Ultimi Articoli

"Basta allevamenti intensivi": il WWF lancia la mobilitazione nazionale per cambiare il sistema

"Basta allevamenti intensivi": il WWF lancia la mobilitazione nazionale per cambiare il sistema

27 Marzo 2026

Con la campagna Our Future, l'associazione ambientalista presenta la petizione...

Alzheimer: la stimolazione elettrica può "frenare" le placche. La scoperta molecolare della Statale di Milano

Alzheimer: la stimolazione elettrica può "frenare" le placche. La scoperta molecolare della Statale di Milano

26 Marzo 2026

Una ricerca pionieristica rivela come la tDCS (stimolazione transcranica a...

Oltre lo Schermo: l’Università di Padova lancia la bussola per la crescita digitale

Oltre lo Schermo: l’Università di Padova lancia la bussola per la crescita digitale

19 Marzo 2026

In un’epoca in cui tablet e smartphone sono diventati compagni...

Foreste europee a rischio: entro il 2100 i danni da eventi estremi potrebbero raddoppiare

Foreste europee a rischio: entro il 2100 i danni da eventi estremi potrebbero raddoppiare

18 Marzo 2026

Un nuovo sguardo sul futuro degli ecosistemi boschiviUn'importante ricerca internazionale...

Global Recycling Day 2026: come trasformare la differenziata in una risorsa per il Pianeta

Global Recycling Day 2026: come trasformare la differenziata in una risorsa per il Pianeta

18 Marzo 2026

In vista della Giornata Mondiale del Riciclo del 18 marzo,...

Abissi in pericolo: il WWF chiede lo stop immediato alle trivellazioni oceaniche

Abissi in pericolo: il WWF chiede lo stop immediato alle trivellazioni oceaniche

14 Marzo 2026

In concomitanza con l'apertura della 31ª sessione del Consiglio dell'Autorità...

Marzo 2026
Venerdì, 24 Marzo 2017 15:40

Steep rise of the Bernese Alps

The striking North Face of the Bernese Alps is the result of a steep rise of rocks from the depths following a collision of two tectonic plates. This steep rise gives new insight into the final stage of mountain building and provides important knowledge with regard to active natural hazards and geothermal energy. The results from researchers at the University of Bern and ETH Zürich are being published in the «Scientific Reports» specialist journal. Mountains often emerge when two tectonic plates converge, where the denser oceanic plate subducts beneath the lighter continental plate into the earth’s mantle according to standard models. But what happens if two continental plates of the same density collide, as was the case in the area of the Central Alps during the collision between Africa and Europe?

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

Growth of colorectal cancer cells can be inhibited with the odorant troenan. This is reported by the research team headed by Prof Dr Dr Dr habil. Hanns Hatt and Dr Lea Weber from Ruhr-Universität Bochum in the journal “PLOS One”. The researchers detected the olfactory receptor OR51B4 in tumour cells taken from the rectum and colon cancer cell lines. They analysed which odorant activates the receptor and in what way the activation affects the cells. For the purpose of the study, the team from the Department for Cellphysiology in Bochum collaborated with the Department of Molecular GI-Oncology at Ruhr-Universität, headed by Prof Dr Stephan Hahn. The necessary gene sequencing was carried out by the team from the Cologne Center for Genomics.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

Algae and plants form the basis of nearly all natural food webs and ecosystems

 

A research project conducted at the University of Cologne’s Zoological Institute reveals important findings on the interaction between nutrient availability and the diversity of consumer species in freshwater environments. A better understanding of this interaction will contribute to developing possibilities to maintain biodiversity in all kinds of ecosystems. In the past decades, we have seen a dramatic decline in biodiversity around the world. Every day, species are irrecoverably lost on an unprecedented scale. This also has an impact on the stability and productivity of ecosystems. Hence it is indispensable to understand the mechanisms that impact biodiversity, particularly in the case of primary producers such as algae and plants that form the basis of nearly all natural food webs and ecosystems.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

The common frog (Rana temporaria)


Researchers at Lancaster University have found a way to detect subtle early warning signs that reveal a frog population is at risk from pollution. Worldwide, amphibian populations are declining due to habitat loss, disease and pollution which is cited as a major threat to their survival. Scientists publishing in Scientific Report, have found evidence of stress in tadpoles taken from ponds most impacted by pollution caused by nutrients and pesticides. They say the technique they used to spot these changes could offer an early warning system for populations at risk.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

In Austria alone, two or three people a day die as a result of passive smoking.

The World Health Organisation (WHO) estimates that every year 600,000 deaths are caused by passive smoking worldwide and, in Austria alone, two or three people a day die as a result of passive smoking. In a study recently published in "Scientific Reports", researchers from MedUni Vienna and the Messerli Research Institute have, for the first time, identified the organic compound acrolein (acrylic aldehyde) as one of the main causes of failure of the immune defence to tumours due to passive smoking.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

 

 

Heat map showing density of marks drawn by visitors: blue areas are rarely marked; red areas are most frequently marked). Painting: Jean-Baptiste Wicar, The judgment of Solomon. Oil on canvas, 96 × 150 cm, 1785. Palais des Beaux-Arts de Lille. Courtesy of Palais des Beaux-Arts de Lille / RMN / Julien Wylleman / Ikonikat

 

The Louvre-Lens museum and its partner, the CNRS, are conducting a novel research project during the museum’s Le Nain exhibit: The Le Nain mystery. In all, 600 museum visitors will be using tablets to highlight what most captivates their attention in seven works on display.  This tablet input collected throughout the exhibit’s duration—from 22 March to 26 June 2017—will be recorded and processed using Ikonikat software. Researchers will use it to determine whether visitors focus on the same details that professionals find most noteworthy. The findings will help the museum redefine how artwork is presented to visitors.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

 

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute scientists and their collaborators at the University of Cambridge have created a new technique that simplifies the production of human brain and muscle cells - allowing millions of functional cells to be generated in just a few days. The results published today (23 March) in Stem Cell Reports open the door to producing a diversity of new cell types that could not be made before in order to study disease. Human pluripotent stem cells offer the ability to create any tissue, including those which are typically hard to access, such as brain cells. They hold huge potential for studying human development and the impact of diseases, including cancer, Alzheimer’s, Multiple Sclerosis, and heart disease.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline
Venerdì, 24 Marzo 2017 13:56

Severe psoriasis predominantly affects men

Marcus Schmitt-Egenolf is a researcher at the Department of Public Health and Clinical Medicine at Umeå University and senior author of the study.

 

The fact that men are overrepresented in psoriasis registers and consume more psoriasis care have long led researchers to believe that the common skin disease disproportionally affects men. A unique study with 5,438 Swedish psoriasis patients now reveals that women have a statistically significant lower incidence of severe psoriasis compared to men. The study, conducted by researchers at Umeå University and Karolinska Institutet, is published in the American Journal of Clinical Dermatology. “Our results tell us that the well-established gender differences in the utilization of psoriasis care can at least partially be explained by a higher prevalence of more severe disease in men,” says Marcus Schmitt-Egenolf, who is researcher at the Department of Public Health and Clinical Medicine at Umeå University and senior author of the study.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline
Giovedì, 23 Marzo 2017 12:58

Prossima fermata Venere

NASA e IKI progettano i prossimi passi di Venera D, la missione spaziale deputata all'esplorazione ddi Venere, pronta a volare nel 2026. L'obiettivo sarà studiare il suo clima grazie all'uso di un orbiter, un lander e un veicolo che plani nell'atmosfera.

Washington e Mosca fanno rotta su Venere. L’Agenzia spaziale americana e la IKI - Russian Academy of Sciences’ Space Research Institute – sono a lavoro per stilare l’agenda dei prossimi appuntamenti con lo spazio: il primo obiettivo condiviso sarà definire i prossimi passi per lo sviluppo della missione Venera D – la prima sonda con destinazione Venere progettata per essere lanciata nel 2026 dalla Russia ed erede della generazione delle Venera, spedite dalla vecchia Unione Sovietica.

Pubblicato in Astronomia

Magetic field model/Magnetic anomaly (ESA)


Satellites have been mapping the upper part of the Earth magnetic field by collecting data for three years and found some amazing features about the Earth’s crust. The result is the release of highest resolution map of this field seen from space to date. This ‘lithospheric magnetic field’ is very weak and therefore difficult to detect and map from space. But with the Swarm satellites it has been possible. “By combining Swarm measurements with historical data from the German CHAMP satellite, and using a new modelling technique, it was possible to extract the tiny magnetic signals of crustal magnetization with unprecedented accuracy,” said professor Nils Olsen from the Technical University of Denmark (DTU), one of the team of scientists behind the new map that has just been released at a Swarm Science Meeting in Banff, Canada.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

Medicina

Alzheimer: la stimolazione elettrica può "frenare" le placche. La scoperta molecolare della Statale di Milano

Alzheimer: la stimolazione elettrica può "frenare" le placche. La scoperta molecolare della Statale di Milano

26 Marzo 2026

Una ricerca pionieristica rivela come la tDCS (stimolazione transcranica a...

Paleontologia

I denti come specchio dell'antica Sumer: dieta, infanzia e società ad Abu Tbeirah

I denti come specchio dell'antica Sumer: dieta, infanzia e società ad Abu Tbeirah

13 Marzo 2026

Un'indagine internazionale coordinata dall'Università La Sapienza di Roma, pubblicata sulla rivista PNAS, ha gettato...

Geografia e Storia

Dagli Ipogei del Tepui venezuelano ai terreni marziani: un protocollo innovativo per l'indagine di siti estremi

Dagli Ipogei del Tepui venezuelano ai terreni marziani: un protocollo innovativo per l'indagine di siti estremi

15 Dicembre 2025

Un team internazionale ha applicato metodologie analitiche portatili avanzate per esaminare in situ le...

Astronomia e Spazio

Destinazione Giove: a Roma nasce lo SWIM Lab per scovare oceani extraterrestri

Destinazione Giove: a Roma nasce lo SWIM Lab per scovare oceani extraterrestri

30 Dicembre 2025

Inaugurato presso l'Università Roma Tre un centro di eccellenza mondiale: studierà...

Scienze Naturali e Ambiente

"Basta allevamenti intensivi": il WWF lancia la mobilitazione nazionale per cambiare il sistema

"Basta allevamenti intensivi": il WWF lancia la mobilitazione nazionale per cambiare il sistema

27 Marzo 2026

Con la campagna Our Future, l'associazione ambientalista presenta la petizione "Basta...

 

Scienzaonline con sottotitolo Sciencenew  - Periodico
Autorizzazioni del Tribunale di Roma – diffusioni:
telematica quotidiana 229/2006 del 08/06/2006
mensile per mezzo stampa 293/2003 del 07/07/2003
Scienceonline, Autorizzazione del Tribunale di Roma 228/2006 del 29/05/06
Pubblicato a Roma – Via A. De Viti de Marco, 50 – Direttore Responsabile Guido Donati

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