Science

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fromwww.mercurynews.com
1 hour ago

Has figure skating reached the limits of human performance?

It was at a relatively minor event in upstate New York in September 2022 that Ilia Malinin, the self-anointed Quad God who was fast becoming the biggest name in figure skating, finally landed the jump that so many people had thought impossible. Others had tried quad axels in competition over the years. All of them had fallen. That extra 180 degrees of rotation necessary for the only jump in skating that starts with a forward-facing entry proved to be a half-revolution too much.
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fromArs Technica
7 hours ago

Rocket Report: Ariane 64 to debut soon; India has a Falcon 9 clone too?

NASA is rolling out the SLS and Orion for Artemis II with a likely no-earlier-than February 8 launch pending the outcome of a wet dress rehearsal.
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fromFast Company
5 hours ago

The power that'll fuel NASA's Gateway Lunar Space Station

NASA's Gateway will use two roll-out solar arrays (ROSAs), each football-end-zone sized, delivering 60 kilowatts continuously to power the lunar station.
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fromLondon On The Inside
9 hours ago

Learn How to Biohack Your Mind and Body at the 1N Labs Pop-Up

1N Labs Shoreditch pop-up offers biohacking experiences, free immersive weekend sessions, brain-mapping, cognitive drinks, and nicotine lozenge tastings through Feb 6, 2026.
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fromNature
1 day ago

Daily briefing: Cancer cells stay hidden using stolen mitochondria

Cancer cells acquire immune-cell mitochondria that activate a mitochondrial pathway enabling immune evasion and lymph-node invasion.
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fromFuturism
4 hours ago

Network of Home Computers Detected 100 Potential Alien Signals

SETI@home used distributed volunteer computing to analyze radio telescope data, producing large datasets and refining sensitivity despite no confirmed extraterrestrial detections.
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from24/7 Wall St.
6 hours ago

Here's How to Profit From NASA's Artemis Moon Missions

Amentum, Lockheed Martin, Boeing, Northrop Grumman, and Rocket Lab stand to capture multi-billion-dollar revenue from NASA's Artemis lunar program.
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fromKqed
3 hours ago

Winter Night Out Idea: See Classic Sci-Fi Films in a Planetarium | KQED

Chabot offers adult Sci‑Fi Nights with planetarium screenings, free public telescope viewings, late NASA Ames Visitor Center access, and youth sky programs.
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fromFast Company
2 hours ago

Neuroscience just showed how 1 type of activity stops your brain from aging

Regular engagement in creative activities correlates with younger brain age, stronger neural connections, and greater benefits for higher expertise, with dancing adding physical advantages.
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fromScienceDaily
8 hours ago

Vitamin A may be helping cancer hide from the immune system

Retinoic acid signaling in cancer cells and dendritic cells suppresses anti-tumor immunity, and blocking this pathway restores vaccine effectiveness.
from24/7 Wall St.
3 hours ago

How Precision Sniper Technology Reduced the Need for Massed Infantry

Infantry once relied on numbers to solve uncertainty. When soldiers could not see or hit targets precisely, the answer was more troops and more fire. Sniper technologies quietly overturned that logic. By extending range, improving accuracy, and increasing awareness, they allowed small teams to dominate space once controlled only by massed formations. Precision replaced presence, and patience became a battlefield advantage. Here, 24/7 Wall St. is taking a look at the sniper technologies that totally changed the game.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
7 hours ago

Mysterious Little Red Dots' in Space Are Likely Cloaked Black Holes

Giant, rapidly growing black holes enshrouded in dense ionized gas likely explain the early-universe “little red dots” seen by JWST.
fromwww.dw.com
1 month ago

2026 stargazing: Eclipses, meteor showers and supermoons

Except for penguins and Antarctic scientists, few will be able to enjoy February's annular solar eclipse. That's because this eclipse will see the moon pass between the Earth and sun across the path of the southern continent, reaching a maximum at around 12:12pm UTC. People living in Eswatini, Lesotho, Madagascar, Mozambique, South Africa, Zimbabwe, and the southern parts of Botswana, Malawi, Namibia, Tanzania and Zambia, will only see a partial eclipse March 3.
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from24/7 Wall St.
6 hours ago

Triple-Leveraged Biotech ETF Doubles as Regulatory Winds Shift in 2026

Triple-leveraged LABU multiplies daily biotech index returns threefold, offering amplified gains and losses tied to biotech FDA catalysts and sector momentum.
fromwww.theguardian.com
13 hours ago

BP accused of insidious' influence on UK education through Science Museum links

Campaigners have accused BP of having an insidious influence over the teaching of science, technology, engineering and maths (Stem) in the UK through its relationship with the Science Museum. Documents obtained under freedom of information legislation show how the company funded a research project that led to the creation of the Science Museum Group academy its teacher and educator training programme which BP sponsors and which has run more than 500 courses, for more than 5,000 teachers.
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fromTravel + Leisure
7 hours ago

A Complete Guide to the Best Meteor Showers to Watch in 2026

2026 meteor showers offer easy, low-effort viewing under dark skies, with notable events including the Lyrids and Eta Aquariids having distinct peaks and viewing conditions.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
7 hours ago

Incredibly Well-Preserved Cheetah Mummies Show Big Cats Once Roamed Saudi Arabia

Researchers have discovered the naturally mummified and skeletal remains of 61 cheetahs, which were hidden deep inside caves in northern Saudi Arabia for hundreds, and in some cases thousands, of years. The find indicates that these big cats roamed the Arabian Peninsula for millennia before they disappeared from the landscape between 49 and 188 years agoevidence that bolsters an effort to rewild the region with modern-day cheetahs, according to Ahmed Boug, general director of the National Center for Wildlife in Riyadh.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
7 hours ago

Mosquitoes Show a Clear Preference for Human Blood after Deforestation

Mosquitoes in remnants of Brazil's Atlantic Forest predominantly fed on humans, showing species-level preference linked to deforestation and increased disease risk.
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fromZDNET
1 day ago

At 25, Wikipedia embodies what the internet could have been - but can it survive AI?

Wikipedia is the world's most popular online encyclopedia and the most successful open data project, but AI creates new challenges and long-term threats.
fromNature
2 days ago

Daily briefing: Why 'harmless' germs can be deadly for some people

DNA variants near a gene called MSRB3 - which is important for hearing in humans - could determine whether a dog's ears are pendulous like a basset hound's or stubby like a rottweiler's. Researchers analysed the genomes of thousands of canines and found that small, single-letter changes to DNA in a region of the genome near MSRB3 could boost the gene's activity. The boost can increase the rate at which ear cells proliferate, resulting in longer ears.
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#spacex
fromSFGATE
1 day ago
Science

NASA astronauts left space yesterday. They just splashed down off San Diego.

fromSFGATE
1 day ago
Science

NASA astronauts left space yesterday. They just splashed down off San Diego.

#nasa
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fromFast Company
1 day ago

Is Elon Musk losing the space cellphone war?

Two competing satellite strategies—massive LEO constellations of small satellites versus a few giant satellites—are racing to provide global mobile internet and affect planetary health.
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fromNextgov.com
1 day ago

House science committee to host hearing on National Quantum Initiative Act

Congressional committee will hold a Jan. 22 hearing to assess the National Quantum Initiative's progress and federal quantum R&D, amid reauthorization and increased funding proposals.
Science
fromVulture
1 day ago

Life After Melvyn Bragg

In Our Time is an austere, long-running BBC Radio 4 program convening experts to explore esoteric subjects and reaching over two million weekly listeners.
#international-space-station
from24/7 Wall St.
1 day ago

Up 158% in 2026, Is Critical Metals Too Hot to Touch?

Critical Metals ( NASDAQ:CRML ) shares rocketed 32.6% higher yesterday after the company announced the first assay results from its 2025 drilling program at the Tanbreez rare-earth project in southern Greenland. The results confirmed additional high-grade intersections across the Fjord Deposit and Upper Fjord areas, building on prior drilling success. The stock has now surged approximately 158% year-to-date in 2026 as investors bet on the project's advancement toward a pilot plant launch targeted for May.
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#crew-11
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fromBig Think
1 day ago

It's time to stop teaching the biggest lie about Hawking radiation

Hawking radiation arises from quantum-field effects near horizons; the popular particle–antiparticle pair popping explanation is incorrect and misleading.
fromThe Verge
1 day ago

Amazon is buying copper harvested by bacteria for its data centers

Amazon's data centers will reportedly utilize copper from a mine in Arizona that's leaching metal from ores using microorganisms, the Wall Street Journal reports. Amazon Web Services will be the first customer for Nuton Technologies, which developed the "bioleaching" technology. AWS will also be providing "cloud-based data and analytics support," helping to optimize Nuton's mining process. Nuton's bioleaching method uses naturally-occurring microorganisms to extract copper from low-grade ore that would otherwise be too expensive to mine,
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fromFast Company
1 day ago

NASA astronauts return to Earth early after a medical evacuation

An ailing astronaut returned to Earth with three others on Thursday, ending their space station mission more than a month early in NASA's first medical evacuation. SpaceX guided the capsule to a middle-of-the-night splashdown in the Pacific near San Diego, less than 11 hours after the astronauts exited the International Space Station. Their first stop was a hospital for an overnight stay.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

Americans Overwhelmingly Support Science, but Some Think the U.S. Is Lagging Behind

A majority of Americans value U.S. scientific leadership, but Democrats increasingly believe the country is losing ground while Republicans view scientific standing more positively.
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fromNature
1 day ago

A 'time capsule for cells' stores the secret experiences of their past

Engineered TimeVaults capture and store cellular mRNA to continuously record past transcriptional activity, enabling retrospective study of cellular history and responses.
fromNature
1 day ago

PhD students' taste for risk mirrors their supervisors'

A researchers' propensity for risky projects is passed down to their doctoral students - and stays with trainees after they leave the laboratory, according to an analysis of thousands of current and former PhD students and their mentors.
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fromPsychology Today
22 hours ago

Vaping vs. Smoking

Popular disposable e-cigarette pods leach multiple toxic metals at levels exceeding cancer and non-cancer risk thresholds, posing heightened health risks, especially for youth.
fromKqed
23 hours ago

From the Galapagos to the Deep Sea, Cal Academy Scientists Describe 72 New Species | KQED

What we learned was something that hadn't been reported before," Mendales said.
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fromTechCrunch
1 day ago

Exclusive: How one startup is using probiotics to try and ease the copper shortage | TechCrunch

Microbe-enhancing additives can potentially raise copper yields 20–30%, helping address a projected copper supply shortfall and attracting venture investment into biotech mining solutions.
fromCN Traveller
1 day ago

What does the 2026 solar eclipse mean for your star sign?

If there's one date sky-gazers have marked in their diaries for 2026, it's the 12 August total solar eclipse. Set to be the year's most-watched celestial event, it takes place when the moon passes between the Earth and the sun, temporarily plunging the summer sky into darkness over Balearic beach clubs, Spanish city streets and Icelandic music festivals. So far, so dramatic, right? Just wait until you discover what it means for your star sign.
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fromHigh Country News
1 day ago

How geology not only shapes the world, it shapes us - High Country News

My father was a petroleum geologist. A lot of my childhood, he was gone, away on oil rigs in the Powder River Basin and remote parts of Wyoming, living in man camps long before cellphones. We had to wait days to talk to him. When he went into the nearest town to shower, he'd find a payphone and call us. I was always breathless with news.
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fromwww.latimes.com
1 day ago

California diver documents close encounter with lacy, undulating sea creature far from home

It looked like the silvery blade of a knife. Peering through his goggles, diver Ted Judah had laid eyes on a deep-sea creature rarely encountered by humans. He and wife Linda were diving off McAbee Beach in Monterey County in late December when, near the surface, he spotted the undulating thing. It was some kind of ribbon fish, he wrote in a post on the Facebook group Monterey County Dive Reports. Kevin Lewand solved the mystery.
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fromSocial Media Explorer
1 day ago

Saltwater vs. Traditional Chlorine - Social Media Explorer

Saltwater pools generate chlorine on-site via electrolysis, producing steadier sanitizer levels, softer-feeling water, and different maintenance and equipment requirements compared with manually dosed chlorine systems.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Pesticides may drastically shorten fish lifespans, study finds

Signs of ageing accelerated when fish were exposed to the chemicals, according to the study, which could have implications for other organisms. Chemical safety regulations tend to focus on short-term exposure to high doses of pesticides and other chemicals, but the study focused on long-term exposure. Low doses of pesticides are widespread in the environment, so their effects should be studied and understood, the authors said.
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fromOpen Culture
1 day ago

Download 435 High Resolution Images from John J. Audubon's The Birds of America

Our sus­pi­cions have lit­tle to do with biol­o­gy, but rather, a cer­tain zesti­ness of expres­sion, an overem­phat­ic beak, a droll gleam in the eye. The Audubon Society's new­ly redesigned web­site abounds with trea­sure for those in either camp: Free high res down­loads of all 435 plates. Mp3s of each specimen's call. And vin­tage com­men­tary that effec­tive­ly splits the dif­fer­ence between sci­ence and the unin­ten­tion­al­ly humor­ous locu­tions of anoth­er age.
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#supermoon
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fromenglish.elpais.com
1 day ago

Culex molestus': What the London Underground mosquito species says about us

Human activities, both direct and indirect, have profoundly altered evolution of many species through domestication, artificial selection, and creation of new ecological niches.
fromFlowingData
1 day ago

Names most likely to appear in the middle

What is the most middle name in the United States? Erin Davis grew curious enough to find the answers in data. For females, the most middle names are Rae, Marie, and Mae. For males, the most middle names are Lee, Kumar, and Ray. The answers are straightforward, but finding the answers was more roundabout, because you can't just dig into the annual baby names dataset from the Social Security Administration. Instead, Davis used voter registration data, which comes with its own challenges.
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fromBuzzFeed
1 day ago

35 Extremely Obvious Things I Just Learned For The First Time That Completely And Totally Blew My Mind

Alligator and crocodile visuals differ; Japanese TV labels uneaten food with "the staff ate it later"; coin mints sometimes produce misprinted pennies.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

NASA Commits to Plan to Build a Nuclear Reactor on the Moon by 2030

NASA and the U.S. Department of Energy will build a long-duration fission reactor on the lunar surface within four years to power Artemis missions.
Science
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

What Physics Might Be If It Were Left to Psychologists

Physics requires classification beyond magnitude-based P-levels; the Five Fs—force, friction, flux, formulation, foundational structure—better capture heterogeneous physical activities.
Science
fromwww.eastbaytimes.com
2 days ago

Beach hazards statement affecting Bay Area Shorelines until Thursday night

Coastal North Bay, San Francisco Peninsula, Monterey Bay, Big Sur and San Francisco County face sneaker waves, strong rip currents, and 7–12 ft breaking waves.
fromTheregister
2 days ago

India's flagship rocket fails for the second time in a row

The PSLV - aka the Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle - is an expendable medium launch rocket that India devised and has flown since 1993. ISRO has launched 64 of the rockets and chalked up 58 successes. This mission, PSLV-C62 / EOS-N1, employed the PSLV-DL variant of the rocket, which uses a pair of external boosters. Other PSLV variants use four or six external boosters. The mission was a commercial affair, with 15 payloads aboard.
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fromwww.ocregister.com
1 day ago

NASA sends 4 astronauts back to Earth in first medical evacuation

An astronaut required medical care, prompting NASA's first ISS medical evacuation and early return of four crew for ground evaluation and Pacific splashdown.
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fromNature
2 days ago

Cancer might evade immune defences by stealing mitochondria

Cancer cells acquire mitochondria from immune cells to weaken those immune cells and activate type I interferon signaling that promotes lymph-node invasion.
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fromNature
2 days ago

Direct observation of the Migdal effect induced by neutron bombardment - Nature

The Migdal effect enables detection of MeV–GeV light dark matter by producing detectable electronic recoils from nuclear recoils, overcoming current detector threshold limits.
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fromwww.npr.org
2 days ago

NASA set to bring astronaut (and the rest) of Crew-11 home early for medical reasons

A Crew-11 astronaut is returning to Earth early for medical evaluation, marking the first medical evacuation in the International Space Station's 25-year history.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

The Milky Way's Central Black Hole May Have Appeared Shockingly Different Just a Few Hundred Years Ago

Supermassive black holes are mysterious bodies. Scientists aren't entirely sure how these beating hearts at the centers of most large galaxies formed. That includes Sagittarius A* (Sgr A*), the supermassive black hole at the center of our own Milky Way galaxy. Now a new preprint study is shedding light on Sagittarius A* by studying what happens as material falls toward the black hole.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

String Theory May Have a New Neuroscientific Niche

Mathematical tools from string-theory contexts can model biological branching networks such as neuronal wiring without implying a fundamental link between string theory and consciousness.
fromNature
2 days ago

Dominant contribution of Asgard archaea to eukaryogenesis - Nature

Eukaryotes drastically differ from archaea and bacteria (collectively, prokaryotes) by the complex organization of eukaryotic cells. The signature features of this organizational complexity include the eponymous nucleus, the endomembrane system, the elaborate cytoskeleton and the energy-converting mitochondrion, which evolved from an alphaproteobacterial endosymbiont9. Thus, the last eukaryotic common ancestor (LECA) probably already possessed mitochondria along with the other signatures of the eukaryotic cellular organization.
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fromBig Think
2 days ago

How "tribology" became a new industrial science

the automation of heavy machinery enabled plants to operate continuously, increasing productivity and revenue. The downside was that any small hiccup was acutely felt, cascading through the production line. At first, it was assumed that inadequate lubrication of factory equipment was causing parts to seize up or break apart. And so, the Lubrication and Wear Group of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, along with the Iron
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fromArchDaily
2 days ago

CRA-Carlo Ratti Associati and Italo Rota Transform MAE Carbon Fiber Archive Into an Interactive Museum in Italy

MAE Museum transforms a major carbon-fiber archive into an interactive "living museum" showcasing carbon-fiber science, production processes, and broad industrial and architectural applications.
fromFuncheap
2 days ago

Chabot's Solar Eclipse Viewing Watch Party & Festivities (2026)

Join Chabot astronomers for a live watch party of the magnificent Total Lunar Eclipse from Chabot's Observation Deck. Bring your friends & family and a lawn chair to enjoy Eclipse-themed crafts and demonstrations, then get bundled up with a cup of hot cocoa to watch this stunning celestial show. During the peak of the Eclipse, The Moon will become totally engulfed in Earth's dark
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fromBig Think
2 days ago

New JWST lens survey: can it save the expanding Universe?

Observations from within the local Universe limit measurements, producing conflicting Hubble expansion rates (67 vs 73 km/s/Mpc), motivating new methods such as JWST multiply-lensed supernova observations.
Science
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

It's Time to Celebrate Animal Sentience and Stop Squabbling

Many nonhuman animals, including insects, are sentient and experience emotions such as joy and pain, and sentience should be recognized broadly.
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

Royal Society president reignites Elon Musk row by defending lack of action

Royal Society supports expelling fellows only for fraudulent or invalid scientific achievement, not for unpopular behaviour, so Elon Musk's fellowship remains intact.
fromThe Atlantic
2 days ago

Your Muscles Remember Your Strongest Moments-And Your Weakest

In 2018, Sharples and his research lab, now at the Norwegian School of Sport Sciences in Oslo, were the first to show that exercise could change how our muscle-building genes work over the long term. The genes themselves don't change, but repeated periods of exertion turns certain genes on, spurring cells to build muscle mass more quickly than before. These epigenetic changes have a lasting effect: Your muscles remember these periods of strength and respond favorably in the future.
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#woolly-rhinoceros
fromNature
2 days ago
Science

Wolf pup's stomach yields DNA from one of world's last surviving woolly rhinos

fromNature
2 days ago
Science

Wolf pup's stomach yields DNA from one of world's last surviving woolly rhinos

fromBlueJaysNation
2 days ago

Former Blue Jay Jose Urena signs with NPB's Rakuten Golden Eagles

Since Ureña also made a brief stint with the Los Angeles Dodgers last season, appearing in just two games after being granted his release from the Blue Jays, he's in line to receive a World Series ring later this year. He was guaranteed to take home a championship ring with two of his former teams - Toronto and Los Angeles - squaring off in the Fall Classic.
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fromNews Center
2 days ago

Novel Mechanism Regulates Essential Enzyme Production in Kidneys - News Center

PIEZO2 mechanosensitive ion channels in juxtaglomerular cells enable direct sensing of renal blood flow and pressure to regulate renin release and influence kidney function.
#animal-behavior
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fromArs Technica
2 days ago

Scientists sequence a woolly rhino genome from a 14,400-year-old wolf's stomach

Woolly rhino effective population fell from about 15,600 to 1,600 between 114,000–63,000 years ago, then stabilized around 1,600 breeding individuals.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

T. rex Never Stopped Growing, Dinosaur Bone Study Suggests

Tyrannosaurus rex grew longer and larger than previously believed, typically reaching at least 8.8 tons and stopping growth between 35 and 40 years.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

How Seed Oils Became the Villain of Social MediaAnd What the Science Really Says

Seed oils are common in many processed foods and are controversial, but claims that they are uniquely toxic are unsupported by evidence.
Science
fromNature
2 days ago

How ageing harms the body's response to raging infection

Some genes that protect against infection in young mice increase mortality in old mice by altering organ-specific immune endurance.
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fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

What Makes Men Attractive? Science Reveals the Ideal Body

Male attractiveness correlates more strongly with lower body fat percentage and BMI than with larger muscle size.
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fromNature
4 days ago

Daily briefing: The neural circuit that can make it hard to start a difficult task

A neural 'motivation brake' reduces willingness to begin unpleasant tasks; suppressing it in macaques increased initiation, suggesting potential implications for treating motivation deficits in depression.
Science
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

How Serious Games Tackle Serious Problems

Serious games use entire games to solve real-world problems like climate change, wealth inequality, and political polarization, achieving research, education, and behavior-change outcomes.
fromTechCrunch
3 days ago

Ammobia says it has reinvented a century-old technology | TechCrunch

Ammonia might be the world's most under appreciated chemical. Without it, crops would go unfertilized and billions of people would starve. Humans started making ammonia in large amounts just over a century ago, and since then the process used to make it, known as Haber-Bosch, hasn't changed much. A new startup, Ammobia, says that it has tweaked the Haber-Bosch process to lower the cost by up to 40%.
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fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

What Can Gaming Do for Our Intelligence?

Effective intelligence — attention, working memory, decision-making, and learning speed — is trainable through experience and interventions such as gaming, leveraging neuroplasticity.
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