Try this query “trans fats” this keyword mention on official Google blog.
http://www.google.com/#hl=en&a.....6364bf1ed8
http://www.bing.com/search?q=t.....orm=OSDSRC
Same result in both . So what new in Google .?
Google has started adding links to specific parts of webpages in the snippets on search results pages.
Google gives the example of the result for the Wikipedia entry for "Trans Fat." The snippet provides links to History, Chemistry, Presence in food, and Nutritional guidelines. These are all sections of one page that the user can go straight to from the results page.

Obviously, if you want to increase the amount of calls to action for your webpages from Google results, you will want to do what you can to cater to this new feature. Luckily, this isn't a completely mysterious part of the algorithm (though the links are generated algorithmically) that Google is leaving you to figure out for yourself. A post on Google's Webmaster Central blog essentially tells you what you have to do to get these links in snippets.
"We generate these deep links completely algorithmically, based on page structure, so they could be displayed for any site (and of course money isn't involved in any way, so you can't pay to get these links)," says Raj Krishnan of Google's Snippets team. "There are a few things you can do to increase the chances that they might appear on your pages."
To increase said chances, you should make sure any multi-topic pages are "well-structured" and broken into distinct sections. You should also make sure each section has an associated anchor with a descriptive name. Pages like this should have a table of contents which link to the individual anchors.
One thing to keep in mind is that these new links won't appear for results in every search. Google says whether they show up or not depends on the specific query used to get to it. Ok, there is a bit of mystery there after all.
Try this query “trans fats” this keyword mention on official Google blog.
http://www.google.com/#hl=en&a.....6364bf1ed8
http://www.bing.com/search?q=t.....orm=OSDSRC
Same result in both . So what new in Google .?
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Is this going to . . .
I'm thinking this is going to change the way lots of people write their content . . .
However for business, you may not want them to find some of these topics in such a direct manner. For instance, I think a lot of business owner would do something nasty w/ a brick if they saw "returns" as a topic there.
Here's some others that traditionally we like to link to from lots of places but only in a very subtle manner as we'd like customers to know we have them but would rather their eyeballs be busy with our high converting content, instead of:
Privacy
Returns
Service
Or what if it was a government web site:
File a Complaint
Suggestions
Apply for Some Program
It would suck to accidentally get one of these topic list especially if the searcher used a purchase keyphrase like: "Buy Acme Widget".