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science
How Peruvian cockfighters could tip the scales for endangered sawfish
Martín Maceda can still rattle off the exact date of his most memorable fishing encounter. On March 1, 2014, he was 8 kilometers (5 miles) off the...
mongabay.com - 12 days ago
science
The European Politician Bringing Nature Into the Halls of Power
Carola Rackete has used her position as a member of the European Parliament to amplify the voices of grassroots communities and the interests of the...
insideclimatenews.org - 12 days ago
science
A Simple Mistake Might Have Encouraged Sick People to Eat The Dead
The history of medicine is filled with remedies that, viewed through a modern lens, seem perplexing, misguided or downright macabre. Among these is...
sciencealert.com - 12 days ago
science
5 Ancient Ruins Discovered In The Most Unlikely Places
In June 2024, construction workers building a new lane on Federal Highway 105 in the Sierra Alta region of Hidalgo, Mexico, uncovered something...
sciencing.com - 12 days ago
science / space / books
Why this weekend's solar eclipse is great for kids and families, and why I'll be watching it with my own
In case you haven't heard, there's a partial solar eclipse visible from the UK this Saturday, 29 March beginning at 10am. You've perhaps already...
skyatnightmagazine.com - 12 days ago
science / space
NASA’s Curiosity Mars Rover Finds Large Organic Molecules
HOUSTON —Samples of pulverized rock from the Martian surface gathered and analyzed by NASA’s Curiosity rover have found the largest collection of...
aviationweek.com - 12 days ago
science
'Wild Swimming' Does Something Amazing to Your Mind, Study Reveals
On Perranporth beach in Cornwall, UK, a local outdoor swimming group called the Perranporth Bluetits is out in force. This group are determined to...
sciencealert.com - 12 days ago
science
A tardigrade protein helped reduce radiation damage in mice
Mouse cells tweaked to produce the tardigrade protein incurred less DNA damage than unaltered cells — hinting at a new tool for cancer patient care....
sciencenews.org - 12 days ago
science
Were large soda lakes the cradle of life?
Life needs sufficient phosphorus. However, the element is scarce, not only today but also at the time of the origin of life. So where was there...
sciencedaily.com - 12 days ago
apps / science
NIH neurodevelopmental assessment system now available as iPad app
Here is a roundup of autism-related news and research spotted around the web for the week of 24 March....
thetransmitter.org - 12 days ago
science
This Recently Discovered 26,000-Pound Dinosaur Was Once The Biggest Creature To Walk Planet Earth
Its name translates to "a giant thunderclap at dawn" — and it's easy to see why.The post This Recently Discovered 26,000-Pound Dinosaur Was Once The...
allthatsinteresting.com - 12 days ago
science
Endurance exercise with reduced muscle glycogen content influences substrate utilization and attenuates acute mTORC1- and autophagic signaling in human type I and type II muscle fibers - Skeletal Muscle
• Research • Open access • Published: 25 March 2025 Endurance exercise with reduced muscle glycogen content influences substrate utilization and attenuates...
biomedcentral.com - 12 days ago
science
New Therapy Offers Promising Solution to Childhood Peanut Allergies
What is oral immunotherapy? Learn how this new therapy could help children treat their peanut allergies, but how there is also extreme caution to the...
discovermagazine.com - 12 days ago
science / space / technology
Ultrafast Laser Breakthrough Reveals Light’s Ability to Instantly Transform Properties of Matter
Researchers say they are finally unraveling the effects of ultrafast lasers that can change material states in attoseconds—one-billionth of...
thedebrief.org - 12 days ago
science
How a herbicide illustrates the many ways chemicals are put to the test
Assessing the risks posed by chemicals is a difficult and imperfect business that reaches well beyond the scientific realm. There are many factors...
chemistryworld.com - 12 days ago
science / space
NASA website axes a pledge to land a woman and a person of color on the moon
Nearly four years ago, NASA announced that its Artemis III mission would include a lot of firsts: it would be the first to land on the moon since the end of the Apollo era, the first to touch down near the moon's rugged south pole and the first to put both a woman and a person of color on the lunar...
npr.org - 12 days ago
nature / science
Unique two-clawed dinosaur discovered
A rare new species of two-clawed dinosaur has been discovered by scientists in Mongolia's Gobi Desert. The species, named Duonychus tsogtbaatari, was unique within a group of dinosaurs called Therizinosaurs, which stood on their hind legs and usually had three claws. It was medium-sized, with an...
bbc.com - 12 days ago
science
Neuroscientists discover a new pathway to forming long-term memories in the brain
Researchers from Max Planck Florida Institute for Neuroscience have discovered a new pathway to forming long-term memories in the brain. Their work,...
techfixated.com - 12 days ago
science
A hit of dopamine tells baby birds when their song practice is paying off
Brain scientists are beginning to disentangle the molecular mechanisms underlying the intrinsic motivation to learn By watching the ebb and flow of...
sciencedaily.com - 12 days ago
science
'Molecular Addiction': How Drinking Soda Rewires Your Body
In a nutshell Regular consumption of sugary drinks can cause your intestines to physically adapt to absorb more sugar, creating a “molecular...
studyfinds.org - 12 days ago
nature / science / space
Just one exo-Earth pixel can reveal continents, oceans, and more
Over the past 35 years, a tremendous transformation has occurred in astronomy. Back in 1990, there wasn’t a single planet known outside of our own...
bigthink.com - 12 days ago
nature / technology / science
Scientist Who Discovered 'Dark Oxygen' Ignored It For Years. Here's Why.
Children are always asking "Why?" As they experience things for the first time , it's natural to want to find out more. But as children grow into...
sciencealert.com - 13 days ago
nature / science / space / technology
23andMe files for bankruptcy as CEO steps down
Once valued at $ 6 billion, executives have yet to find a bidder for the $ 50 million gene testing company that has never turned a profit. DNA testing firm 23andMe has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection to help the company sell itself after years of financial difficulties. Anne Wojcicki,...
theverge.com - 13 days ago
science
Babies Form Memories. Why Do Adults Forget Them? - 3 Quarks Daily
Sahana Sitaraman in The Scientist: An infant learns many things in the first few years of life—movements, languages, relationships, and more—all of...
3quarksdaily.com - 13 days ago
science
Tuberculosis was once a disease in decline, but a resurgence in cases has health officials puzzled
An outbreak of tuberculosis, or TB – a lung disease that is often accompanied by a hacking cough – began in January 2024 in Kansas City, Kansas, and...
pbs.org - 13 days ago
science
Male Octopuses Stun Females With Venom to Survive Mating, Study Finds
The blue-lined octopus (Hapalochlaena fasciata) is only a few cen time ters long, yet it may be one of the most dangerous marine animals on...
sciencealert.com - 13 days ago
science
How many types of insects are there in the world?
How many types of insects are there in the world? – Sawyer, age 8, Fuquay-Varina, North Carolina Exploring anywhere on Earth, look closely and you’ll...
theconversation.com - 13 days ago
nature / science / space
Plastic pollution cuts into fishers’ livelihoods in Ecuador and Peru
Plastic waste is increasingly causing problems for fishers. Fishnets bring up bottles, propellers get tangled in bags, water pumps get clogged with...
mongabay.com - 13 days ago
science / space
Astronomers Just Found Oxygen in a Galaxy Born Only 300 Million Years After the Big Bang
The JWST once again proves it might have been worth the money....
zmescience.com - 13 days ago
science
How a surprising twist on rewilding could help settle our carbon debt
In the Țarcu mountains of Romania, a pioneering experiment is changing the atmosphere around rewilding. Starting in 2014, around 100 European bison...
newscientist.com - 13 days ago
nature / science
Scientists Have Discovered a Previously Unknown Forest Giant in the Remote Mountains of East Africa
A previously unknown gigantic species has been discovered by researchers working in the remote Udzungwa Mountains of East Africa.Named Tessmannia...
thedebrief.org - 13 days ago
science
Mystery solved: our tests reveal the tiny algae killing fish and harming surfers on SA beaches
Confronting images of dead seadragons, fish and octopuses washed up on South Australian beaches – and disturbing reports of “more than 100” surfers...
theconversation.com - 13 days ago
science
Dendritic spines: The key to understanding how memories are linked in time
If you've ever noticed how memories from the same day seem connected while events from weeks apart feel separate, a new study reveals the reason: Our...
phys.org - 13 days ago
science / space
Euclid 'dark universe detective' spacecraft discovers 2,674 new dwarf galaxies
"This work highlights Euclid’s remarkable ability to detect and characterize dwarf galaxies, enabling a comprehensive view of galaxy formation and...
space.com - 13 days ago
science
Genomic sequencing reveals previously unknown genes that make microbes resistant to drugs and hard to kill
In the 20th century, when a routine infection was treated with a standard antibiotic, recovery was expected. But over time , the microbes responsible...
theconversation.com - 13 days ago
science
A Prenatal Test of the Fetus Turns Up Cancers in Pregnant Mothers
In 2013, Susan Klugman, an obstetrician and geneticist who is currently president of the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics, got back...
scientificamerican.com - 13 days ago
science
Man Develops Life-Threatening Infection After Eating Feral Pig
A Florida man in his 70s contracted an extremely rare, life-threatening infection in his implanted defibrillator after eating a feral pig in...
sciencealert.com - 13 days ago
nature / science / space
Farmers almanacs issue spring outlooks with zinger storms, slow warmups
Spring has sprung, even if the temperatures aren’t feeling like it yet. With the new season, The Old Farmer’s Almanac and the Farmers’ Almanac have both released their spring weather outlooks to help planters and families plan their calendars in the months ahead. Unlike your daily weather forecasts,...
aol.com - 13 days ago
nature / science
As apes adapt to human disturbance, their new behaviors also put them at risk: Study
Human activities such as mining, agriculture, urbanization, damming and logging threaten the habitats of great apes in Africa and Asia. Apes have...
mongabay.com - 13 days ago
science
The State of Science, Microbiology, and Vaccines Circa 1918
The influenza pandemic of 1918–1919 dramatically altered biomedical knowledge of the disease. At its onset, the foundation of scientific knowledge...
nih.gov - 13 days ago
science
23andMe files for bankruptcy, will seek a buyer
Genetics testing company 23andMe has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection and launched a sale process, just weeks after rejecting a takeover...
axios.com - 13 days ago
science / space
Scientists Scan Mysterious Planet as It Drifts Through Space
A team of researchers used the James Webb Space Telescope to uncover new details about SIMP 0136, a free-floating planet in the Milky Way that does...
wired.com - 13 days ago
science / space
The most distant galaxy has oxygen, and that’s no surprise
Before any stars formed in the Universe, there was no oxygen.This plot shows the abundance of the light elements over time , as the Universe expands...
bigthink.com - 13 days ago
nature / science / space
5 of the Strangest and Most Dangerous Exoplanets Ever Discovered
Learn what planet rains molten iron and which planet has two moons like Tatooine in Star Wars. Long before astronomers discovered the first exoplanet...
discovermagazine.com - 13 days ago
science
Single-cell genomics technologies and cell atlases have ushered in a new era of human neurobiology
Single- cell approaches are already shedding light on the human brain, identifying cell types that are most vulnerable in the early stages of...
thetransmitter.org - 13 days ago
science / space
ESA Shares Preview Of Euclid Telescope's Deep Field Images With 26 Million Galaxies
The European Space Agency (ESA) has released the first batch of survey data from the Euclid telescope. For the first survey data, ESA says Euclid scanned a sky area equivalent of more than 300 time s the full Moon. The pictures shared by the agency are three mosaics featuring 26 million galaxies...
mashable.com - 13 days ago
science
Historical robber 'Schinderhannes' clearly identified: Skeletons were mixed up about 220 years ago
The legendary robbers Schinderhannes and Schwarzer Jonas were executed by guillotine in Mainz in 1803. In 1805, the first chairholder of anatomy at...
phys.org - 13 days ago
science / health
Does selecting targeted therapies based on genetic testing of an individual's cancer prolong their life or delay disease progression in people with advanced cancer?
Does selecting targeted therapies based on genetic testing of an individual's cancer prolong their life or delay disease progression in people with...
cochrane.org - 13 days ago
science
General anaesthesia decreases the uniqueness of brain functional connectivity across individuals and species
The human brain is characterized by idiosyncratic patterns of spontaneous thought, rendering each brain uniquely identifiable from its neural...
nature.com - 13 days ago
nature / science
Extreme 'Feast And Famine' Cycle Sparked Explosion of Life on Earth
Imagine a world where the oxygen you need changes dramatically between day and night. Your world shifts from being rich in oxygen (oxic) in the day,...
sciencealert.com - 13 days ago
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