ea

stealth kill




ea

the pea




ea

dearest




ea

Cloud of Death




ea

the sword that cannot be sheathed




ea

Caveat emptor




ea

Owlbear




ea

deadfall




ea

Game of Death




ea

the Burning Jewels of Death




ea

habeas corpus




ea

Outreach




ea

Appeal to heaven




ea

Chauncey, Earl of Gloom




ea

panacea




ea

the Fog of Meat




ea

hereafter




ea

throne of heaven




ea

"Weathercock"




ea

Nearly




ea

Moonbeams




ea

Heats




ea

Do not clean




ea

Magical Fuck-beasts reviewed




ea

Hero of the Beach




ea

Meanwhile in Hell




ea

Beasts of Prey




ea

Wild Yeast




ea

dream lover




ea

Red leather, Yellow leather




ea

Yeah, bye




ea

100 years later




ea

Bread Alone




ea

touch of fear




ea

Cleavage




ea

Feather Boa




ea

Dead wood




ea

Sexy Wet Adventures of Ocean Man




ea

death rattle




ea

and even death




ea

The Cleansing




ea

UB chemist awarded $2 million NIH grant for enzyme research

A University at Buffalo-led research team is studying the details of how enzymes perform their job. The focus of the project is on understanding the molecular interactions that enable enzymes to accelerate chemical reactions.




ea

The Medical Minute: Is 'impossible' meat too good to be true?

It sizzles on the grill. But does it fizzle in terms of nutrition? That's the question when it comes to the new burgers made of plant-based meat substitutes that are flying off grocery store shelves and restaurant tables.




ea

New Centers Lead the Way towards a Quantum Future

The Department of Energy (DOE) recently announced that it will establish Quantum Information Science Centers to help lay the foundation for these technologies. As Congress put forth in the National Quantum Initiative Act, the DOE's Office of Science will make awards for at least two and up to five centers.




ea

Tiny, ancient meteorites suggest early Earth's atmosphere was rich in carbon dioxide

Tiny meteorites that fell to Earth 2.7 billion years ago suggest that the atmosphere at that time was high in carbon dioxide, which agrees with current understanding of how our planet's atmospheric gases changed over time.




ea

Smaller Detection Device Effective for Nuclear Treaty Verification, Archaeology Digs

Most nuclear data measurements are performed at accelerators large enough to occupy a geologic formation a kilometer wide. But a portable device that can reveal the composition of materials quickly on-site would greatly benefit cases such as in archaeology and nuclear arms treaty verification. Research published this week in AIP Advances used computational simulations to show that with the right geometric adjustments, it is possible to perform accurate neutron resonance transmission analysis in a device just 5 meters long.




ea

Factors affecting female bear harvest rates

Examining the factors that affect the number of females being harvested during the bear hunting season will help Pennsylvania wildlife officials manage population.




ea

Robot sweat regulates temperature, key for extreme conditions

Just when it seemed like robots couldn't get any cooler, Cornell University researchers have created a soft robot muscle that can regulate its temperature through sweating.




ea

UC San Diego Health Launches Drone Transport Program with UPS, Matternet

UC San Diego Health launches pilot project using drones to move medical samples, supplies and documents between Jacobs Medical Center, Moores Cancer Center and the Center for Advanced Laboratory Medicine, speeding delivery of services and patient care currently managed through ground transport.




ea

Not Dead; Or, Making Sure Life Signs Continue

In short… I overdid it last year. I wrote two new books for publication in the first six months. Also during that time I expanded a previously written book by at least 25%, a lot of reference material for which didn’t really exist yet. Over the rest of the year, I wrote the second half […]