White Nationalists Are Flocking to Genetic Ancestry Tests--with Surprising Results It was a strange moment of triumph against racism: The gun-slinging white supremacist Craig Cobb, dressed up for daytime TV in a dark suit and red tie, hearing that his DNA testing revealed his ancestry to be only “86 percent European, and … 14 percent Sub-Saharan African.” The studio audience whooped and laughed an
An employee uses a a radiation dosage monitor as workers continue the decontamination and reconstruction process at the Tokyo Electric Power Co.'s embattled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant on February 25, 2016 in Okuma, Japan. The following essay is reprinted with permission from The Conversation, an online publication covering the latest research. Six years have passed since the Fukushima n
Trump Administration Restricts News from Federal Scientists at USDA, EPA Pres. Donald Trump’s administration moved quickly this week to shore up its control over communications with the public and the press, as officials at the Environmental Protection Agency and the U.S. Department of Agriculture e-mailed staff to inform them that they may no longer discuss agency research or departmental restric
Rational and Irrational Thought: The Thinking That IQ Tests Miss No doubt you know several folks with perfectly respectable IQs who repeatedly make poor decisions. The behavior of such people tells us that we are missing something important by treating intelligence as if it encompassed all cognitive abilities. I coined the term “dysrationalia” (analogous to “dyslexia”), meaning the inability to th
Computer Model Predicts Fewer Than 200 Deaths from Fukushima RadiationRadiation exposure from the Fukushima meltdowns is unlikely to result in many fatal cancer cases Immediate and future radiation from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster may result in hundreds of deaths and emerging cancer cases, according to a yearlong modeling project undertaken by researchers at Stanford University. Started
Fukushima Nuclear Plant Released Far More Radiation Than Government SaidGlobal radioactivity data challenge Japanese estimates for emissions and point to the role of spent fuel pools The disaster at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant in March released far more radiation than the Japanese government has claimed. So concludes a study1 that combines radioactivity data from across the globe to estima
Opinion, arguments & analyses from the editors of Scientific American Magnitude 7.1 aftershock disrupts efforts at Japan nuclear plant to stave off hydrogen explosions By Larry Greenemeier | Apr 7, 2011 02:43 PM | 0 Share Email Print As northeastern Japan copes with Thursday's magnitude-7.1* aftershock, the largest since the disastrous March 11 magnitude-9.0 earthquake and tsunami, the injection o
Long Live the Web: A Call for Continued Open Standards and Neutrality The Web is critical not merely to the digital revolution but to our continued prosperity—and even our liberty. Like democracy itself, it needs defending The world wide web went live, on my physical desktop in Geneva, Switzerland, in December 1990. It consisted of one Web site and one browser, which happened to be on the same com
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