News | Space  | Reliance on Indirect Evidence Fuels Dark Matter Doubts Pinning down the universe's missing mass remains one of cosmology's biggest challenges By Bruce Dorminey | Ask the Experts | More Science  | How Can Winter Storm Forecasting Be Improved? As the northeastern U.S. continues to dig itself out from the Christmas-weekend blizzard, Scientific American looks at how meteorologists track such storms By Larry Greenemeier | News | Health  | Body Under General Anesthesia Tracks Closer to Coma than Sleep Studying brain waves and physiologic patterns in patients under general anesthesia might help researchers build new neurological models of disorders, such as comas and insomnia By Katherine Harmon | Advertisement (Newsletter continues below)  | News | Energy & Sustainability  | Abandoned Uranium Mines: An 'Overwhelming Problem' in the Navajo Nation A look at one uranium mine shows how difficult it will be to clean up the reservation's hundreds of abandoned Cold War-era mines By Francie Diep | Scientific American Mind | Mind & Brain Calendar: MIND events in January and February Museum exhibits, conferences and events relating to the brain By Victoria Stern | Scientific American Magazine | More Science Advertisement (Newsletter continues below)  | |
Podcasts 60-Second Science Fluoride's Dental Dominion May Remain A Mystery Spectroscopic analysis finds that the fluoridated layer thought to protect teeth is probably too thin to be responsible for fluoride's effects. Karen Hopkin reports | |
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