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Vol. 207 No. 12
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cover of December 2025 issue of Science News

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More Stories from the December 1, 2025 issue

  1. Health & Medicine

    Building a better skin barrier

    Skin is a barrier meant to keep small invaders out. Products making their way across it should boost that mission.

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  2. Neuroscience

    Early Parkinson’s trials revive stem cells as a possible treatment

    The phase I clinical trials showed stem cell transplants for Parkinson’s disease appear to be safe and might restore dopamine-producing brain cells.

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  3. Animals

    Meet the ‘grue jay,’ a rare hybrid songbird

    Despite millions of years of evolutionary separation and a geographical divide, a blue jay and green jay mated in Texas. This bird is the result.

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  4. Health & Medicine

    Scientists made human egg cells from skin cells

    More work needs to be done to create viable human embryos, but the method might someday be used in IVF to help infertile people and male couples.

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  5. Animals

    Toy-obsessed dogs give clues to addictive behaviors

    Some dogs love playing with toys so intensely they can’t stop—offering scientists a window into behavioral addictions.

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  6. Planetary Science

    Dwarf planet Makemake sports the most remote gas in the solar system

    The methane gas may constitute a rarefied atmosphere, or it may come from erupting plumes on Makemake’s surface.

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  7. Particle Physics

    A primordial black hole may have spewed the highest energy neutrino ever found

    The Big Bang may have spawned these theoretical black holes, whose lives are thought to end in a burst of extremely energetic particles.

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  8. Psychology

    People with ADHD may have an underappreciated advantage: Hypercuriosity

    ADHD is officially a disorder of deficits in attention, behavior and focus. But patients point out upsides, like curiosity. Research is now catching up.

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  9. Materials Science

    New wetsuit designs offer a layer of protection against shark bites

    By weaving Kevlar or polyethylene nanofibers into standard neoprene in wetsuits, researchers found ways to limit injury during rare encounters with sharks.

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  10. Physics

    Scientists made a biological quantum bit out of a fluorescent protein

    Researchers could use quantum effects to develop new types of medical imaging inside cells themselves.

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  11. Physics

    Ice is more flexible than you think, a new nano-movie shows

    Scientists have filmed nanoscale ice crystals adapting to trapped air bubbles without losing structural integrity.

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  12. Astronomy

    Astronomers saw a rogue planet going through a rapid growth spurt

    The growth spurt hints that the free-floating object evolves like a star, providing clues about rogue planets’ mysterious origins.

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  13. Physics

    A ‘ringing’ black hole matches scientists’ predictions

    Gravitational waves emitted after two black holes coalesced agree with theories from physicists Stephen Hawking and Roy Kerr.

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  14. Paleontology

    Crystallized dino eggs provide a peek into the tumultuous Late Cretaceous

    Definitively dating the age of a clutch of fossil dinosaur eggs at a famous site in China may let scientists link eggshell features to environmental shifts at the time.

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  15. Archaeology

    12,000-year-old rock art hints at the Arabian Desert’s lush past

    Newly found engravings of animals on rock outcrops in Saudi Arabia’s Nefud desert show nomads lived there thousands of years ago.

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  16. Health & Medicine

    The brain preserves maps of missing hands for years

    Countering the idea of large-scale rewiring, women whose hands were removed retained durable brain activity patterns linked to their missing fingers.

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  17. Genetics

    AI generated its first working genome: a tiny bacteria killer

    Bacteriophages designed with AI kill E. coli faster than a well-studied strain, but the tech needs regulation before moving beyond lab dishes.

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  18. Physics

    Here’s how Rudolph’s light-up nose might be possible

    Simple chemistry could give the reindeer his famously bright snout. But physics would make it look different colors from the ground.

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  19. Math puzzle: A Loopy Holiday Gift Exchange

    Solve the math puzzle from our December 2025 issue, in which a holiday gift exchange occurs.

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