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AnimalsOrangutans hit the ground walking
A surprising affinity for moving across the forest floor may aid threatened apes.
By Bruce Bower -
LifeHappy birthday, Mr. Darwin
A male rove beetle that Charles Darwin collected in Argentina in 1832 has finally turned up and been named in his honor.
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Health & MedicineIntroducing the first bank of feces
A new nonprofit called OpenBiome is hoping to do for fecal transplants what blood banks have done for transfusions. It’s a kind of Brown Cross.
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LifeNonhuman city natives in decline but can be conserved
Cities have been a downer on biodiversity but native populations still remain in urban areas, offering a starting point for possible conservation efforts.
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Health & MedicineDrug injection could limit heart attack damage
Study in pigs suggests hydrogel treatment might minimize the risk of heart failure in survivors.
By Nathan Seppa -
PhysicsGetting warmer in attempt to reach ignition
Fusion energy output hits modest milestone at National Ignition Facility.
By Andrew Grant -
HumansClovis baby’s genome unveils Native American ancestry
DNA from skeleton shows all tribes come from a single population.
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LifeCharms of small males may collapse a Darwin’s finch species
Mating rules may be changing for one of the storied Galápagos birds.
By Susan Milius -
AstronomyChina’s lunar rover fails to connect with controllers (updated)
Yutu, or Jade Rabbit, could not be restored to full function, Chinese media report.
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Materials ScienceMaking it work, on paper and just maybe in practice
Last spring, Science News reported on the lack of progress by the main U.S. nuclear fusion effort. As the researchers still contend, laser-initiated fusion should work. It works on paper. But in practice, even a set of extremely powerful lasers failed to trigger the fusion of hydrogen nuclei and the concomitant chain reaction and release of net energy expected.
By Eva Emerson -
Health & MedicineFeedback
Calculating vaccines' impact, cat-induced bird death toll revised, taming wildcat genetics, and praise for The Science Life.
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MathThere’s something suspicious about using statistics to test statistics
The use of statistics to validate medical studies suffers from flaws of faulty assumptions.