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Which is, as they report in the Proceedings of the Royal Society, the case.
ECONOMIST: Religious diversity may be caused by disease
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It was published last month in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B.
CNN: Dolphins may be calling each other by name
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It is published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.
BBC: NEWS | Science/Nature | Dingo has 'vital ecosystem role'
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The answer, as Dr Evans shows in the Proceedings of the Royal Society, is that sneaks are first-class in one particular department.
ECONOMIST: Males can take many routes to reproductive success
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And the answer, soon to be published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society, is that women do better reproductively if they are shorter than average.
ECONOMIST: Short women have more children than tall ones
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In the Proceedings of the Royal Society, Bernd Heinrich and Thomas Bugnyar of the University of Vermont, in Burlington, describe a series of experiments they have carried out on ravens.
ECONOMIST: Now, it seems, even the bird-brained have theories of mind
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As they explain in a paper in the Proceedings of the Royal Society, other males may fight over access to the female and try to dislodge any male that has an inserted palp.
ECONOMIST: Why self-sacrifice makes perfect sense for spiders
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As they report in the Proceedings of the Royal Society, the 160m-year-old Darwinopterus, which has been dug up in Liaoning Province, catches the flying reptiles in transition between the primitive, long-tailed forms exemplified by Rhamphorhynchus and the advanced, almost tailless creatures typified by Pteranodon.
ECONOMIST: How new groups of creatures emerge
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Unfortunately for the textbooks, the latest estimate, made by Yvonne Stokes of the University of Adelaide, and which will be reported in the Proceedings of the Royal Society next month, is that it would take over 10m years for a window pane to flow perceptibly.
ECONOMIST: Non-dribbling glasses
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In a paper in the Proceedings of the Royal Society, published in 2009, Joan Chiao and Katherine Blizinsky of Northwestern University, in Illinois, found a positive correlation between higher levels of the short version of the gene and mood disorders (China and Japan have lots of both) and with collectivist political systems.
ECONOMIST: The genetics of happiness
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The research findings appear in the latest edition of the Royal Society Proceedings B.
BBC: NEWS | Health | TB 'may have killed off leprosy'