All Stories

  1. Animals

    How snakes defy gravity to stand tall

    Limbless tree snakes can lift most of their body into the air without toppling. They manage this by focusing all their bending forces at their base.

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  2. Artificial Intelligence

    Welcome to the weird world of AI agent teams

    AI agents are starting to work in teams, but without careful organization, groups of bots can easily fall into chaos.

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  3. Astronomy

    A rare star in a tiny galaxy preserves a record of the early universe

    Found in an ultrafaint dwarf galaxy, the ancient star’s unusual chemistry indicates it formed from gas enriched by a single early supernova.

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  4. Animals

    Watch the first video of a sperm whale birth captured by scientists

    In a sperm whale birth recorded in more intimate detail than ever before, local whales huddled around the mother and lifted the calf to the surface.

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  5. Physics

    Water has a newfound ‘critical point’ that may help explain its quirks

    At cold temperatures, water has two different liquid phases, which become one at the critical point. The discovery could help explain water’s quirks.

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  6. Paleontology

    Early apes may not have evolved in East Africa

    Fossil jaw remains found in Egypt suggest that the earliest modern apes evolved in North Africa, not in East Africa where most fossils have been found.

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  7. Science & Society

    Social media can be addictive, a jury finds. Research hints at a link

    Instagram and YouTube intentionally designed social media platforms to hook users, a landmark court case found. A pediatrician explains the ruling’s impact.

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  8. Health & Medicine

    Start cholesterol tests in childhood, new guidelines say

    The idea is to control bad cholesterol early in life. Additional tests are also recommended to provide a clearer picture of risk.

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  9. Space

    NASA races to have the first moon base and nuclear-propulsion spacecraft

    A $20 billion plan for a moon base by 2030 and the launch nuclear-propulsion space exploration raises hopes, but caution given deep government cuts.

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  10. Animals

    When were dogs domesticated? The oldest known dog DNA offers clues

    Two new studies suggest that genetically stable dogs were living among humans in Europe by about 14,000 years ago.

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  11. Planetary Science

    A private moon lander challenges ideas about lunar volcanism

    New measurements from the Blue Ghost lander suggest that thin crust, not just radioactive heating, shaped the moon’s dark lava plains.

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  12. Neuroscience

    Clumps of mouse brain cells can learn to play a virtual game

    Sure, playing video game is fun. But the ability of tiny brain organoids to pick up a skill could provide insight into how healthy brains work.

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