As Jurassic World explores the return of dinosaurs that had no problems in killing their prey, could humans in modern society face killing for food too? These subjects and many other topics are among ScienceSeeker editors' favourite posts within their respective areas of interest and expertise for the past seven days. Here is the full round-up of the ScienceSeeker Editors’ Selections:
Resurrecting dinosaurs might not be so easy.
Credit: pixabay/azdude, CC BY-SA
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- Jurassic World: Can We Really Resurrect a Dinosaur? by Darren Griffin and Rebecca O'Connor at The Conversation
- “Life finds a way”: What Jurassic World teaches us about modern wildlife by Roisin Conn at Seeking Science
- Tardigrade mysteries by Jon Farrow at The Thoughtful Pharoah
- ‘I’m only going to eat animals I kill myself’: Q&A with Louise Gray, author of ‘The Ethical Carnivore’ by Joshua Parfitt at Mongabay
- Did Han Solo Use A Trick Of Einstein’s Relativity To Make The Kessel Run? by Ethan Siegel at Starts With A Bang
- Evidence Builds for a New Kind of Neutrino by Clara Moskowitz at Scientific American
- Gravitational Waves Were Used To Look Inside Neutron Stars by Alfredo Carpineti at The Astroholic
- Finally, scientists have found intriguing organic molecules on Mars by Eric Berger at Ars Technica
- Nanodiamonds are forever by Sue Vorenberg at Argonne National Laboratory
- Political Emotions. The Role of Affect in Social Movements by Katja May at Imperfect Cognitions
- "The Love of Neuroscience" and the Neuroscience of Love by Neuroskeptic at Discover
- California legislation will require polyester clothing to have a microfiber pollution label at Microfiber Pollution Project
- Reminder: Plastic Doesn’t Go in the Compost Bin by Michael Allen at Hakai Magazine
- The Island Paradise Where the Roads Are Made of Plastic by Monica Pelliccia at Oceans Deeply
- The cancer cell next door by Maya Emmons-Bell at Equilibria
- Cancer: a many headed beast by Emily Harrison at OncoBites
- Cancer Vaccines: Educating Your Immune System since the 1800s by Sara Musetti at OncoBites
- Singapore could become the second country to legalize mitochondrial replacement therapy by Sandy Ong at Science
- Intestinal bacteria can work better than antibiotics by Nancy Bazilchuk and Ingrid Spilde at ScienceNordic
- From the duh files: Human behavior and corporate culture impact on hygiene, food safety by Doug Powell at Barfblog
- Here are the data and code for that study of Puerto Rico deaths by Andrew Gelman at - Statistical Modeling, Causal Inference, and Social Science
Check back next week for more great picks!
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