeeded in improving skeletal muscle differentiation worsened by diabetes with oligo DNA.
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University of Bath research shows how to improve emergency service response to terrorist incident

Eurekalert - May 26 2021 - 00:05
The Manchester Arena terrorist bomb attack in 2017 exposed flaws in the response of emergency services that could be addressed with a new three-phase approach, research by the University of Bath School of Management shows.
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Aquaculture turns biodiversity into uniformity along the coast of China

Eurekalert - May 26 2021 - 00:05
Fishery and aquaculture have given rise to an enormous uniformity in the diversity of bivalves along the more than 18,000 kilometer long Chinese coast, biologist He-Bo Peng and colleagues report in this month's issue of Diversity and Distributions.
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Raised buildings may help reduce malaria transmission in Africa

Eurekalert - May 26 2021 - 00:05
Using four experimental houses, researchers in Africa found that the number of female malaria mosquitoes collected in huts declined with increasing height, decreasing progressively as the hut's floor moved further from the ground.
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Hacking and loss of driving skills are major consumer concerns for self-driving cars

Eurekalert - May 26 2021 - 00:05
A new study from the University of Kent, Toulouse Business School, ESSCA School of Management (Paris) and ESADE Business School (Spain) has revealed the three primary risks and benefits perceived by consumers towards autonomous vehicles (self-driving cars).
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Otago study aids understanding of invisible but mighty particles

Eurekalert - May 26 2021 - 00:05
Tiny charged electrons and protons which can damage satellites and alter the ozone have revealed some of their mysteries to University of Otago scientists.
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Dry metastable olivine and slab deformation in a wet subducting slab

Eurekalert - May 26 2021 - 00:05
Our results suggest that olivine and wadsleyite show dry transformation kinetics even in wet slabs. It is therefore possible that olivine transformation as a cause of deep-focus earthquakes and large slab deformation creating stagnant slabs could occur in the water-undersaturated wet slabs. These processes could be caused jointly by dehydration of hydrous minerals and the subsequent rapid phase transformation when the dehydration starts at lower temperatures than the phase transformation.
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Deciphering structure of a toxic matter that destroys the nerves in the brain

Eurekalert - May 26 2021 - 00:05
Professor Joon Won Park's research team at POSTECH reveals the structure of a hetero-oligomer nano-aggregate - a substance that causes Parkinson's and dementia - through quadruple force mapping.
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Research uncovers how 'non-professional' cells can trigger immune response

Eurekalert - May 26 2021 - 00:05
Researchers are finding new details on the complex dynamics involved in how organisms sense an infection from pathogens. The researchers found that worms can sense changes in their metabolism in order to unleash protective defenses, even if they don't directly sense an incursion from pathogens.
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Protein tenascin-C important in retinal blood flow disorders

Eurekalert - May 26 2021 - 00:05
Many eye diseases are associated with a restricted blood supply, known as ischaemia, which can lead to blindness. The role of the protein tenascin-C, an extracellular matrix component, in retinal ischaemia was investigated in mice by researchers from Ruhr-Universität Bochum (RUB). They showed that tenascin-C plays a crucial role in damaging the cells responsible for vision following ischaemia. The results were published online by the team in the journal Frontiers in Neuroscience on 20 May 2021.
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Hidden genes discovered in bovine genome

Eurekalert - May 26 2021 - 00:05
When researchers at ETH Zurich compared the reference genomes between several breeds of domestic cattle and closely related wild cattle, they discovered genes with previously unknown functions.
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Small modular reactors competitive in Washington's clean energy future

Eurekalert - May 26 2021 - 00:05
A new report finds small modular reactors could provide competitively priced electricity in Washington state's future electricity market.
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Recent warming weakens global dust storm activity

Eurekalert - May 26 2021 - 00:05
The frequent and strong dust storms in northern China have attracted wide attentions. Yet the long-term dust storm activities and their responses to natural climatic forcing and/or human activities are not fully understood. Researchers in Tianjin University, China, and colleagues presented histories of annual/decadal dust storm variations of the past few hundred years using high resolution sedimentary grainsize records from Lake Karakul and Lake Daihai, northern China (Fig. 1), and discussed the potential forcing mechanisms.
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Coronavirus testing made quick and easy

Eurekalert - May 26 2021 - 00:05
New diagnostic technique could help contain the spread of COVID-19 and other viral outbreaks.
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An 1% Hubble parameter estimation from LISA-Taiji gravitational wave observatory network

Eurekalert - May 26 2021 - 00:05
Hubble parameter describes the expansion rate of the present universe. The current measurements from high redshift cosmic microwave background and low redshift supernovae distance ladder show a significant discrepancy. A new independent measurement whose accuracy is better than 2% is crucial. Gravitational waves from compact binary coalescence open a completely novel observational window. Chinese scientists find that the future space-borne gravitational wave observatories will be able to constrain the Hubble parameter within 1% level.
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Hundreds of antibiotic resistant genes found in the gastrointestinal tracts of Danish infants

Eurekalert - May 26 2021 - 00:05
Danish one-year-olds carry several hundred antibiotic resistant genes in their bacterial gut flora according to a new study from the University of Copenhagen. The presence of these genes is partly attributable to antibiotic use among mothers during pregnancy.
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UVA develops new tools to battle cancer, advance genomics research

Eurekalert - May 26 2021 - 00:05
The new approaches have already unearthed a treasure trove of useful data -- and they're now being made available for free.
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UCSF improves fetal heart defect detection using machine learning

Eurekalert - May 26 2021 - 00:05
UC San Francisco researchers have found a way to double doctors' accuracy in detecting the vast majority of complex fetal heart defects in utero - when interventions could either correct them or greatly improve a child's chance of survival - by combining routine ultrasound imaging with machine-learning computer tools.
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Amazon indigenous group's lifestyle may hold a key to slowing down aging

Eurekalert - May 26 2021 - 00:05
The Tsimane indigenous people of the Bolivian Amazon experience less brain atrophy than their American and European peers. The decrease in their brain volumes with age is 70% slower than in Western populations.
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