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By Alan, on October 27th, 2010% (Economic Research Service, USDA)
Tobacco may be the plant we all love to hate, but researchers at the University of Western Ontario (UWO) in London have confirmed properties of tobacco that make it a potential natural alternative to traditional commercial pesticides. This potential as a pesticide can also provide tobacco farmers with another, . . . → Read More: Researchers Process Tobacco Into Organic Pesticide
By Alan, on October 27th, 2010% (University of Manchester)
An engineering professor at University of Manchester in the U.K. has invented a portable scanner based on radio frequency (microwave) technology, which can show in a second the presence of tumors -– both malignant and benign -– in the breast of a patient on a computer. The device can be . . . → Read More: Portable Scanner Enables Quicker Breast Cancer Detection
By Alan, on October 27th, 2010% (A. Kotok)
Fish farming on an industrial scale can inflict environmental damage, even when the industry’s best practices are being applied, according to the first global assessment of marine fin fish aquaculture released today. Fin fish include species such as salmon, cod, and turbot.
John Volpe, a marine ecologist, and his team at the . . . → Read More: Report: Large-Scale Fish Farming Increases Enviro Damage
By Alan, on October 27th, 2010% (U.S. Mint)
EUREKA, an intergovernmental consortium of European and neighboring organizations focused on research and development, approved funding €51 million ($US 70.4 million) for 56 new projects next year.
The projects were selected by EUREKA’s High Level Group Representatives and National Project Coordinators from 40 countries. The funded R&D projects covered the fields . . . → Read More: Europe R&D Network Approves 2011 Funding Targets
By Alan, on October 26th, 2010% (USTR.gov)
A study by an engineering professor at University of Washington (UW) in Seattle found that 25 commonly used scented products emit an average of 17 chemicals each, including some toxic substances. Only in a few instances were the potentially dangerous chemicals disclosed on the product labels. All were widely used brands, with . . . → Read More: Study: Scented Products Stink with Unlisted Chemicals
By Alan, on October 26th, 2010% The European Commission’s 2010 “EU Industrial R&D Investment Scoreboard” shows that R&D investment by the world’s top 1,400 companies dropped by nearly 2 percent in the companies’ 2009 fiscal years, but with pharmaceutical/biotech companies and companies in Asian countries increasing their R&D spending.
The worldwide economic recession, the report indicates, is taking its toll on . . . → Read More: Worldwide Corporate R&D Drops, Pharma/Biotech Bucks Trend
By Alan, on October 26th, 2010% PET scanner (U.S. Department of Energy)
Clarity Pharmaceuticals Pty Ltd, a new company in Australia, has licensed technology developed by the University of Melbourne and the Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation (ANSTO). The technology involves compounds developed by scientists from ANSTO and the University of Melbourne for use in positron emission tomography.
. . . → Read More: Start Up Licenses Nuclear Imaging Drug Compounds
By Alan, on October 26th, 2010% Tidal turbine illustration (Isis Innovation)
A new enterprise, Kepler Energy Limited, has been formed in the U.K. to develop a tidal turbine, a result of research in Oxford University’s Department of Engineering Science. Professors Guy Houlsby, Martin Oldfield, and Malcolm McCulloch developed the turbine (pictured right), which they say has the potential to . . . → Read More: Oxford University Spins Off Tidal Turbine Company
By Alan, on October 26th, 2010% 7 transmembrane receptor, a type of GPCR (NIH)
Omeros Corporation, a Seattle, Washington biopharmaceutical company focused on inflammation and disorders of the central nervous system, says it has received $20 million from Vulcan Capital and a grant award for $5 million from Washington State’s Life Sciences Discovery Fund (LSDF) to finance the company’s . . . → Read More: Drug Discovery Company Lands $25M in Private, State Funding
By Alan, on October 25th, 2010% Marcellus shale gas well in West Virginia (dep.wv.gov)
University at Buffalo (UB) researchers have found indications that the process called hydraulic fracturing or “fracking” to release natural gas from Marcellus shale deposits can cause naturally trapped uranium inside the shale to be released. The findings add to the environmental concerns about the process, . . . → Read More: Study: Hydraulic Fracturing Can Release Uranium from Shale
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Welcome to Science & Enterprise Science and Enterprise is an online news service begun in 2010, created for researchers and business people interested in taking scientific knowledge to the marketplace.
On the site’s posts published six days a week, you find research discoveries destined to become new products and services, as well as news about finance, intellectual property, regulations, and employment.
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