2009 Science News of the Year

Brevity is in. If what you have to say can’t be delivered in 140 characters or less, you should reconsider your message — or so it seems in a world agog with texting and Twitter. Compiling Science News’ annual list of scientific highlights brought home the good and bad of this trend. Indeed, some of this year’s best stories are easily conveyed in a handful of words: a surprising human ancestor, Ardi, was unveiled, the moon is far wetter than supposed, the LHC set a new energy record. Some science works short and sweet.

But much of the year’s great science can’t be communicated so quickly or simply. Science is a world of uncertainty and subtlety, and writing about it requires caveats and modifiers. Boiling down the research described in these pages and online over the past year also meant, in some cases, abandoning the golden nuggets that brought a story to life or leaving out context  and larger implications.

Still, on the following pages at least, brevity rules. After all, time and space, never mind attention span, are limited. So here it is: All the news that’s fit to fit in two sentences or less. And a few extra paragraphs here and there because Science News writers and editors couldn’t resist. Elizabeth Quill, News Editor

On the Web
For the complete year-end recap with links to the original online articles, visit www.sciencenews.org/2009

Humans

Atom & Cosmos 

Numbers

Genes & Cells 

Life 

Body & Brain 

Matter & Energy 

Nutrition

Molecules Earth Environment Technology Science & Society