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SCIENCE
Sick From Fracking? Doctors, Patients Seek AnswersMysterious fumes wafting in from outside have repeatedly sickened several nurses at a rural Pennsylvania health clinic, forcing the clinic to temporarily relocate. Like many other people living near gas wells around the country, the clinic's staff wonders whether the industry in their backyard is making them sick.SCIENCE
Chef Dan Barber chronicles his pursuit of a sustainable fish he could love and the foodie honeymoon he's enjoyed since discovering an outrageously delicious fish raised using a revolutionary farming method in Spain.
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Town's Effort To Link Fracking And Illness Falls ShortDespite residents' fears, scientists say they can't link health woes to gas wells in Dish, Texas.Medical Records Could Yield Answers On FrackingResearchers plan to mine 10 years of data on people who live near the Marcellus Shale gas wells.
A quest to find answers on fracking pollution becomes too polarizing to pursue.
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Also in Science
California's Genetically Engineered Food Label May Confuse More Than Inform
A new analysis of the labeling initiative, which may go on the ballot in November, shows that it would create a complex and nuanced set of restrictions for food companies on what "natural" food is. - READ MOREWith Gas Boom, Pennsylvania Fears New Toxic Legacy
Industry has ruined a lot of Pennsylvania's water. Coal mining companies hammered the state, leaving behind acidic water that turned thousands of miles of streams into dead zones. People in the state are looking for ways to make sure the fracking boom doesn't deal another blow to its water. - READ MOREScience And The Fracking Boom: Missing Answers
People living on the front step of the natural gas boom have the same questions: What kinds of pollutants are entering our water and air, and are those pollutants making us sick? Explore key components of the natural gas production process — and the questions scientists are asking. - READ MORENPR Series To Examine Fracking
All this week, NPR is taking a deeper look at the natural gas boom in the United States. Steve Inskeep previews the upcoming series on fracking from NPR's Science Desk. - READ MOREMaya Artwork Uncovered In A Guatemalan Forest
Archaeologists have stumbled on a room full of wall paintings and numerical calculations in the buried ninth century city of Xultun. The room was apparently an astronomer's workshop, with calculations painted on the walls counting lunar cycles and predicting eclipses. - READ MOREThe Case For A Presidential Science Debate
A group of science advocates say the American president should have the basic scientific know-how to understand policy challenges, evaluate options and devise solutions. Ira Flatow and guests discuss how a presidential science debate can help voters decide if a candidate is up for the job. - READ MOREWhy Race Could Color The Vote Against Obama
A new study shows eligible voters who favored whites over blacks- either consciously or unconsciously- also favored Republican candidates relative to Barack Obama. Psychologist Anthony Greenwald discusses the results and why racial attitudes continue to predict voter preference in 2012. - READ MORE
Can We Protect Food's Future And Improve School Lunch?
120 Giants Found Living With 86 Year Old Man
What inspired 86-year-old Brendon Grimshaw to buy an island in the Indian Ocean, replant it with 16,000 trees, grasses and lure a bunch of giant tortoises to live with him? - READ MOREWhy Was A Huge 'Rogue Earthquake' Not Destructive?
The massive 8.6 magnitude earthquake in April off the coast of Indonesia was felt from Bangladesh to Australia. But it caused little damage and no major tsunami. Seismologists studying the quake say it revealed some interesting features about how the Earth's tectonic plates move. - READ MORE|
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