Below the belt blows
August 1, 2005 12:00 amHTLV-1 spreads like the AIDS virus and causes erectile dysfunction
HTLV-1 spreads like the AIDS virus and causes erectile dysfunction
Air currents lead humidity or smoke from the Amazon to the Prata basin
Tree frog lives in holes in the trees that closes with its hard and spiny head
The densest regions of galaxies help for the formation of other stars
Optical tweezers and spectroscopy to facilitate the study of living cells
New magnetic materials will be useful in electronics and in medicine
Sensor does a more detailed diagnosis of visual imperfections
System improves the production of bottles made with polymers
Group of companies sets up company to process long-life packaging
Does the country really need an electoral system reform?
Project discusses the dangers of the merchandizing of science
A study reveals the lifestyle surrounding the Tietê river at the 20th century
An in-depth Brazil is worthy of attention
In the interior of Sao Paulo, the two-hundred-year old Ipanema steel mill is restored
A battling scientist
Law authorizes private management of public forest to contain deforestation
Law that permits the use of embryonic stem cells is contested
A new bill speeds up measures to stimulate technological innovation
Consanguineous marriages bring about an unknown form of deficiency
Strips of mobile DNA regulate the differentiation of nerve cells
São Paulo network clarifies the structure of 52 proteins
Acupuncture combat gastric ulcer and improve sleeping quality
Botanists identify in São Paulo 7,239 species of native plants
Dating the teeth helps in the reconstruction of the Northeast's megafauna
Ceramic nanoribbons are used as connectors in circuits and transistors
Brazil now has essential components for satellites
Machine developed by a small company cleans endoscopes more effectively
Port in Ceará will have an electricity generation plant developed at UFRJ
Authoritarianism still reigns in the Brazilian information service
A study helps to distinguish myth from reality of drug use in Brazil