All Stories

  1. BOOK REVIEW: The Cure For Everything: Untangling Twisted Messages about Health, Fitness, and Happiness by Timothy Caulfield

    Review by Nathan Seppa.

    By
  2. Humans

    Stone Age art gets animated

    Cave paintings and decorated disks provided moving experiences in ancient Europe.

    By
  3. Earth

    Defying Depth

    How deep-sea creatures, and close relatives, survive tons of water weight.

    By
  4. Space

    At Home in the Universe

    Astronomers lay bare the Milky Way’s biggest secrets.

    By
  5. Health & Medicine

    Feel the Burn

    Turning on brown fat in humans may boost weight loss.

    By
  6. Physics

    Quantum teleportation leaps forward

    Two teams report beaming information about particles over long distances, a step toward creating satellite quantum communication networks.

    By
  7. Astronomy

    Milky Way will be hit head-on

    The Andromeda galaxy is destined to slam directly into ours, new observations from the Hubble Space Telescope show.

    By
  8. Genetics

    Poppies make more than opium

    A 10-gene cluster controls the flowers’ production of a valuable cough suppressant and antitumor compound.

    By
  9. Life

    Treatment helps paralyzed rats walk

    A combination of drugs, electrical stimulation and therapy can restore lost connections between lower limbs and brain.

    By
  10. Humans

    Depolarizing climate science

    A study out this week attempts to probe why attitudes on climate risks by some segments of the public don’t track the science all that well. Along the way, it basically debunks one simplistic assumption: that climate skeptics, for want of a better term, just don’t understand the data — or perhaps even science. “I think this is sort of a weird, exceptional situation,” says decision scientist Dan Kahan of the Yale Law School, who led the new study. “Most science issues aren’t like this.” But a view is emerging, some scientists argue, that people tend to be unusually judgmental of facts or interpretations in science fields that threaten the status quo — or the prevailing attitudes of their cultural group, however that might be defined. And climate science is a poster child for these fields.

    By
  11. Life

    Blue-green algae release chemical suspected in some amphibian deformities

    Retinoic acid levels high in waterways rich in cyanobacteria blooms.

    By
  12. Earth

    Supervolcanoes evolve superquickly

    Huge underground chambers of magma appear and erupt within just several centuries, a study of California rocks suggests.

    By