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学英语必须去的网站Scientific American: 60-Second Science

60-Second Science 

      这是一个学习英语很好的网站,每天60秒的科学新闻,标准的美音,广播语速虽然有点快,但是听一两周后就会习惯了,它还有文本,刚开始可以边听边看。坚持一年左右你就可以成为英语高手了,呵呵。我只提供了部分的链接,它的播放器转不了,你可以点下面的标题直接进入听。

 
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  • 60-Second Science  7/24/09

    Fish Shrink to Beat Heat

    A study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences finds that the planet's warming oceans are inducing fish to get smaller as a strategy to deal with increased temperature. Karen Hopkin reports
  • 60-Second Science  7/23/09

    Artificial Gravity Slows Muscle Loss

    A study in the Journal of Applied Physiology found that spinning bedridden volunteers in a centrifuge to mimic gravity stopped the muscle loss associated with weightlessness. Steve Mirsky reports
  • 60-Second Science  7/22/09

    What's on TV Is Biomedical Bonus

    A study in the journal Green Chemistry shows that a substance recovered from old liquid crystal displays, PVA, has multiple medical uses. Cynthia Graber reports
  • 60-Second Science  7/21/09

    Raindrop Sizes Surprises

    A study in the journal Nature Physics shows that raindrop size distribution is a function of large drops disintegrating as they fall. Karen Hopkin reports

  • 60-Second Science  7/17/09

    Jockey Positions Speed Up Horses

    A study in the journal Science claims that the movement of jockeys out of phase with their horses eases the horse's workload and accounts for up to 7 percent of the decrease in race times over the last century. Karen Hopkin reports

  • 60-Second Science  7/16/09

    Wastewater Analysis for Drug Abuse Evidence

    A study in the journal Addiction shows that a viable system for measuring the consumption of illegal drugs in various communities is to analyze samples of untreated wastewater--which contains the leftovers. Steve Mirsky reports

  • 60-Second Science  7/15/09

    The Myth of Multitasking

    A study in the journal Neuron shows that when we think we're getting better at multitasking, we're really getting faster at switching back and forth between two different things at different times. Karen Hopkin reports

  • 60-Second Science  7/14/09

    Cat Call Coerces Can Opening

    A study in the journal Current Biology finds that some cat purrs include a high-frequency plaintive component that gets people to do cats' bidding. Karen Hopkin reports

  • 60-Second Science  7/13/09

    Profanity Bleeps Physical Pain

    A study in the journal NeuroReport finds that using socially unacceptable "swear words" has physical effects that enable the swearer to tolerate pain better. Adam Hinterthuer reports


  • 60-Second Science  7/9/09

    Poll: Science, Though Beneficial, Losing Importance

    The American public likes science, but thinks that its achievements are less important than they were a decade ago. That's according to telephone surveys conducted by the Pew Research Center and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Steve Mirsky reports

  • 60-Second Science  7/8/09

    Are Parasites to Thank for Sex?

    A study in the journal The American Naturalist implies that parasites helped drive the development of sex, because the shuffling of genes gives sex-produced progeny an advantage over asexual genetic clones. Cynthia Graber reports

  • 60-Second Science  7/7/09

    Really Mass Media

    In London last week at the World Conference of Science Journalists, Philip Hilts, the director of the Knight Science Journalism Program at M.I.T., reviewed the worldwide state of Internet and cell phone use, two of the major ways people now get news

  • 60-Second Science  7/6/09

    Future of Science Coverage

    At the World Conference of Science Journalists in London last week, outgoing Scientific American Editor in Chief John Rennie talked to writers about the future of what they do, remarks that also pertain to this podcast. Steve Mirsky reports


  • 60-Second Science  7/2/09

    Rain Zone Moving North

    An article in Nature Geoscience predicts that the rainiest area on Earth, the intertropical convergence zone, is moving steadily north. Christie Nicholson reports

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