All Stories
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Health & MedicinePrompt liver transplant boosts survival in heavy drinkers
Some patients with severe organ inflammation from alcohol use can benefit from the operation.
By Nathan Seppa -
SpaceHow the moon got its magnetism
Earth’s tug or asteroid impacts may have generated the ancient lunar magnetic field.
By Nadia Drake -
LifeTwo steps to primate social living
Evolutionary shifts about 52 million and 16 million years ago led to the group structures observed today, researchers argue.
By Nick Bascom -
TechTiniest car gets a test drive
Scientists build the world's tiniest electric 'roadster,' and zap it into action.
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LifeA gland grows itself
Japanese researchers coax a pituitary to develop from stem cells in a lab dish.
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LifePrehistoric horses came in leopard print
Dappled animals, once thought to be the result of selective breeding after domestication, were around when early humans depicted them on cave walls.
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LifeSchool rules
Fish coordinate with one, or perhaps two, of their neighbors to make group travel a swimming success.
By Devin Powell -
PaleontologyDNA suggests North American mammoth species interbred
Supposedly separate types may really have been one.
By Susan Milius -
HumansContrasting the concerns over climate and ozone loss
On November 7, ozone and climate scientists met in Washington, D.C., to discuss whether the history of stratospheric ozone protection offered a useful case study about how to catalyze global action on carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases. The simple answer that emerged: No.
By Janet Raloff -
LifeGiant beavers had hidden vocal talents
With air passageways in its skull like no other animal known, an extinct outsized rodent may have made sound all its own.
By Susan Milius -
PsychologySkateboarders rock physics
Skateboarding develops intuition about slope speeds unavailable to most people.
By Bruce Bower -
Psychology‘Gorilla man’ goes unheard
Paying attention to what others say can make listeners totally unaware of unexpected sounds.
By Bruce Bower