All Stories

  1. Particle Physics

    This laser would shoot beams of neutrinos, not light

    The subatomic particles called neutrinos are famously elusive. But an unconventional trick could make a laser beam of the aloof particles.

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  2. Neuroscience

    Your red is my red, at least to our brains

    Despite philosophical debates, colors like red may spark similar brain activity across individuals, new research suggests.

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  3. Health & Medicine

    Drugs like Ozempic might lower cancer risk

    GLP-1 medications like Ozempic, Wegovy and Mounjaro might lower people’s risk of developing certain cancers, especially ones linked to obesity.

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  4. Animals

    Just like humans, many animals get more aggressive in the heat

    From salamanders to monkeys, many species get more violent at warmer temperatures — a trend that may shape their social structures as the world warms.

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  5. Paleontology

    Young pterosaurs probably died in violent Jurassic storms

    Two hatchling pterosaurs with fractured arm bones point to ancient storms as the cause of mass casualties preserved in Germany’s Solnhofen Limestone.

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  6. Astronomy

    Astronomers detect the brightest ever fast radio burst

    The fast radio burst came from 130 million light-years away. That proximity allowed an in-depth search for what produced the mysterious signal.

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  7. Animals

    Tiny thumbnails may be key for rodents’ global takeover

    Thumbnails might have boosted rodents’ food-handling skills, helping them thrive worldwide.

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  8. Life

    A sixth mass extinction? Not so fast, some scientists say

    A new analysis suggests that recent extinctions have been rare, limited mostly to islands and slowing. But others argue this is all just semantics.

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  9. Animals

    Here’s how fruit flies’ giant sperm squeeze into tight spaces

    Researchers found that fruit fly sperm push against one another and align in orderly bundles, preventing knots that could block reproduction.

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  10. Archaeology

    Venice’s iconic winged lion statue originated in ancient China

    European artisans turned a Tang Dynasty tomb guardian sculpture into a symbol of medieval Venetian statehood, researchers say.

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  11. Microbes

    Antarctic lake microbes have flexible survival strategies 

    Life teems under the Antarctic ice sheet. In subglacial Lake Mercer, it is surprisingly versatile and isolated from the rest of the world.

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  12. Animals

    This lizard can tolerate extreme levels of lead

    Cuban brown anoles have the highest blood lead levels of any vertebrate known — three times that of the previous record holder, the Nile crocodile.

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