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    Month: January 2023

    Here are 7 new science museums and exhibitions to visit in 2023

    If you’re a museum aficionado itching for a new place to explore, 2023 has you covered. New science museums and exhibitions are opening, and some…

    31/01/2023

    The deadly VEXAS syndrome is more common than doctors thought

    A mysterious new disease may be to blame for severe, unexplained inflammation in older men. Now, researchers have their first good look at who the…

    31/01/2023

    A new metric of extinction risk considers how cultures care for species

    In shallow coastal waters of the Indian and Pacific oceans, a seagrass-scrounging cousin of the manatee is in trouble. Environmental strains like pollution and habitat…

    30/01/2023

    Prairie voles can find partners just fine without the ‘love hormone’ oxytocin

    Prairie voles have long been heralded as models of monogamy. Now, a study suggests that the “love hormone” once thought essential for their bonding —…

    27/01/2023

    Mysterious marks on Ice Age cave art may have been a form of record keeping

    As far back as roughly 25,000 years ago, Ice Age hunter-gatherers may have jotted down markings to communicate information about the behavior of their prey,…

    27/01/2023

    It’s possible to reach net-zero carbon emissions. Here’s how

    Patricia Hidalgo-Gonzalez saw the future of energy on a broiling-hot day last September. An email alert hit her inbox from the San Diego Gas & Electric…

    27/01/2023

    Birds that dive may be at greater risk of extinction

    Birds that dive underwater — such as penguins, loons and grebes — may be more likely to go extinct than their nondiving kin, a new…

    26/01/2023

    Fossils suggest early primates lived in a once-swampy Arctic

    The Arctic today is a hostile place for most primates. But a series of fossils found since the 1970s suggest that wasn’t always the case.…

    25/01/2023

    Procrastination may harm your health. Here’s what you can do

    The worst procrastinators probably won’t be able to read this story. It’ll remind them of what they’re trying to avoid, psychologist Piers Steel says. Maybe…

    25/01/2023

    Lots of Tatooine-like planets around binary stars may be habitable

    SEATTLE — Luke Skywalker’s home planet in Star Wars is the stuff of science fiction. But Tatooine-like planets in orbit around pairs of stars might…

    24/01/2023

    A bird with a T. rex head may help reveal how dinosaurs became birds

    A 120-million-year-old fossil bird found in China could offer some new clues about how landbound dinosaurs evolved into today’s flying birds. The dove-sized Cratonavis zhui…

    24/01/2023

    Some young sea spiders can regrow their rear ends

    No backside, no problem for some young sea spiders. The creatures can regenerate nearly complete parts of their bottom halves — including muscles, reproductive organs…

    23/01/2023

    Earth’s inner core may be reversing its rotation

    Our planet may have had a recent change of heart. Earth’s inner core may have temporarily stopped rotating relative to the mantle and surface, researchers…

    23/01/2023

    A rare rabbit plays an important ecological role by spreading seeds

    A crucial link in the life cycle of one parasitic plant may be found in a surprising place — the bellies of the descendants of…

    23/01/2023

    Recycling rare earth elements is hard. Science is trying to make it easier

    Our modern lives depend on rare earth elements, and someday soon we may not have enough to meet growing demand. Because of their special properties,…

    20/01/2023

    Rare earth elements could be pulled from coal waste

    In Appalachia’s coal country, researchers envision turning toxic waste into treasure. The pollution left behind by abandoned mines is an untapped source of rare earth…

    20/01/2023

    New data show how quickly light pollution is obscuring the night sky

    The night sky has been brightening faster than researchers realized, thanks to the use of artificial lights at night. A study of more than 50,000…

    19/01/2023

    Chicken DNA is replacing the genetics of their ancestral jungle fowl

    Today’s red jungle fowl — the wild forebears of the domesticated chicken — are becoming more chickenlike. New research suggests that a large proportion of…

    19/01/2023

    Too much of this bacteria in the nose may worsen allergy symptoms

    A type of bacteria that’s overabundant in the nasal passages of people with hay fever may worsen symptoms. Targeting that bacteria may provide a way…

    19/01/2023

    Scientists have found the first known microbes that can eat only viruses

    New Year, new viral diet — literally. Tiny, pond-dwelling Halteria ciliates are virovores, able to survive on a virus-only diet, researchers report December 27 in…

    18/01/2023

    These adorable Australian spike-balls beat the heat with snot bubbles

    Animals cover themselves in all kinds of unsavory fluids to keep cool. Humans sweat, kangaroos spit and some birds will urinate on themselves to survive…

    18/01/2023

    These chemists cracked the code to long-lasting Roman concrete

    MIT chemist Admir Masic really hoped his experiment wouldn’t explode. Masic and his colleagues were trying to re-create an ancient Roman technique for making concrete,…

    17/01/2023

    Cyclones in the Arctic are becoming more intense and frequent

    CHICAGO – In January 2022, a cyclone blitzed a large expanse of ice-covered ocean between Greenland and Russia. Frenzied gusts galvanized 8-meter-tall waves that pounded…

    17/01/2023

    A powerful laser can redirect lightning strikes

    Like a high-tech hammer of Thor, a powerful laser can grab hold of a lightning bolt and reroute its path through the sky. In a…

    16/01/2023

    How rare earth elements’ hidden properties make modern technology possible

    In Frank Herbert’s space opera Dune, a precious natural substance called spice melange grants people the ability to navigate vast expanses of the cosmos to…

    16/01/2023

    Here’s what you need to know about COVID’s XBB.1.5 ‘Kraken’ variant

    The omicron variant’s family tree has grown substantially over the last year. The brood now encompasses a subvariant soup with alphanumeric names such as BA.2,…

    13/01/2023

    Enceladus is blanketed in a thick layer of snow

    Saturn’s moon Enceladus is shrouded in a thick layer of snow. In some places, the downy stuff is 700 meters deep, new research suggests. “It’s…

    13/01/2023

    Sea life offers a lens for self-exploration in ‘How Far the Light Reaches’

    How Far the Light ReachesSabrina ImblerLittle, Brown & Co., $27 In How Far the Light Reaches, Sabrina Imbler shows us that the ocean, in all…

    13/01/2023

    HDL ‘good’ cholesterol isn’t always good for heart health

    “Good” and “bad” cholesterol: These well-known characters have long starred in the saga of heart health. But in a major plot twist, “good” cholesterol, it…

    12/01/2023

    The James Webb telescope found ‘Green Pea’ galaxies in the early universe

    Galaxies that helped transform the early universe may have been small, round and green. Astronomers using the James Webb Space Telescope have spotted “Green Pea”…

    12/01/2023

    Rare earth mining may be key to our renewable energy future. But at what cost?

    In spring 1949, three prospectors armed with Geiger counters set out to hunt for treasure in the arid mountains of southern Nevada and southeastern California.…

    11/01/2023

    Why it’s easier to catch a cold, the flu or COVID in the winter

    When bitter winds blew and temperatures dropped, my grandmother would urge me to come inside. “You’ll catch your death of cold out there,” she’d say.…

    11/01/2023

    Methylated gases could be an unambiguous indicator of alien life

    SEATTLE — Attention alien hunters: If you want to find life on distant planets, try looking for signs of toxic chemical cleanup.  Gases that organisms…

    11/01/2023

    4 key things to know about lung infections caused by fungi

    Some fungi that can cause serious lung infections have spread to many parts of the United States. A Science News story on the expanded range…

    10/01/2023

    Rare ‘dark lightning’ might briefly touch passengers when flying

    CHICAGO — More than electricity can illuminate a thundercloud. Brilliant bursts of gamma radiation, known as dark lightning or terrestrial gamma-ray flashes, also explode in…

    10/01/2023

    Pandemic languishing is a thing. But is it a privilege?

    Languishing. The term captured the zeitgeist in April 2021 when organizational psychologist Adam Grant penned an article in the New York Times titled, “There’s a…

    10/01/2023

    50 years ago, scientists sequenced a gene for the first time

    Molecular biology’s flower child — Science News, January 6, 1973       During the past several years, some artificial genes have been synthesized…. But no one had unraveled…

    09/01/2023

    Complex supply chains may have appeared more than 3,000 years ago

    Long-distance supply chains, vulnerable to disruptions from wars and disease outbreaks, may have formed millennia before anyone today gasped at gas prices or gawked at…

    09/01/2023

    Here’s how to make a fiber-optic cable out of air using a laser

    Tubular laser beams can create what amount to fiber-optic cables made of thin air, researchers report in a study to appear in Physical Review X.…

    09/01/2023

    Lasers reveal sites used as the Americas’ oldest known star calendars

    Olmec and Maya people living along Mexico’s Gulf Coast as early as 3,100 years ago built star-aligned ceremonial centers to track important days of a…

    06/01/2023

    Tiny bubbles that make icicles hazy are filled with water, not air

    Tiny drops of dirty water, often mistaken for air bubbles, tell the tale of rippling icicle growth. Icicles made of pure water are smooth. But…

    06/01/2023

    Meet some of the microbes that give cheeses flavor

    Cheese making has been around for thousands of years, and there are now more than 1,000 varieties of cheese worldwide. But what exactly makes some…

    06/01/2023

    Indigenous people may have created the Amazon’s ‘dark earth’ on purpose

    CHICAGO — Indigenous people in the Amazon may have been deliberately creating fertile soil for farming for thousands of years. At archaeological sites across the…

    05/01/2023

    Fungi that cause serious lung infections are now found throughout the U.S

    Three types of fungi that cause serious lung infections and were once thought to be confined to certain regions of the United States are now…

    04/01/2023

    Meet the first Black American to earn an evolutionary biology Ph.D.

    A Voice in the WildernessJoseph L. Graves Jr.Basic Books, $30 It’s both good and bad that the first Black American to earn a Ph.D. in…

    04/01/2023

    We could get messages back from spacecraft sent through a wormhole

    If you ever happen to fall through a wormhole in space, you won’t be coming back. It will snap shut behind you. But you may…

    03/01/2023

    Brain scans suggest the pandemic prematurely aged teens’ brains

    Living through the COVID-19 pandemic may have matured teens’ brains beyond their years. From online schooling and social isolation to economic hardship and a mounting…

    03/01/2023
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    Brain scans suggest the pandemic prematurely aged teens’ brains

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