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Scientific American
Polar Geoengineering Debate Rages as Climate Change Melts Ice
[276d]
Magic Mushroom Edibles Found to Contain No Psilocybin
[276d]
Frances Glessner Lee, the Mother of Modern Forensic Science, Made Crime Scene Dioramas
[276d]
Big Oil Companies Caused about 25 Percent of Heat Waves since 2000
[276d]
Quanta Magazine
No new articles in the Past 12 Hours.
New Scientist
A weird cloud forms on Mars each year and now we know why
[276d]
Early Neanderthals hunted ibex on steep mountain slopes
[276d]
Why simple tasks like charging your phone rely on quantum measurements
[276d]
ScienceDaily
NASA spacecraft detect a mysterious force shaping the solar wind
[276d]
A doomed star system could soon shine as bright as the Moon
[276d]
Black hole explosion could change everything we know about the Universe
[276d]
Secrets unearthed: Women and children buried with stone tools
[276d]
These dinosaur eggs survived 85 million years. What they reveal is wild
[276d]
Phys
Independent palm oil farmers excluded from sustainable market, finds study
[276d]
AI uncovers hidden rules of some of nature's toughest protein bonds
[276d]
New statistical tool enhances prediction accuracy
[276d]
Mathematical 'sum of zeros' trick exposes topological magnetization in quantum materials
[276d]
Turbulence with a twist: New work shows fluid in a curved pipe can undergo discontinuous transition
[276d]
Volcanic emissions of reactive sulfur gases may have shaped early climate of Mars, making it more hospitable to life
[276d]
New method streamlines detection of carcinogenic compounds in food products
[276d]
Newly developed organic compounds can serve as highly sensitive oxygen sensors
[276d]
Nano-switch achieves first directed, gated flow of excitons
[276d]
eDNA alone may mislead tracking of marine species' shifting ranges, study finds
[276d]
Expanding scientific access to biodiversity data
[276d]
Hunting for aliens in the galaxy's most promising neighborhood
[276d]
New tool automates cell identification in complex datasets
[276d]
Preventing recidivism after imprisonment: Systemic patterns behind reoffending revealed
[276d]
A new view of the proton and its excited states
[276d]
Southeast Pacific sediment cores are an 8-million-year-old climate archive of temperature effects on the ocean
[276d]
Measuring the Unruh effect: Proposed approach could bridge gap between general relativity and quantum mechanics
[276d]
Island ant communities show signs of 'insect apocalypse'
[276d]
Pinning down protons in water—a basic science success story
[276d]
AI-powered tool reconstructs missing data to predict coastal oceans' health
[276d]
Cellular quality control in humans decoded
[276d]
How North Carolina trash traps could help inform policy
[277d]
'No rest for the wilted': Climate bioassessment method targets species most at risk from extremes
[277d]
The digital movement that is enabling Indigenous people to show for themselves how the Amazon region is changing
[277d]
Economists find 2025 farm income boosted by high cattle prices and one-time payments
[277d]
Seaweed cells could give solar panels a boost
[277d]
When 'sustainable' fashion backfires on the environment
[277d]
Chalk and talk vs. active learning: What's holding South African teachers back from using proven methods?
[277d]
A massive eruption 74,000 years ago affected the whole planet: Volcanic glass may show how people survived
[277d]
Narrow-linewidth laser on a chip sets new standard for frequency purity
[277d]
Locusts bypass classical molecular pathway to process smells and pheromones, study reveals
[277d]
Switching disease on and off: How a gene switch could help against bacterial infections
[277d]
From pubs to plates: Research shows Britain's social life is shifting
[277d]
What 3I/ATLAS tells us about other solar systems
[277d]
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