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²ÝÁñÉçÇø researchers retrieve fossil track of giant extinct bird | At 10:24 a.m. Monday, July 12, in the foothills northeast of Deming, the heavy-duty helicopter gently lowered a sandstone slab onto a flatbed truck on loan from Western Washington University. A safe distance away in the foothills drizzle, several members of ²ÝÁñÉçÇø's geology department… |
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iPod Oblivion | The inattentiveness of those engrossed with MP3 players, cell phones and other similar devices. |
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Fossil discovered by ²ÝÁñÉçÇø geologists proves local existence of giant flightless bird 50M years ago | |||
Dinner Tuesday to raise funds for ²ÝÁñÉçÇø X Prize team; finals begin July 19 in Michigan | |||
Words for 'canoe' point to long-lost family ties | An obscure language in Siberia has similarities to languages in North America, which might reshape history, writes Randy Boswell. A new book by leading linguists has bolstered a controversial theory that the language of Canada's Dene Nation is rooted in an ancient Asian tongue spoken… |
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Recent Language Study Shows Bering Strait Connection | A new book is presenting more evidence that a Bering Strait land bridge once connected North America with Asia. The book includes an article by Western Washington University linguistics professor Edward Vajda on his work with the isolated Ket people of Central Siberia. |
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²ÝÁñÉçÇø X PRIZE team ready for finals round to begin July 19 | |||
²ÝÁñÉçÇø X Prize team to hold fundraising dinner event July 13 in Bellingham | |||
New book claims link between Asian dialects and some Canadian native languages | A new book by a leading group of linguists has bolstered a controversial theory that the language of Canada's Dene Nation — along with those of the Navaho and Apache in the U.S., and numerous other "Athapaskan" dialects — is rooted in an ancient and highly endangered Asian tongue… |
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Green machine: The dream of green cars meets reality | Sustainable motoring, powered by battery-electric, hydrogen, or hyper-efficient combustion, promises both the convenience afforded by conventional cars and the clear conscience of reduced fossil-fuel use. The technology is ever sexy, but is it ready for the market? |