Science & Technology
In Distracted: The Erosion of Attention and the Coming Dark Age, Jackson explores the effects of "our high-speed, overloaded, split-focus and even cybercentric society" on attention. It's not a pretty picture: a never-ending stream of phone calls, e-mails, instant messages, text messages and tweets is part of an institutionalized culture of interruption, and makes it hard to concentrate and think creatively.

Comet Lulin passing just north of the bright star Zubenelgenubi (alpha2 Librae) on 2/6/09
Comet Lulin (C/2007 N3) is approaching Earth for a 38-million-mile close encounter on Feb. 24, 2009. At the moment it is glowing like a 6th magnitude star, dimly visible to the unaided eye and a fine target for binoculars and backyard telescopes.
Comet Lulin is now visible to the naked eye from dark-sky sites. "This morning, Feb 6th, I noticed a faint smudge above Zubenelgenubi," reports Jeff Barton from the Comanche Springs Astronomy Campus in West Texas. "I then trained my 9x63 binoculars on the fuzzy patch. Yep, nailed it! I was thrilled to finally bag Comet Lulin without optical aid."
Stefan Seip took the picture from Welzheim, Germany. Note the gray shadow, lower-right, intruding on what should be a uniformly-lit full Moon. This kind of eclipse is not as dramatic as a deep-red total lunar eclipse, but it does have a subtle, almost-surprising beauty which should not be dismissed until you've seen one with your own eyes.
"Life is cosmically abundant and was brought to the earth by comets and our genes and those of all living forms on earth were brought by comets, neatly-packaged within cosmic microorganisms," professor N Chandra Wickramasinghe, Director, Cardiff Centre for Atrobiology, Cardiff University, said.
The astrobiologist speaking at Nehru Planetarium said, "Our genetic ancestors still lurk amidst the stars, and molecular biology is being deployed to trace connections between different species in search of a Last Universal Common Ancestor (LUCA) for all life on the Earth."
Part of the mystery and allure of dinosaurs is their (relatively) sudden disappearance from the face of the Earth at the end of the Late Cretaceous epoch, 65m years ago. Many theories have been expounded to explain their sudden departure, with more fanciful ones including a build-up of methane from herbivorous dinosaur farts, mass blindness from cataracts, or an eradication of plantlife due to a global infestation of caterpillars.
It is, however, now widely accepted that the most likely cause of this mass extinction event (which, in fact, not only eradicated dinosaurs but 75% or more of all land-based animal species) is the impact of a huge meteorite that struck Earth around the coast of what is now the Yucatán peninsula in south-east Mexico.
Researchers from the University's Astbury Centre for Structural Molecular Biology and from the University of Tokyo have for the first time identified key elements of dynein's structure, and the winch-like mechanism by which it moves.
The research - funded by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council and the Wellcome Trust - is published in the latest issue of Cell.
"The cargo spacecraft's remaining fragments fell into the Pacific Ocean after re-entry into the Earth's atmosphere is 11:19 a.m. Moscow time [81:49 GMT]," Mission Control said.
The Progress M-01M cargo spacecraft undocked on Friday from the International Space Station and served as a temporary space lab before its "burial" in the Pacific Ocean.
The team at the University of Texas in Austin, in collaboration with the Ethiopian government, completed the first high-resolution computed tomography or CT scan of the human ancestor, who lived 3.2 million years ago.
"These scans we've completed at the University of Texas permit us to look at the internal architecture -- how her bones are built," anthropology professor John Kappelman, who helped lead the work scanning all 80 pieces of the skeleton, told Reuters in an interview.

Underwater archeologist Mark Holley investigates a circle of stones on the Grand Traverse Bay floor near Traverse City, Mich. Scientists are not sure whether the stones were arranged by humans or natural forces
Forty feet below the surface of Lake Michigan in Grand Traverse Bay, a mysterious pattern of stones can be seen rising from an otherwise sandy half-mile of lake floor.
Likely the stones are a natural feature. But the possibility they are not has piqued the interest of archeologists, native tribes and state officials since underwater archeologist Mark Holley found the site in 2007 during a survey of the lake bottom.
The site recently has become something of an Internet sensation, thanks to a blogger who noticed an archeological paper on the topic and described the stones as "underwater Stonehenge."








