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ScienceBlog.com Newsletter

Alzheimer’s paradox:  Why one-third of patients never lose their minds.”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.  Accessed on 25 April 2026, 1613 UTC.

Content and Source:  “ScienceBlog.com Newsletter.”

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Russ Roberts (https://hawaiisciencejournal.com).

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Alzheimer’s Paradox: Why One-Third Of Patients Never Lose Their Minds

Apr 25

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dry farmland

Salt-Tolerant Bacteria Are Bringing Dying Farmland Back To Life


Why A Slower AI Might Actually Feel Smarter To You


Woman walking down stairs

Walking Downstairs Could Be The Best Workout You’re Not Doing


crystals

High-Tech Crystal Learns To Waste Less Power


woman at window

Your Blood Already Knows You Have PTSD. Scientists Are Just Starting To Listen


 

red powder

Freeze-Dried Platelets Could Be The First Drug To Treat Brain Swelling After Traumatic Injury


Nanoscale organisation of many different proteins in a mammalian nucleus obtained with DNA-PAINT imaging

New Microscopy Technique Maps Nine Proteins Inside A Single Nucleus At Once


turtle

By 2085, A Third Of All Animal Habitats Could Be Hit By Multiple Climate Disasters At Once


The image illustrates nanoparticles moving along an optical nanofiber under the influence of circularly polarized light. Chiral nanocubes near the fiber experience a force, which depends on both their handedness and the polarization of the light.

How Light Can Sort Drug Molecules By Their Handedness, One At A Time


woman selecting item at supermarket

Supermarkets Throw Away Food That Would Be Cheaper To Give Away


As a test, the researchers recorded the sounds of spring in Philadelphia, then used SmartDJ to transform them into the sounds of a forest.

An AI That Edits Your Soundscape Just By Being Told What You Want To Hear

 

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kh6jrmAuthor kh6jrm@gmail.comPosted on April 25, 2026Categories Environment and Earth News, Science and Technology News, Space and Astronomy News, UncategorizedTags ScienceBlog.com NewsletterLeave a comment on ScienceBlog.com Newsletter

ScienceBlog.com Newsletter

“First moonfarers in half century just splashed down and they broke Apollo’s record doing it.”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents. Accessed on 11 April 2026, 1511 UTC.

Content and Source:  “ScienceBlog.com Newsletter.”

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Russ Roberts (https://hawaiisciencejournal.com).

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First Moonfarers In Half Century Just Splashed Down, And They Broke Apollo’s Record Doing It

Apr 11

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sleeping baby

Your Baby’s Gut Bacteria Could Counteract Genetic Risk Factors For Autism And ADHD


This artist's illustration shows the cosmic distance ladder — a series of overlapping methods astronomers use to measure distances across the universe.

Every Method Of Measuring The Universe’s Expansion Rate Agrees, And That’s A Problem


Ozempic (Semaglutide) injectors

One In Ten People May Be Genetically Resistant To GLP-1 Diabetes Drugs Like Ozempic


Chimpanzee Civil War Rewrites What We Know About Violence


The Single Device That Can Both Generate And Store Clean Energy


a depressed man sitting on a floor

Your Depression And Your Heart Disease May Share The Same Genetic Roots


 

crowded ashtray

Nicotine Hijacks Rare Lung Cells To Damage The Brain, Raise Dementia Risk


 

 

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kh6jrmAuthor kh6jrm@gmail.comPosted on April 11, 2026Categories Environment and Earth News, Science and Technology News, Space and Astronomy NewsTags Artemis II Moon Mission splashes down, ScienceBlog.com NewsletterLeave a comment on ScienceBlog.com Newsletter

ScienceBlog.com Newsletter

“NASA sends humans around the Moon, starting with blinking toilet light.”

Views expressed in this science, space, and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.

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NASA Sends Humans Around The Moon Again, Starting With A Blinking Toilet Light

Apr 2

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abstract illustration of a key opening a lock

Quantum Computers Could Crack Bitcoin’s Encryption In Nine Minutes. The Clock Is Already Running


native american dice

Native Americans Were Gambling, Exploring Probability Millenia Before Their Old World Counterparts


 

 

criminal at police hq being interrogated

Dark Web Attracts People Who Favor Violence Over Any Other Crime


 

Optical image of a 32 × 32 (1K) crossbar array based on Gra/HfOx/W devices using a two-wire configuration.

Atom-Thin Layer Lets Computer Chips Survive Temperatures Hotter Than Lava


vegetables

Eating More Plants Slows Your Biological Clock, Not Just Your Chronological One


 

Bat-Inspired Gripper Lets Drones Perch Like Birds And Switch Off Their Motors


 

Tiny Bubbles Can Mix, Heal, And Dissolve Blood Clots


 

an eye looking through an opening in a brick wall

Being In Two Places At Once Is Not Just A Quantum Quirk. It Happens To Real Atoms, Too


In the first-ever laboratory experiments done on the bat, a research team determined that the torpedo bat and traditional bat perform equally well in hitting power with only a slight difference in the location of the bat’s sweet spot.

Nine Home Runs, One Weird-Shaped Bat, And A Physics Lab That Burst The Bubble

 


 

A robot designed to assist with precision irrigation in action, in a citrus orchard.

Orchard Robot Waters Each Tree Just Right. That’s A Big Deal.

 


 

abstract illustration of identical tiles

A Physics Trick Could Make Quantum Computers Far Cheaper To Build

 

 

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kh6jrmAuthor kh6jrm@gmail.comPosted on April 2, 2026Categories Environment and Earth News, Science and Technology News, Space and Astronomy News, UncategorizedTags NASA sends humans around the Moon, ScienceBlog.com NewsletterLeave a comment on ScienceBlog.com Newsletter

ScienceBlog.com Newsletter

“Human language evolved to make us funnier, not just friendlier.”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.

Accessed on 31 March 2026, 1544 UTC.

Content and Source:  “ScienceBlog.com Newsletter.”

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Human Language Evolved To Make Us Funnier, Not Just Friendlier

Mar 31

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doormat

Putting Dirt On Your Doormat Could Lower Your Child’s Asthma Risk


 

mother and baby at a lake

Ending Birthright Citizenship in U.S. Could Create 6 Million Children Without Legal Status By 2050


 

MIT researchers (from left to right) Hyungeun Song, Guillermo Herrera-Arcos, and Hugh Herr have developed the first “living” implant that uses rewired sensory nerves to revive paralyzed organs.

MIT Engineers Rewire Living Muscle To Power Paralyzed Organs From The Inside


 

From left to right: Robin Helsten, Benjamin Crockett, Yang Liu, and Nicola Montaut

Repurposed Optics Gear Rescues Quantum States From A Sea Of Noise


 

a fist

Being Betrayed By Your Own Side Causes Far More Trauma Than Being Attacked By The Enemy


 

man asleep at keyboard

Antidepressant Cuts Long COVID Fatigue. Metformin Not So Much.


 

A Four-Legged Robot Just Showed How To Search For Life On Mars 3X Faster


 

Censer no. 2 in situ in the domestic shrine at Boscoreale (Pompeii, Archivio Fotografico inv. H6803).

The Ash Inside Pompeii’s Household Altars Reveals A Trade Empire In Miniature


 

A Catalyst That Heats Itself Up Can Turn Sunlight And CO2 Into Fuel


 

The comprehensive review helps in understanding the gut microbiota-metabolite-immune axis in disease pathogenesis

Your Gut Bacteria Are Running A Chemical Embassy To Your Immune System


 

Human retinal organoid. Photoreceptors are labelled in green and the light sensing compartment is labelled in red. Organoid cell nuclei are labelled in blue.

Drug Screen Found Way To Keep Dying Vision Cells Alive

 

 

 

 

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kh6jrmAuthor kh6jrm@gmail.comPosted on March 31, 2026Categories Environment and Earth News, Science and Technology News, Space and Astronomy News, UncategorizedTags ScienceBlog.com Newsletter, The evolution of human languageLeave a comment on ScienceBlog.com Newsletter

ScienceBlog.com Newsletter

“A body implant that makes your medicine could replace daily drug regimens.”

Views expressed in this science, space, and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.

Accessed on 28 March 2026, 2210 UTC.

Content and Source:  “ScienceBlog.com Newsletter.”

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Russ Roberts (https://hawaiisciencejournal.com).

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A Body Implant That Makes Your Medicines Could Replace Daily Drug Regimens

Mar 28

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The model of the hybrid optical diffraction neural network for digital classification.

The Light-Speed Computers That Keep Breaking In The Lab Have A Fix


 

Josh Mitteldorf: Fourier Meets Heisenberg


 

fiery looking brain

Your Brain’s Alpha Rhythm Slows Because Its Wiring Does Too


 

people wearing neutral theater masks

The Personality Test That Doesn’t Know What To Do With You Is About To Get A Lot Smarter


 

 

Asymmetric temperature structure revealed in the paper, as it was observed from JWST. These are offset from where the currents flow into and out of the planet, but ultimately, the winds generated by this temperature offset are what drive those currents.

Saturn’s Northern Lights Are Running A Heat Pump That Fooled Scientists For Decades


 

Scheme of the cell irradiation setup at the Novosibirsk Free Electron Laser (Budker Institute of Nuclear Physics, SB RAS). Terahertz irradiation was performed at a wavelength of 130 µm. Each experiment was conducted using five biological replicates (n = 5).

Zapping Melanoma With Terahertz Light Rewires Their Energy Economy Without Killing Them


 

This pair of images represents an extraordinarily large survey of galaxies studying slowdown of the growth of supermassive black holes from about ten billion years ago, when the growth of these black holes was at its peak, to today.

The Universe’s Black Holes Have Stopped Gorging. We Finally Know Why.


 

 

Crystal Chemistry Could Make Perovskite Solar Efficient Enough To Compete With Silicon


 

 

Ancient Fish Used Their Lungs To Hear Underwater


 

 

Vegan rye sandwich with fresh avocado, salad,veggies, healthy snack, vitamin and diet food copy space

Eating The Same Meals On Repeat May Help You Lose More Weight Than Dietary Variety Does


 

This image created using Gemini Pro, depicts an activated carbon fiber functionalized with amine groups (–NH2) at adjacent positions. This arrangement improves the energy efficacy of key interactions, enabling the desorption of captured carbon dioxide at lower temperatures.

A New Class Of Carbon Material Can Release Captured CO2 Using Only Waste Heat

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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kh6jrmAuthor kh6jrm@gmail.comPosted on March 28, 2026Categories Environment and Earth News, Science and Technology News, Space and Astronomy News, UncategorizedTags ScienceBlog.com NewsletterLeave a comment on ScienceBlog.com Newsletter

ScienceBlog.com Newsletter

“America is going back to the Moon.  This time, it plans to stay.”

Views expressed in this science, space, and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.

Accessed on 25 March 2026, 2344 UTC.

Content and Source:  “ScienceBlog.com Newsletter.”

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America Is Going Back To The Moon. This Time, It Plans To Stay

MAR 25

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TOAD, SONORAN DESERT (Bufo alvarius)

Single Breath Of Psychedelic Frog Molecule Lifted Depression In More Than Half Of Patients Who Had Run Out Of Options


Red blood cells

The Paradox In Your Blood: Why Less Hemoglobin May Be Better For You


Evangelos Piliouras, a graduate student in physics, demonstrates a space curve.

Hidden Geometry Could Finally Fix Quantum Computers


 

New research finds the snow fly (Chionea alexandriana) counteracts subzero temperature by creating bursts of body heat and producing antifreeze proteins.

The Snow Fly Runs On Antifreeze And Generates Its Own Heat. Insects Were Not Supposed To Do This.


petri dish

Bacterial Armor Hiding In Plain Sight Could Be Key To Beating Drug-Resistant E. Coli


The Lizard That Lost Its Name For 80 Years Has Finally Got It Back


Sleep study graphic

Your Brain Gets More Active As The Night Goes On. Somehow That Makes Sleep Feel Deeper.


The scientists studied brain organoids derived from patients suffering from a newly discovered genetic disease. These organoids had a more disorganized structure and fewer properly patterned developing nerve cells than healthy controls, suggesting impaired brain development.

New Genetic Disease Causes Premature Aging


Illustration of neurotransmitters released from vesicles into the synaptic space. The reviewed study highlights that, beyond neurons, immune cells such as T cells, B cells, and macrophages can also produce and respond to these signaling molecules. By engaging pathways like cAMP–PKA, MAPK, and JAK–STAT, these immune-derived neurotransmitters play a key role in regulating inflammation, cell function, and disease processes.

Your Immune Cells Are Making Brain Chemicals, And That Changes Everything


The Hidden Wiring Inside Brown Fat That Controls How Well It Burns Energy

Hidden Wiring Inside Brown Fat Controls How Well It Burns Energy

 

 

 

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kh6jrmAuthor kh6jrm@gmail.comPosted on March 25, 2026Categories Environment and Earth News, Science and Technology News, Space and Astronomy News, UncategorizedTags America is going back to the Moon, ScienceBlog.com NewsletterLeave a comment on ScienceBlog.com Newsletter

ScienceBlog.com Newsletter

“19 million Americans thought about shooting someone.”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.

Accessed on 18 March 2026, 0019 UTC.

Content and Source:  “ScienceBlog.com Newsletter.”

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19 Million Americans Have Thought About Shooting Someone

MAR 17

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Chaos Math Can Tell You How To Manage Your Eczema

closeup of human skin

 


The Shingles Vaccine Cuts Heart Attack Risk Nearly As Much As Quitting Smoking

man wearing an oxygen mask in hospital bed

Star Born From Universe’s First Explosion Found Hiding In Tiny, Ancient Galaxy

Credit: CTIO/NOIRLab/DOE/NSF/AURA Image processing: Image Processing: T.A. Rector (University of Alaska Anchorage/NSF NOIRLab), M. Zamani & D. de Martin (NSF NOIRLab) Acknowledgment: PI: Anirudh Chiti, Alex Drlica-Wagner

Politicians Who Treat Congress As Launchpad For Celebrity Win More Coverage, Accomplish Less

Man speaking through a megaphone that covers his face

The Bow Arrived Everywhere At Once, But Only Half Of Hunters Ditched The Atlatl

A petroglyph from Newspaper Rock, a site along Indian Creek in southeastern Utah. The rock includes images from cultures dating from 1,500 years ago to much more recent times.

Lab-Grown Xenobots With Self-Built Nervous Systems Move In Ways Evolution Never Planned

A neurobot stained to highlight multiciliated cells – with small tufts of hairlike cilia around the periphery of the bot – and the neuronal extensions of dendrites and axons seen in the center.

The Brain That Learned To Type Again

ok sign by a human hand

Two Drugs Repurposed Together, PrimeC, Could Slow The Progression Of ALS

Hand clutching a person's flank in pain

Your BMI Is Lying To You About Your Metabolic Future

doctor measuring the waist of a male patient with a tape measure

A World Of Magma And Rotten Eggs Doesn’t Fit Any Category We Know

An artist’s impression of L 98-59 d. Credit: Mark A. Garlick / markgarlick.com

The Parkinson’s Drug Hidden Inside A Plastic Bottle

plastic bottles empty

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kh6jrmAuthor kh6jrm@gmail.comPosted on March 17, 2026Categories Environment and Earth News, Science and Technology News, Space and Astronomy News, UncategorizedTags ScienceBlog.com NewsletterLeave a comment on ScienceBlog.com Newsletter

ScienceBlog.com newsletter

“High fat diets cause gut bacteria to sneak into (your) brain.”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.

Accessed on 13 March 2026, 1947 UTC.

Content and Source:  “ScienceBlog.com Newsletter.”

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High-fat Diets Cause Gut Bacteria to Sneak Into Brain

Mar 13

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Yak Gene Could Repair Damaged Nerves In Multiple Sclerosis


 

Artist's impression

When Planets Collide, The Light From 11,000 Light-Years Away Tells The Story


 

Example of AI makeup system in action

AI Makeup Mirror Learns What You Want By Projecting Colors Onto Your Skin


 

 

The Crocodile That Hunted Our Ancestors Lurked In Ethiopia 3 Million Years Ago


 

 

The colors show how much tau was detected in different parts of the brain. Blue marks areas with lower levels, while red marks areas with higher levels.

Alzheimer’s Brain Scans Trained On White Patients May Be Missing Warning Signs In Others


 

 

The research shows sulfur-sulfur bonds can be formed and broken rapidly and cleanly at room temperature, opening new avenues for drug development, biotech and protein science, and chemical and material science.

Researchers Find A Brand New Chemical Reaction


 

Campos úmidos and veredas

Brazil Has A Second Amazon. We Almost Missed It.


 

 

illustration of one neuron lighting up

Five Kinds Of Neurons Bear The Brunt Of ALS Brain Damage

 

 

 

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kh6jrmAuthor kh6jrm@gmail.comPosted on March 13, 2026Categories Environment and Earth News, Science and Technology News, Space and Astronomy News, UncategorizedTags Brain risk from high fat diets, ScienceBlog.com NewsletterLeave a comment on ScienceBlog.com newsletter

ScienceBlog.com Newsletter

“Neanderthal men and human women drove most interbreeding between the two species.”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.

Accessed on 28 February 2026, 0239 UTC.

Content and Source:  “ScienceBlog.com Newsletter.”

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Neanderthal Men And Human Women Drove Most Interbreeding Between The Two Species

Feb 27

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mouse in a tea cup

CAR T Cells Eliminate Previously Untreatable Solid Cancers In Mice


 

An AI developed by Kobe University endocrinologists can accurately diagnose acromegaly just by analyzing pictures of the back of the hand and the clenched fist. The privacy-conscious achievement holds promise for establishing more efficient referral systems and reducing healthcare disparities across communities.

AI Detects Rare Hormone Disorder From Hand Photographs Alone


 

Japanese woman in traditional dress walking with umbrella in the rain

Japanese Scientists Map Extreme Rain Risk For Next 100 Years


 

Biochar Can Curb Or Boost Greenhouse Gas Depending On Soil


 

Pancreatic Tumor

Pancreatic Cancer Starts Disabling Immune Defences Before Symptoms Appear


 

Robotic wing inspired by nature CREDIT Credit University of Southampton

Liquid-Metal Skin Gives Robotic Underwater Wing Fish-Like Awareness Of Currents


 

used rubber gloves on the ground as trash

Used Rubber Gloves Converted Into Carbon Capture Material


 

 

adult deer tick

Tick Protein Inhibits Both Major Chemokine Classes Linked To Autoimmune Disease


 

Football player

More Years Of U.S. Football Linked To Worse Cognitive, Psychiatric Outcomes In Later Life


 

amber with cretaceous ants

Cretaceous Amber Preserves 99-Million-Year-Old Ant Interactions With Mites And Spiders

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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kh6jrmAuthor kh6jrm@gmail.comPosted on February 27, 2026Categories Environment and Earth News, Science and Technology News, Space and Astronomy NewsTags Neanderthal men and human women drove most interbreeding, ScienceBlog.com NewsletterLeave a comment on ScienceBlog.com Newsletter

ScienceBlog.com Newsletter

“Researchers capture sun in a bottle” and “Engineered Listeria Bacteria become a potent new weapon against cancer.”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.

Content and Source:  “ScienceBlog.com Newsletter.”

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Researchers Capture Sun In A Bottle

Feb 14

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Wild Parrots Sing Duets With Grammar Rules That Rival Human Language


 

In virtual reality, participants embodied an avatar whose left forearm was replaced by an autonomous prosthetic arm that flexed toward a target at different movement speeds.

To Feel Like Yours, A Prosthetic Must First Move Like Yours


 

The Listeria lifecycle after it infects a mammalian host. Counterclockwise from upper left, the bacteria are quickly ingested by an immune system cell called a macrophage, where they end up in an organ called the phagosome for digestion. But they escape the phagosome and enlist a protein called actin to build a needle-like protrusion and push it through the cell wall into a neighboring cell, starting the cycle over again. The Listeria strain used for cancer therapy is unable to co-opt actin and thus cannot infect other cells to cause illness.

Engineered Listeria Bacteria Becomes A Potent New Weapon Against Cancer


 

Josh Mitteldorf: Evidence For “Dark Energy” Challenged


 

 

Singapore’s First Shipwreck Carried A Record Haul Of China’s Rarest Porcelain


 

 

pear finch diagram

A Computational Trick Lets Scientists Refocus Holograms After They Have Already Been Recorded


 

 

Wolf Teeth Reveal A Hidden Cost Of Warmer Winters


 

HAL from 2001

When Chatbots Join The Delusion: How AI Can Hallucinate With Us, Not Just At Us


 

 

solar panel installation

Next-Gen Solar Panels Could Slash Billions Of Tonnes Of CO₂ From Their Own Manufacturing


 

woman grabbing her side

When Diabetes Comes For The Kidneys, Blood Chemistry Tells The Story First


 

 

a clock and dots connected by a wavy line, indicating how cells tell time

When Your Cells Fix Broken DNA Depends On The Time Of Day

 

 

 

 

 

 

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kh6jrmAuthor kh6jrm@gmail.comPosted on February 14, 2026Categories Environment and Earth News, Science and Technology News, Space and Astronomy News, UncategorizedTags ScienceBlog.com NewsletterLeave a comment on ScienceBlog.com Newsletter

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I am the retired news director of Pacific Radio Group stations on the Island of Hawaii. I am a retired Lt. Col., USAF Reserve. I am a FCC-licensed Amateur Radio Operator, holding the Amateur Extra Class License. I am a substitute teacher for the state of Hawaii Department of Education.

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