Uncategorized
- Humans
Climate skepticism not rooted in science illiteracy
Cultural values are more important than science knowledge in shaping a person’s views on global warming.
By Janet Raloff - Humans
Harappans may have lived, died by monsoon
Waning of seasonal rains over millennia gave rise to a civilization and then doomed it, a new study suggests.
By Devin Powell -
- Life
How not to eat the wrong frog
Panamanian bats use an array of senses to keep from ingesting poison prey.
By Susan Milius - Life
Blue light tells plants when to flower
Protein that marks day length also coordinates blooming genes.
- Humans
Family labels framed similarly across cultures
Despite differing languages, a trade-off between simplicity and usefulness of words defining kin relationships might be universal.
By Bruce Bower - Tech
Bacterial trick keeps robots in sync
Communicating information about the environment allows a stumbling machine to rejoin its group.
- Life
Delay of bloom blamed on climate change
Flowers that appear immune to global warming in spring may simply be taking a cue from the previous warmer autumn.
By Susan Milius - Health & Medicine
Long-acting contraceptives best by far
Implants and IUDs outperform the pill, vaginal ring and patch as birth control options, a study finds.
By Nathan Seppa - Life
No new smell cells
Other mammals constantly create new olfactory neurons as they learn new smells, but a new study suggests humans don’t.
- Planetary Science
Frosted honeycomb of a moon
New analyses of Cassini images reveal ice on the pockmarked Saturnian satellite Hyperion.
By Nadia Drake - Health & Medicine
Thou can’t not covet
Wanting what others have may be hardwired in the brain, experiments suggest.