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#SciAmBlogs Wednesday - singing mice, fungal civiliization, icefish, chestnut clock, addiction predisposition, not-so-fast neutrinos, and more.

This article was published in Scientific American’s former blog network and reflects the views of the author, not necessarily those of Scientific American


I am sure you will love today's new Video of the Week!

- Scicurious - And you can tell everybody, this is your mouse’s song

 


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- Rob Dunn - A Science Miniseries: The Big Story of Alcohol, Civilization and a Little Fungus

 

- Bora Zivkovic - Chestnut Tree Circadian Clock Stops In WinterandTomorrow in Charlotte: ‘How the Web is Changing the Way Science Is Communicated, Taught and Done.’

 

- David Wogan - Fracking gets the NMA Taiwan animation treatment

 

- James Byrne - The bacteria in your belly Pt. 2 – Adults

 

- Cassie Rodenberg - My genetic profile says I’d be a heroin addict

 

- Krystal D'Costa - Ashes, Yarmulkes and the Hijab: Communitas and Religious Symbols

 

- Lucas Brouwers - Antarctica’s Erratic Climate Shaped Icefish Evolution

 

- Kelly Oakes - Faster-than-light neutrinos explained?

 

- Caleb A. Scharf - Superluminal Neutrino Result Caused by Faulty Connection?

 

- John Matson - Could GPS Problems Explain Seemingly Faster-Than-Light Neutrinos?

 

- Mark Fischetti - Being Happy: Social and Natural Factors Are More Important than Money (Especially in Costa Rica)

 

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