«
Some scientists suggested the tools became valuable in themselves because they were associated with food,» he says.
Not exact matches
But those early temperatures are now a
tool unto themselves, helping
scientists tease out when humans might have started to warm Earth's climate — and
suggesting that the warming may be greater than first thought.
Still, the hunt for nonterran life could be accomplished with a
tool familiar in any biology lab,
scientists suggested here yesterday at the Lunar and Planetary Science Conference and in a paper in press at Astrobiology.
«These findings are important because they
suggest that we may have another
tool in our toolbox to combat childhood obesity,» says psychological
scientist and lead researcher Jennifer A. Silvers, a post-doctoral fellow at Columbia University in the laboratory of Professor Kevin Ochsner.
These findings, which will be discussed during an oral poster presentation,
suggest that hair samples may provide
scientists with a simple, non-invasive
tool for determining if and how cortisol is linked to poorer pregnancy outcomes.
While both studies are bad news for many women, Horvath
suggests that
scientists in the future may use the epigenetic clock as a diagnostic
tool to evaluate the effects of therapies, like hormone therapy for menopause.
Scientists suggest that the discovery is relevant as it
suggests that humans were making
tools much earlier than when the genus Homo came into existence.
That
suggests these ancient
tools could have been family «heirlooms,» the
scientists say.
For instance, as
suggested on the Learning
Scientists blog, upgrade how flashcards are used as a review
tool.