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Science News for Kids has Moved!

Since April 16, the fun and informative news and feature stories that you've come to expect from Science News for Kids have gotten a new home on the Web -- www.ScienceNews.org. That's right, they're sharing the online portal of their sister publication, Science News.

At this new site, you will find a wealth of material for youthful readers. Just go to those topic headings at the top of the home page and select Science News for Kids. Some kid-friendly stories will even be featured each week on the home page. Their headlines will clue you in with the tag "For Kids."

We realize that some teachers, parents and kids will want more in-depth material than our old site provided. You can now seamlessly tap into a universe of additional offerings from Science News. Do you like pictures? Check out Sights & Sounds. It's a feature found at the bottom of the home page and hosts plenty of cool science photos. Miss those stories from yesteryear or puzzles and science fare experiments? There are more than you can imagine still archived at this, our old site.

So now you have two reliable and authoritative places on the Web to find plenty of cool material to help you understand and experience science. And they were developed just for you.


The Scoop:
[Article Image]
Xi-Chen Zhang

Undercover Detectives
T-rays are digitally uncovering everything including potential terrorists, buried images on church walls, and subsurface flaws in the foam used to protect space shuttles.
Read more


Polling Place: Using T-Rays
Word Find: Terrific T-Rays

Science Snapshots:
[Article Image]

Salty, Old and, Perhaps, a Sign of Early Life
Exploring salt deposits, researchers unearthed the planet's oldest-known, complete molecules thought to have been made by living things.
Read more

[Article Image]

Gut Microbes and Weight
A new report links a baby's gut microbes with the chance that the baby will become an overweight child.
Read more


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Visit Teen Wizards—some of the successful Science and Engineering Fair 2007 Finalists—as they discuss their independent research projects and the inspiration behind them on YouTube. Go to: http://www.youtube.com/
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