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La dieta africana "riduce l'infiammazione" in sole due settimane

La dieta africana "riduce l'infiammazione" in sole due settimane

29 Aprile 2025

Un'alimentazione tipica africana, abbondante di ortaggi, fibre e alimenti fermentati,...

Un semplice test potrebbe prevedere meglio il rischio di malattie cardiache

Un semplice test potrebbe prevedere meglio il rischio di malattie cardiache

29 Aprile 2025

Per quasi 60 anni, la misurazione dei livelli di colesterolo...

Nasce il Parco Nazionale del Matese, un obiettivo importante atteso da anni

Nasce il Parco Nazionale del Matese, un obiettivo importante atteso da anni

29 Aprile 2025

Per il WWF questo rappresenta un importante passo in avanti...

Le sorprendenti proprietà dei cristalli liquidi attivi

Le sorprendenti proprietà dei cristalli liquidi attivi

28 Aprile 2025

a) Esempio di emulsione doppia la cui direzione del moto...

The most distant twin of the Milky Way ever observed

The most distant twin of the Milky Way ever observed

24 Aprile 2025

An international team led by the University of Geneva (UNIGE)...

Una nuova tecnologia per la rimozione di contaminanti dall'acqua

Una nuova tecnologia per la rimozione di contaminanti dall'acqua

24 Aprile 2025

Filtri basati sull'ossido di grafene, un nanomateriale in grado di...

I pesci sbadigliano… e si contagiano a vicenda: una scoperta che riscrive l’evoluzione del comportamento sociale

I pesci sbadigliano… e si contagiano a vicenda: una scoperta che riscrive l’evoluzione del comportamento sociale

23 Aprile 2025

La ricerca coordinata dall’Università di Pisa pubblicata su Communications Biology....

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Venerdì, 01 Settembre 2017
Venerdì, 01 Settembre 2017 14:25

Protecting minors online, a vital but tough case

Children are susceptible to online crime and abuse. The key to protecting these inexperienced internet users is to build more robust, easy-to-manage security and privacy features into browsers. EU-funded researchers are on the case. The ENCASE project is leveraging the latest advances in online security and privacy to design and implement a browser-based architecture for protecting youngsters from predators frequenting social networks, as well as other internet menaces. Key to the new developments being explored by the Cyprus-led team is ease-of-use, so guardians, whether at home or school, can easily activate and manage browser settings. To do this, they plan to develop a user-centric architecture (design, test and organise websites guided by user needs) focusing on distinct services, which can be combined to form what the team calls “an effective protective net” against, for example, cyber-bullying and lurid or abusive acts.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

In a bid to foster a more sustainable and competitive olive-oil sector, the EU-funded BeFOre project is developing a molecular database of the most resilient olive varieties that have the highest agronomical potential. Over 1 200 varieties of olive are currently cultivated globally. For those interested in the molecular and agronomical aspects of the olive, this which makes it difficult to find agreed data As agricultural production faces new demands, variants of olive with a high resilience to climate change or relevance for functional foods are of particular interest to the olive-growing sector.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline
Venerdì, 01 Settembre 2017 14:03

How Neanderthals made the very first glue

The world’s oldest known glue was made by Neanderthals. But how did they make it 200,000 years ago? Leiden archaeologists have discovered three possible ways. Publication in Scientific Reports, 31 August. A Neanderthal spear is predominantly made up of two parts, a piece of flint for the point, and a stick for the shaft. But one aspect is often overlooked, and has recently been puzzling archaeologists: the glue that fixes the point to the shaft. For this, Neanderthals used tar from birch bark, a material that researchers often assumed was complex and difficult to make.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

 

 

A new study led by the University of Southampton has shed light on the swimming style of a prehistoric sea creature by creating a robot to mimic its movements.
 A Southampton team including Luke Muscutt, a PhD student in Engineering and the Environment, worked with partners at the University of Bristol to analyse the propulsion method of plesiosaurs –marine reptiles that lived at the same time as dinosaurs and died out more than 65 million years ago.
Plesiosaurs are unique among vertebrates because they used two near-identical pairs of flippers to propel themselves through the water – whereas other animals, including existing species such as turtles and sea lions, have differently constructed front and back sets, using the front ones mainly for thrust and the back ones for steering. However, the propulsion dynamics of the plesiosaur have long been debated, with various theories proposed since the 1950s.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

 

Making a biocell that is as effective as a platinum fuel cell: that’s the feat that researchers in the Laboratoire de Bioénergétique et Ingénierie des Protéines (CNRS/Aix-Marseille Université) have achieved, in collaboration with the Centre de Recherche Paul Pascal (CNRS/Université de Bordeaux) and the Institut Universitaire des Systèmes Thermiques Industriels (CNRS/Aix-Marseille Université). Three years after making their first prototype biocell, the researchers have just reached a new milestone and increased its performance and stability. This biocell could, in the long run, offer an alternative to fuel cells that require rare and costly metals, such as platinum. Their work was published in Energy & Environmental Science on August 17, 2017. A fuel cell converts chemical energy into electrical energy via hydrogen combustion. Though it is considered to be a clean technology – because it does not emit greenhouse gases – fuel cells do use costly rare metal catalysts1, such as platinum, to oxidize hydrogen and reduce oxygen. In recent years, the identification of biocatalysts, enzymes with remarkable properties, has revitalized research in this area: their oxygen, and especially hydrogen, transformation activity is comparable to that of platinum.  Hydrogenase activity was, until recently, inhibited by oxygen and therefore incompatible with use in cells.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

The drugs enter rivers and lakes from treatment plants and sewage overflows, threatening aquatic life, scientists say

Human antidepressants are building up in the brains of bass, walleye and several other fish common to the Great Lakes region, scientists say. In a new study, researchers detected high concentrations of these drugs and their metabolized remnants in the brain tissue of 10 fish species found in the Niagara River. This vital conduit connects two of the Great Lakes, Lake Erie and Lake Ontario, via Niagara Falls. The discovery of antidepressants in aquatic life in the river raises serious environmental concerns, says lead scientist Diana Aga, PhD, the Henry M. Woodburn Professor of chemistry in the University at Buffalo College of Arts and Sciences. "These active ingredients from antidepressants, which are coming out from wastewater treatment plants, are accumulating in fish brains," Aga says. "It is a threat to biodiversity, and we should be very concerned.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

Medicina

Un semplice test potrebbe prevedere meglio il rischio di malattie cardiache

Un semplice test potrebbe prevedere meglio il rischio di malattie cardiache

29 Aprile 2025

Per quasi 60 anni, la misurazione dei livelli di colesterolo...

Paleontologia

Continuità culturale ma distanza genetica. Il DNA antico sfida le convinzioni consolidate sullo stretto legame tra i fenici e le comunità puniche

Continuità culturale ma distanza genetica. Il DNA antico sfida le convinzioni consolidate sullo stretto legame tra i fenici e le comunità puniche

24 Aprile 2025

Una ricerca condotta da un team internazionale e pubblicata sulla rivista “Nature” apre nuove...

Geografia e Storia

Costa atlantica dell’Africa: le variazioni del livello del mare negli ultimi 30mila anni a seguito dai cambiamenti climatici e dalla fusione delle calotte glaciali

Costa atlantica dell’Africa: le variazioni del livello del mare negli ultimi 30mila anni a seguito dai cambiamenti climatici e dalla fusione delle calotte glaciali

08 Aprile 2025

L’Università di Pisa ha coordinato lo studio pubblicato su Nature Communications. Il livello attuale...

Astronomia e Spazio

Scienze Naturali e Ambiente

Nasce il Parco Nazionale del Matese, un obiettivo importante atteso da anni

Nasce il Parco Nazionale del Matese, un obiettivo importante atteso da anni

29 Aprile 2025

Per il WWF questo rappresenta un importante passo in avanti per...

 

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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