All Stories

  1. Planetary Science

    A possible new dwarf planet skirts the solar system’s edge

    For the dwarf planet candidate, one trip around the sun takes over 24,000 years. Its orbit challenges a proposed path for a hypothetical Planet Nine.

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  2. Health & Medicine

    A cup of chickpeas a day lowers cholesterol

    Adding a cup of chickpeas or black beans to people’s daily diets could improve health by lowering cholesterol and inflammation, a new study suggests.

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  3. Space

    A private Japanese spacecraft failed on its way to the moon’s surface 

    The spacecraft’s owner, ispace, is attempting to land these crafts to commercialize lunar resources.

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  4. Archaeology

    Precolonial farmers thrived in one of North America’s coldest places

    Ancestral Menominee people in what’s now Michigan’s Upper Peninsula grew maize and other crops on large tracts of land despite harsh conditions.

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  5. Animals

    Preemptively cutting rhinos’ horns cuts poaching

    Comparing various tactics for protecting rhinos suggests that dehorning them drastically reduces poaching.

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  6. Health & Medicine

    A diet full of tiny plastics triggered health problems in mice

    Mice exposed to polystyrene nanoplastics developed problems in their guts and livers. It’s not yet clear if humans are similarly affected.

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  7. Animals

    Probiotics helped great star corals fend off a deadly disease

    A probiotic paste prevented the spread of stony coral tissue loss disease, but the treatment is still a proof-of-concept, not a cure.

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  8. Earth

    Small earthquakes can have a big impact on the movements of major faults

    Small and far-off earthquakes can stifle the spread of large motions on some of the world’s biggest faults.

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  9. Animals

    Flamingos create precise water vortices in a shrimp-hunting frenzy

    Nashville Zoo flamingos reveal the oddball birds generate many types of vortices to eat. The swirls could be an inspiration to human engineers.

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  10. Plants

    Trees ‘remember’ times of water abundance and scarcity

    Spruce trees that experienced long-term droughts were more resistant to future ones, while pines acclimatized to wet periods were more vulnerable.

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  11. Animals

    Aussie cockatoos use their beaks and claws to turn on water fountains

    Parrots living in Sydney have learned how to turn on water fountains for a drink. It's the first such drinking strategy seen in the birds.

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  12. Particle Physics

    Muons’ magnetism matches theory, easing an enduring physics conundrum

    A puzzle over muons’ magnetic properties could have broken the standard model. But the theory bounced back.

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