Technology & Innovation News posted 1 hour ago | 0 comments
Felled mangrove trees may have doomed the coast of Myanmar
By cutting down 50,000 acres (20,235 hectares) of mangrove trees in the 1990s, and probably more since, Myanmar may have left itself much more vulnerable to last week's deadly Cyclone Nargis, according to Surin Pitsuwan, the secretary-general of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations. That shouldn't be surprising: A study appearing in Science in 2005 found that regions buffered by coastal vegetation sustain fewer deaths and less damage when they are swamped by inundations from strong storms or tsunamis, such as the one in December 2004.... [more]
The Monitor
The Monitor ep. 11--Absence of Aid from U.S.S.R. Made Cubans Slimmer [Video]
In this week's episode of Scientific American's weekly news video roundup: bad times might lead to good health, the misuses of the iPod as a unit of storage, decisions happen seven seconds earlier than you think, and hear a Neandertal speak!
Why does my cell phone make screechy noises when I place it near my computer? - 2/18/08
Podcast: 60-Second Science Cloth-Eating Fungus Could Make Fuel
Podcast: 60-Second Science Fishing Lines That Repel Sharks
Podcast: 60-Second Psych World Wide Suicide: A Self-Termination Community Grows on the Web
Podcast: 60-Second Psych Brain Images Make Inaccurate Science News Trustworthy