Here are some true science stories you may have missed during the past year, mostly drawn from the pages of the journal Science:
Articles with 1998
The day the Furbies said ‘no’
Friday at New York’s FAO Schwartz on Fifth Avenue, Hasbro’s Tiger Electronics division unveiled Furby — a “cuddly stand-alone animatronic pet” that will sell for approximately $30.
Losing it in the translation
Can machines translate human languages?
Listening for the music of creation
The 11 p.m. weather report said there might be breaks in the clouds before dawn.
A word from the heavenly Gates
Moses went up the mountain. There God gave him Ten Commandments carved into stone tablets. The tablets were labeled “Version 1.0.”
Can we ever make amends?
A decade ago, landscape photographer Peter Goin was granted access to several of America’s most restricted nuclear weapons facilities. His visits resulted in a haunting book of color photographs called “Nuclear Landscapes.”
Mother Nature can use some help
Seven a.m. The meadow mists are tinged gold by the rising sun. I cross the plank bridge over Queset Brook, skirt the water meadow, then take the higher path through the old orchard.
A way of knowing, ways of believing
“Science Finds God,” screamed the cover of Newsweek not long ago.
The circle widens, much too late
Neanderthal. For most people, the word evokes a hulking, hairy, thick-necked brute, a “missing link” sort of creature who occupied a place on the developmental scale somewhere between the gorilla and modern man.
The moment when life ceased to be microscopic
Early in Jules Vernes’ “20,000 Leagues Under the Sea,” Captain Nemo welcomes Pierre Aronnax, professor of natural history at the Paris Museum, aboard his submarine.