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Scientific American
The U.S. Debt-Ceiling Crisis Could Harm Science for Years to Come
[344d]
The Universe Began with a Bang, Not a Bounce, New Studies Find
[345d]
U.S. Military Sees Growing Threat in Thawing Permafrost
[345d]
People, Not Google's Algorithm, Create Their Own Partisan 'Bubbles' Online
[345d]
The Science Is Clear: Gun Control Saves Lives
[345d]
Why Has a Group of Orcas Suddenly Started Attacking Boats?
[345d]
What the End of the COVID Emergency Means for You
[345d]
High School Students Need More Sleep and Later School Start Times
[345d]
Astronomers Have Spotted a Once-in-a-Decade Supernova--and You Can, Too
[345d]
Quanta Magazine
Is It Real or Imagined? How Your Brain Tells the Difference.
[345d]
New Scientist
Common compostable plastic fails to break down after a year at sea
[345d]
Tumble dryers shed hundreds of tonnes of microfibres into waterways
[345d]
Lab imitations of the unobservable cosmos can be genuinely insightful
[345d]
Why sending messages to extraterrestrials is controversial
[345d]
Questions I dread: How did the universe begin, and what is space-time?
[345d]
See the Hunterian Museum's weird and wonderful anatomical curiosities
[345d]
Allergic review: A great guide explores a complex medical mystery
[345d]
Titanium Noir review: Gripping, philosophical science fiction
[345d]
How listening to audiobooks may be making us more gullible
[345d]
Bendy solar panels are just as good as regular ones
[345d]
Man with paralysis can walk by activating spine implants with his mind
[345d]
Nuclear clocks could be the best timepiece in the universe
[345d]
Can recreating black holes in the lab solve the puzzles of space-time?
[345d]
Why has Virgin Orbit shut down and what will happen to UK spaceports?
[345d]
Astronomers race to observe rare supernova in a nearby galaxy
[345d]
Do new Alzheimer's drugs signal the end of the condition?
[345d]
Wild African primates have flame retardants in their faeces
[345d]
Seagulls choose their meals based on what people nearby are eating
[345d]
ScienceDaily
Deadly virus structures point toward new avenues for vaccine design
[344d]
Most effective ways of foraging can attract predators
[344d]
Propellers are louder over ground
[345d]
How tasty is the food?
[345d]
People who live to be 90+ with superior thinking skills are resilient to Alzheimer's pathology in their brains
[345d]
Epigenetic landscape modulates pioneer transcription factor binding
[345d]
A student's poor eating habits can lead to a lifetime of illness
[345d]
Researchers map the brain during blood sugar changes
[345d]
Vitamin D alters developing neurons in the brain's dopamine circuit
[345d]
The Mediterranean Diet: Good for your health and your hip pocket
[345d]
Failed antibiotic now a game changing weed killer for farmers
[345d]
Growing blood stem cells in the lab to save lives
[345d]
Global macrogenetic map of marine habitat-forming species
[345d]
Engineers harvest abundant clean energy from thin air, 24/7
[345d]
Researchers comprehensively assess the safety of using your head in youth soccer
[345d]
Medical 'microrobots' could one day treat bladder disease, other human illnesses
[345d]
New method predicts extreme events more accurately
[345d]
Study shows key role for human T cells in the control of Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV) infection
[345d]
New potential drug target for Alzheimer's disease
[345d]
Microplastics are harming gut health
[345d]
Multivitamin improves memory in older adults, study finds
[345d]
New chemical compound demonstrates potential in nerve regeneration
[345d]
Quantum matter breakthrough: Tuning density waves
[345d]
'Segment-jumping' ridgecrest earthquakes explored in new study
[345d]
Scientists find evidence for new superconducting state in Ising superconductor
[345d]
Phys
The most effective ways of foraging can attract predators, scientists find
[345d]
Fossil tells the 'tail' of an ancient beast
[345d]
Study finds people who expect others to vote are more likely to vote themselves
[345d]
Fuzzy falcon chicks who nest at Michigan State football stadium get tracking bands
[345d]
Danish masters prepped canvases with leftovers from brewing beer
[345d]
Pre-Hispanic aquaducts irrigate modern Peruvian crops
[345d]
Danish researcher and NASA predict how many people will die from air pollution in the future
[345d]
Lost since 1362: Researchers discover the church of a sunken medieval trading place
[345d]
Relating to someone else's situation 'equally' can be validating, shows research
[345d]
Nearly 70% of private label avocado oil rancid or mixed with other oils, find researchers
[345d]
White-bellied pangolins have second-highest number of chromosomes among mammals
[345d]
Food forests and urban farms hold promise of addressing numerous problems at once
[345d]
Translating Swahili language and knowledge in colonial and post-colonial Tanzania
[345d]
How can universities better understand students' experiences of violence and victimization?
[345d]
Phytophthora 'the plant destroyer' meets its match with a new identification tool
[345d]
Activity sessions in daycare already nurturing emotional skills by 10 weeks, finds research
[345d]
Algae combined with visible light may create ink for cultured meat
[345d]
Scientists advocate synergistic approach to address climate change and air pollution in China
[345d]
Large-scale long terminal repeat insertions found to produce a significant set of novel transcripts in cotton
[345d]
New is good: Novelty is essential to keeping bright learners engaged this summer
[345d]
Publication of the first global macrogenetic map of marine habitat-forming species
[345d]
Volcano rumbles near Mexico City, coating towns with ash, disrupting flights
[345d]
'Sustainable' ventless dryers may contribute to waterborne microfiber pollution
[345d]
Database stores names for family members in 1,200+ languages
[345d]
Increasing heat likely a major factor in human migration
[345d]
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