Wednesday, October 26, 2016

Donald Trump Is the First Demagogue of the Anthropocene and other top stories.

  • Donald Trump Is the First Demagogue of the Anthropocene

    Lately I’ve been thinking back to something that John Kerry told The Atlantic’s editor in chief, Jeffrey Goldberg, earlier this year. Asked about the importance of the Middle East to the United States, Kerry answered entirely about the Islamic State.“Imagine what would happen if we don’t stand and fight [ISIS],” he said: If we didn’t do that, you could have allies and friends of ours fall. You could have a massive migration into Europe that destroys Europe, leads to the pure destruction of Euro..
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  • [ October 19, 2016 ] ESA celebrates ExoMars orbiter success, keeps vigil for lost lander News

    [ October 19, 2016 ] ESA celebrates ExoMars orbiter success, keeps vigil for lost lander News
    Artist’s concept of the ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter firing its main engine to enter orbit around Mars. Credit: ESA/ATG medialab A European-built orbiter designed to seek out the source of methane on Mars slipped into orbit around the red planet Wednesday after a seven-month interplanetary journey, but mission control lost contact with an experimental landing probe just before touchdown. Both spacecraft — part of the joint European-Russian ExoMars program — reached Mars around the same time Wednes..
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  • Monkeys spotted making stone tools thought to be unique to humans

    Monkeys spotted making stone tools thought to be unique to humans
    Stone flakes excite archaeologists hunting for early human artifacts. The razor-sharp edges that suggest deliberate creation point to someone with skills. Generally, that someone is human.But stone flake production might not be so special, according to a paper published Wednesday in the journal Nature. Capuchin monkeys can make stone flakes too."It's an incredibly interesting behavior," says study lead author Tomos Proffitt, an archaeologist at the University of Oxford. "Another species is maki..
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  • What Mars Maps Got Right (and Wrong) Through Time

    What Mars Maps Got Right (and Wrong) Through Time
    Tracing the history of Mars maps is like taking a visual tour of how our thinking about the red planet has changed. Each new telescope and space mission brought about a leap in understanding that is reflected in the maps that followed. These days our knowledge about Earth's second closest neighbor in the solar system grows by the hour, as the Curiosity and Opportunity rovers explore the Martian surface with five active satellites orbiting above them. And on October 19, the fleet grew by at le..
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  • Accidental discovery could be renewable energy breakthrough

    Accidental discovery could be renewable energy breakthrough
    In an unexpected twist of fate, scientists at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory have developed a process to turn carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas, into ethanol fuel — a breakthrough with implications for the future of renewable energy.That discovery, which occurred in 2014 and has been replicated multiple times since then in the nanotechnology lab Oak Ridge, Tennessee, is explained in full in a new study published in ChemistrySelect.The finding was serendipitous, lead stu..
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  • 2 quake faults in the Bay Area could rupture together, causing major devastation, scientists say

    2 quake faults in the Bay Area could rupture together, causing major devastation, scientists say
    The most dangerous earthquake fault in the San Francisco Bay Area is connected to another, which means both could rupture simultaneously and unleash major devastation, a new study finds.The Hayward Fault has long been considered a threat because it runs under densely populated neighborhoods east of San Francisco. The new study found that beneath San Pablo Bay, it joins with a second, less active underground fracture to the north. Scientists had already considered the possibility of both faults..
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  • NASA's Juno Probe Sidelined Just Before Jupiter Flyby

    NASA's Juno Probe Sidelined Just Before Jupiter Flyby
    NASA's Juno spacecraft has encountered its second problem at Jupiter in less than a week. The probe went into a protective "safe mode" at 1:47 a.m. EDT (0547 GMT) this morning (Oct. 19), preventing the spacecraft from gathering any data during today's ...
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Bill Clinton to host public campaign rallies Friday in Cincinnati ... .Google's Chromebooks Are Selling Better Than Apple's Macs .
HP makes the Envy name premium again with new laptops, all-in-one, monitor .Apple Watch News & Update: Nike+ Edition Available On October 28; Features & Details Here! [VIDEO] .

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