All Stories
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Science & SocietyNo New Meds
With drug firms in retreat, the pipeline for new psychiatric medications dries up.
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EarthSalvage Job
With fertilizer prices skyrocketing, scientists scramble to recover phosphorus from waste.
By Roberta Kwok -
ArchaeologyA king’s final hours, told by his mortal remains
The skeleton of Richard III reveals a violent and chaotic end for a controversial English monarch.
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SpaceSupernova’s death throes revealed
In archival images, astronomers see giant star’s activity in weeks before supernova.
By Andrew Grant -
EarthMagnitude 8.0 earthquake strikes Solomon Islands
Temblor is the largest in a month of seismic activity on Australian-Pacific plate boundary.
By Erin Wayman -
Health & MedicineLink between obesity and vitamin D clarified
People carrying gene variants tied to weight are also prone to deficiency of the sun-derived nutrient, but not vice versa.
By Nathan Seppa -
AnimalsMole sniffs the world in stereo
Nostrils of the common mole recognize slight differences in smells to steer it toward its food.
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Health & MedicineTV watching linked to low sperm counts
Couch potatoes’ reproductive health may suffer.
By Nathan Seppa -
HumansEarlier Neandertal demise suggested by redating
Using an improved radiocarbon method, researchers challenge the notion that the species hung on in Iberia for millennia after modern humans arrived in Europe.
By Erin Wayman -
Health & MedicineNothing to fear but suffocation
People with a rare brain disorder don’t get scared — except when they breathe carbon dioxide.
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ChemistryGold-digging microbe
By spitting out a molecule, a bacterium draws solid gold out of solution.