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nature
Human embryo models are getting more realistic — raising ethical questions
Dozens of labs around the world are striving to grow models of human embryos to study development, fertility and therapies. They are entering...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Blood test uses ‘protein clock’ to predict risk of Alzheimer’s and other diseases
The clock is effective in people with a range of genetic backgrounds. The University of Manchester is seeking candidates for the Appointment of...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Epic blazes threaten Arctic permafrost. Can firefighters save it?
Some scientists argue that it’s time to rethink the blanket policy of letting blazes burn themselves out in northern wildernesses. We are pleased to...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
T. rex relative found in Thailand: why local researchers are excited
Scientists hope the discovery will inspire more palaeontologists from southeast Asia to explore the region’s fossil history. Palaeontologists in...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Influential abortion-pill studies retracted: the science behind the decision
Nature spoke to researchers about the flaws that triggered the retractions. They say these papers are just the tip of the iceberg. Mariana...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
US and China inch towards renewing science-cooperation pact — despite tensions
Sources say the nations are close to a deal, but the looming US presidential election is probably bogging it down. Natasha Gilbert Smriti Mallapaty The...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Nuclear power for AI: what it will take to reopen Three Mile Island safely
As Microsoft strikes a deal to restart a reactor at the notorious power station, Nature talks to nuclear specialists about the unprecedented...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
AI & robotics briefing: Chatbot catcher spots fake chemistry papers
A machine-learning algorithm can spot chemistry papers written by ChatGPT better than other chatbot-detectors can. Plus, the super-accurate...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Daily briefing: See a smiling face made of living human skin cells
A robotic face is made from living human skin cells anchored to a ‘skeleton’ with ligament-like structures. Plus, massive old stars reveal the true...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Experts stunned by discovery in kelp forest decades after studying lives of sea otters: 'An impact which cascades through the ecosystem'
The data could provide valuable input for future sustainability work in our oceans. Researchers examining a century of ocean maps made an exciting...
thecooldown.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Daily briefing: Blockbuster weight-loss drugs linked to unexpected pregnancies
Women on the pill or diagnosed as infertile have reported getting pregnant with ‘Ozempic babies’. Plus, the first ever rocks from the Moon’s far...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature / technology
Water scarcity impacts 30 million Americans—but these 2 innovations could help dramatically
fastcompany.com - 30+ days ago
nature
How a PhD student’s lab size affects their chance of future academic success
Trainees in big research groups tend to go on to greater academic success than their small-group counterparts — but are more likely to quit academia...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Meet The Maned Wolf: South America’s Largest Canid
While it might look like a cross between a wolf and a fox, the maned wolf is in a genus all by itself. Long legs,...
iflscience.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Incredible moth spotted in England for the first time in 50 years: 'It gives a bit of hope for the future'
"It's really exciting." The Norfolk snout, an incredibly rare type of moth, has been spotted in England for the first time in more than half...
thecooldown.com - 30+ days ago
nature
‘It can feel like there’s no way out’ — political scientists face pushback on their work
In a year in which numerous countries are going to the polls, many election-watching scientists are under pressure. The candidate will develop...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
One Way to Fight Rising Food Prices: Public Grocery Stores
New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani has proposed opening government-owned grocery stores as a solution to ever-increasing food costs and...
newrepublic.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Protecting just 0.7% of world's land could help save a third of unique and endangered species
Conservation efforts directed towards just 0.7% of the world's land mass could help protect one third of the world's threatened and unique tetrapod...
phys.org - 30+ days ago
nature
Tornado Alley is shifting east—but scientists aren't quite sure why
Experts say the causes are still unclear, but the change is consistent with a warming world. The effects on the ground could be devastating. As...
fastcompany.com - 30+ days ago
nature
US and China likely to delay renewal of key science pact again
Relations have changed between the two nations, so negotiators are hashing out new terms in the 45-year-old agreement. Natasha Gilbert Smriti...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Pioneering journal eLife faces major test after loss of impact factor
The open-access title’s bold publishing model has brought long-bubbling conflicts to the fore. Diana Kwon Diana Kwon is a freelance science journalist...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Daily briefing: How nations are preparing for a possible H5N1 bird flu pandemic
Countries are ramping up surveillance of avian influenza, purchasing vaccines and developing new ones. Plus, the first fossil chromosomes ever...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
The rise of brain-reading technology: what you need to know
As implanted devices and commercial headsets advance, what will the real-world impacts be? In a laboratory in San Francisco, California, a woman named...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
How Ukraine’s crisis tested European attitudes towards refugees
Despite what politicians say, Europeans have become more welcoming to people fleeing humanitarian crises. Access Nature and 54 other Nature Portfolio...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
16 Rare Animals Most People Will Never See in Their Life time
Some animals are so rare and elusive that encountering them in the wild is nearly impossible for most people. Here are 15 of the rarest animals...
animalsaroundtheglobe.com - 30+ days ago
nature
As wildfire season approaches, ‘massive cuts’ and other actions have put states’ plans at risk
By Martha Bellisle, The Associated Press SEATTLE — Budget woes, combined with cuts to the federal wildfire-fighting workforce and President Donald...
pennlive.com - 30+ days ago
nature
ChatGPT has a language problem — but science can fix it
The Large Language Models that power chatbots are known to struggle in languages outside of English — this podcast explores how this challenge can be...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
‘Disruptive’ science: in-person teams make more breakthroughs than remote groups
Analysis of millions of papers shows that farflung collaborators produce fewer foundational discoveries than groups working together in person. David...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
The weight-loss drugs being tested in 2025: will they beat Ozempic?
Drug companies are trialling a host of medications that they hope will offer benefits beyond weight loss. As appetite for blockbuster weight-loss...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Daily briefing: ‘All of Us’ genetics chart stirs unease
A figure in a high-profile paper has reignited debate among geneticists about how to best discuss and depict human diversity. Plus, a decades-old...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Asteroid sampler’s hypersonic return thrilled scientists: here’s what they learnt
The re-entry of the OSIRIS-REx sample canister is the most closely observed of its type in history. Alexandra Witze Physicist Jennifer Inman has...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
architecture / design / innovation / nature
Northwestern University Scientists Create Carbon-Negative Concrete from Seawater and CO2
One of the, if no the most widely used artificial material in the world right now is concrete. We keep building things so we need...
yankodesign.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Mystery 'Bigfoot' ape hidden inside remote museum could rewrite history books
Exclusive: Yahoo has spoken with the world's top primate experts as debate over the strange creature's species grows. When the 200kg animal was first...
yahoo.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Daily briefing: What is ageing? Even gerontologists don’t agree
We explore the thorny question of what exactly is ageing and watch colour-changing textiles adapt to temperature. What is ageing? Researchers don’t...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Unethical studies on Chinese minority groups are being retracted — but not fast enough, critics say
Campaigners who want scrutiny of biometrics research on Uyghurs, Tibetans and other groups are frustrated by slow progress. Yves Moreau thought...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Daily briefing: Why climate change is making flights rougher
Severe turbulence such as those that killed one person on a Singapore Airlines flight, could become more frequent with warming temperatures. Plus,...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature / science / space
Clearing Brain Waste Dramatically Improves Memory in Aging Mice
sciencealert.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Daily briefing: Google DeepMind roll out ‘watermark’ on AI-generated text
Researchers at Google DeepMind have devised a ‘watermark’ to invisibly label text that is generated by artificial intelligence. Plus, an ‘epigenetic...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Scientists call out rogue emissions from China at global ozone summit
Researchers confirm a powerful greenhouse gas is being emitted from eastern China, despite reports to the contrary. Jeff Tollefson Efforts to curb...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
The Amazon’s record-setting drought: how bad will it be?
Scientists tell Nature why the rainforest has dried out, and what to expect in the coming months. Last month, a portion of the Negro River...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
First northwestern Pacific records of the deep-sea cardinalfish Epigonusglossodontus (Teleostei, Epigonidae) from the Daito Islands, Japan - PubMed
Full text linksCite Display options Display options The deep-sea cardinalfish Epigonusglossodontus Gon, 1985, previously known only from the Hawaiian...
nih.gov - 30+ days ago
nature
Daily briefing: Alzheimer’s makes brain cells undergo ‘cellular suicide’
Neurons experience programmed cell death in the presence of amyloid plaques — the first clue to how brain cells die in Alzheimer’s disease. Plus, an...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
A human gene makes mice squeak differently — did it contribute to language?
A gene variant present in most people might have contributed to cognitive differences between humans and their closest relatives. Mice carrying a gene...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Dinosaur-killing Chicxulub asteroid formed in Solar System’s outer reaches
Rock samples hold clues to origin of impactor that sparked a mass extinction 66 million years ago. Michael Marshall The object that smashed into Earth...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
science / space / nature
Scientists in Antarctica: why they’re there and what they’ve found
A media storm blew up in mid-March 2025 when a researcher at South Africa’s isolated Sanae IV base in Antarctica accused one of its nine...
theconversation.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Daily briefing: Autism triples risk of Parkinson’s-like symptoms
People with autism, intellectual disabilities or both are three time s more likely than the general population to develop Parkinson’s-like symptoms as...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
The world has warmed 1.5 °C, according to 300-year-old sponges
By the time that official temperature records began, global temperatures had already risen by half a degree. Bianca Nogrady The planet has already...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Puerto Rico's 'Monkey Island' was destroyed by a hurricane. Researchers were shocked by how the primates responded
A new study found that instead of increasing conflict, the environmental challenges made the monkeys more social and cooperative. Human-caused climate change is wreaking havoc...
fastcompany.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Number of Black UK professors rises by 25% in one year
Initiatives such as grass-roots campaigns are likely to have contributed to the uptick, but barriers to progress remain. Elizabeth Gibney The number of...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
nature
Why autoimmune disease is more common in women: X chromosome holds clues
Rogue antibodies are drawn to the protein–RNA coating on half of the X chromosomes in an XX cell. Elie Dolgin Elie Dolgin is a...
nature.com - 30+ days ago
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