http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?chanID=sa003&articleID=00065442-09C2-13AB-896383414B7F4945

Top Science Stories of 2005
 
2005 has been a year of tempests both literal and figurative.
Hurricanes Katrina, Rita and Wilma led a record pack of devastating
storms; the issue of whether to teach intelligent design in the
classroom went to trial; the decision about whether to make "Plan B"
emergency contraception available over the counter was postponed; a
celebrated stem cell researcher was revealed as a fraud; and the threat
of avian flu loomed large.

But there were exhilarating developments as well. Long believed
extinct, the ivory-billed woodpecker was detected in the Big Woods of
Arkansas; astronomers discovered a tenth planet in our solar
system--complete with its own moon; physicists created a new state of
matter using quarks and gluons; and the genome of our closest living
relative, the chimpanzee, was sequenced.

These are just some of the biggest science stories of 2005. We've
listed our top 25 picks below, in no particular order. But there were,
of course, many more findings of note. So consider this list a jumping
off point for a fuller exploration of our site as you look back at the
year in science. --The Editors


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