All Stories

  1. Climate

    Can geoengineering blunt El Niño’s fury?

    Marine cloud brightening could cool part of the Pacific and weaken extreme El Niños, simulations suggest. But the approach could have risks.

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  2. Space

    A shoebox-sized satellite could expose hidden nuclear weapons in space

    There’s never been a good method to check for violations of the Outer Space Treaty’s prohibition of nuclear weapons in space.

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  3. Artificial Intelligence

    AI tools meant to vet science are surprisingly easy to fool

    The gold standard of scientific review, peer review by researchers’ colleagues, is in crisis. AI might offer a solution but has problems of its own.

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  4. Climate

    A robot swarm is on a mission to map Greenland’s perilous ice sheets

    The ambitious expedition aims to fill data gaps about the glacier-sea boundary to predict when the world might tip into a catastrophic climate regime.

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  5. Agriculture

    Scientists say Beefalo are all beef, no -alo. Breeders disagree

    A whole-genome analysis of Beefalo, a hybrid bison-cattle breed, suggests very few individuals have any bison DNA at all, a new study reports.

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  6. Health & Medicine

    Many U.S. teens underestimate fentanyl’s deadly risk

    A majority of 8th-graders and roughly a third of 10th- and 12th-graders do not see great risk in using fentanyl once or twice, a study reports.

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  7. Physics

    Pickles glow when you plug them in. Science explains why

    A scientist, a jar of pickles and a power strip walk into a room. The punchline involves physics, glowing condiments and a scientific party trick.

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  8. Anthropology

    ‘Hobbits’ likely scavenged dragons’ kills

    Homo floresiensis may have scavenged Komodo dragon leftovers instead of hunting small elephant relatives.

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  9. Plants

    Giant trees have tricks to work around drought

    Samples collected at daring heights provide evidence for an untested theory of tree drought adaptation, while countering another.

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  10. Life

    The natural history of every U.S. state is on display at a new D.C. exhibit

    The Smithsonian Natural History Museum’s latest exhibit, “From These Lands,” connects visitors with America’s natural history.

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  11. Animals

    The animal behind most aggressive wildlife encounters may surprise you

    Analysis of 3,000 incidents in Canada reveals which animal–human activity combos are especially risky. Of note: Elk and campgrounds are a bad mix.

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  12. Animals

    Young gulls’ drab plumage may help them avoid adult attacks

    Fake, painted decoys suggest immature coloring acts as a social signal, reducing aggression from territorial nesting gulls.

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