Scientific American 2001 Diane Martindale - Abstracts
| Scientific American 2001 Diane Martindale | |||||
| Title | Subject | Authors | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Leaking away: more than one billion gallons of water flow through New York City ever day, and hardly a drop is wasted.(Safeguarding Our Water: How We Can Do It)(Cover Story) | Science and technology | Diane Martindale | |||
| Pink slip in your genes: evidence builds that employers hire and fire based on genetic tests; meanwhile protective legislation languishes. | Science and technology | Diane Martindale | |||
| Sweating the small stuff: extracting freshwater from the salty oceans is an ancient technique that is gaining momentum in a high-tech way.(Safeguarding Our Water: How We Can Do It)(Cover Story) | Science and technology | Diane Martindale | |||
| Waste not, want not: in the world's arid regions, even sewage water cannot be thrown away.(Safeguarding Our Water: How We Can Do It)(Cover Story) | Science and technology | Diane Martindale | |||
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