Ozone Gas May Signal Coming Earthquakes
By Duncan Geere, Wired UK
Seismologists hunting for ways to predict earthquakes in advance have stumbled on a potential breakthrough — detecting ozone generated by rocks fracturing deep underground.
The research, published in Applied Physics Letters, details how stone breaking apart under pressure releases ozone. The team, led by Raúl A. Baragiola, a professor of engineering physics in the University of Virginia School of Engineering and Applied Science, crushed and drilled into different types of volcanic rock, including granite, basalt, gneiss, rhyolite and quartz. They f...Ancient Cave Lion Bones Reveal Big Cats' Diet
By Andrew Curry, ScienceNOW
A quarter larger than today’s lions, the European cave lion was one of the biggest cats around 12,000 years ago. Now, an unusually sophisticated analysis of its bones is revealing what these creatures ate—and why they may have disappeared.
Although they were certainly massive cats, the term “cave lion” is a bit of a misnomer. Unlike today’s lions, males probably didn’t have manes, and they appear to have been solitary hunters. What’s more, though their bones are best preserved in caves, they probably lived in the open. But they did have one thing in common with...
Test utilisateur : deux semaines avec le BlackBerry Bold 9900
RIM renouvelle progressivement sa gamme de smartphones BlackBerry. Derniers arrivés en date, le BlackBerry Curve 9360, le BlackBerry Torch « tout tactile » 9860, et le Bold 9900, ces trois terminaux étant disponibles depuis quelques semaines en France.
C’est au dernier, le Bold 9900 que nous allons nous intéresser aujourd’hui. J’en ai un exemplaire en main depuis quelques jours et je l’ai utilisé comme smartphone principal pendant cette période. Revue de détail.
Prise en main, premières impressions
Le BlackBerry Bold 9900 est… beau. C’est la première réflexion que je me suis faite quand je l’ai e...