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Smithsonian May 2004 Douglas Chadwick |
A Mine of Its Own Where miners used to dig, an endangered bat now flourishes, highlighting a new use for abandoned mineral sites. |
IEEE Spectrum July 2012 Jean Kumagai |
Fixing Wind Power's Bat Problem Turbines kill hundreds of thousands of bats each year, but new technology could drastically cut the toll |
Outside March 2009 Ted Genoways |
Batman Returns They say you can't go home again -- to the strange, remote, threatened South American jungle where your larger-than-life, field-scientist dad discovered an extremely rare, weird-looking species called Lophostoma schulzi. |
National Gardening Karen Dardick |
Going Batty! Gardeners are discovering that attracting bats is a smart way to control pests |
Salon.com May 10, 2001 Peter Meyers |
The pigeon protocol How the Talmud, hacker whimsy and a love of Linux inspired a group of Norwegian programmers to attach packets of computer code to birds' legs... |
Scientific American February 27, 2006 Charles Q. Choi |
Going to Bat Long known as vectors for rabies, bats may be the origin of some of the most deadly emerging viruses. Knowledge that bats can carry dangerous viruses could work to prevent epidemics. |
Science News July 6, 2002 |
TimeLine: July 2, 1932 Our friend the bat... 600 miles per hour is limit of speed for present planes... Old age may be postponed by calcium and phosphorus... |
Scientific American August 2009 Peter Brown |
Night Stalker: White-Nose Fungus in Bats -- Why It's Our Problem, Too No end in sight for the bat-killing white-nose syndrome |