- + Science News: Twisting Words Crossword—Solve our latest interactive crossword. We'll publish science-themed crosswords and math puzzles on alternating months. [Category: Uncategorized] [Li...
- + BBC - Science: UK's biggest ever dinosaur footprint site unearthed—About 200 footprints made by dinosaurs 166 million years ago have been unearthed in a quarry in Oxfordshire.
- + BBC - Science: New bone test could rewrite British history, say scientists—Researchers say new DNA research could shed new light on what history books say about ancient Britain.
- + BBC - Science: Could bike lanes reshape car-crazy Los Angeles?—LA is trying to expand its cycling network ahead of the 2028 Olympics, but some are skeptical.
- + BBC - Science: Future of space travel: Could robots really replace human astronauts?—Advances in technology raise questions about the need to send people to space - and the risks and cost
- + BBC - Science: Could AI robots replace human astronauts in space?—Advances in technology raise questions about the need to send people to space - and the risks and cost
- + ScienceAlert - Latest: US Is Dealing With Troubling Surge in Norovirus Cases, CDC Reports—Here's how to protect yourself from 'stomach flu'. [Category: Health, MSFT Content]
- + ScienceAlert - Latest: Scientists Trace Fast Radio Burst to Surprise Source For First Time—Mind blowing. [Category: Space, MSFT Content]
- + ScienceAlert - Latest: New Year's Resolutions Didn't Stick in 2024? Scientists Say Try This For 2025—You're only human. [Category: Health]
- + ScienceAlert - Latest: Just One Cigarette Steals 20 Minutes of Your Life Expectancy, Study Finds—Quitting can add years to your life. [Category: Health, MSFT Content]
- + ScienceAlert - Latest: 2025 Officially Marks The Start of a New Human Generation—Welcome! [Category: Society]
- + ScienceAlert - Latest: Kickstart 2025 With Quadrantids Peak, One of The Best Meteor Showers All Year—Plus more night sky highlights this week! [Category: Space]
- + ScienceAlert - Latest: The Size of Your Pupils While You Sleep Could Reveal The Memories You're Reliving—A real eye-opener. [Category: Health, MSFT Content]
- + ScienceAlert - Latest: Volcanic Activity Beneath Yellowstone's Massive Caldera Could Be on The Move—Even volcanoes like a vacation. [Category: Nature, MSFT Content]
- + ScienceAlert - Latest: Common ADHD Drug Could Make Some People Better Drivers—Interesting. [Category: Health, MSFT Content]
- + ScienceAlert - Latest: Here Are 4 Things We Need to Consider Before We Mine Our Moon—It's going to happen. [Category: Space]
- + NASA Breaking News: January’s Night Sky Notes: The Red Planet—3 min read January’s Night Sky Notes: The Red Planet by Kat Troche of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific Have you looked u...
- + NASA Breaking News: Astronomy Activation Ambassadors: A New Era—Learn Home Astronomy Activation… STEM Engagement at NASA Overview Learning Resources ...
- + NASA Breaking News: Red and Green Aurora Move Through Earth’s Atmosphere—Peering through the window of the SpaceX Dragon Endeavour spacecraft, NASA astronaut Matthew Dominick captured this image on Oct. 7, 2024 of the Spa...
- + NASA Breaking News: Assessment of PFO as Related to DCS in the Spaceflight Environment and During Ground Testing—6 min read Preparations for Next Moonwalk Simulations Underway (and Underwater) In-person participants L-R standing: Dave Francisco,...
- + Scientific American - Global: Nanotech Scientists Build on an Insect’s Odd Soccer Ball-Like Excretions to Design Ingenious Camouflage—Artificial versions of nanoscale soccer-ball-like structures called brochosomes might be used to make new forms of military camouflage, self-cleaning ...
- + Scientific American - Global: Do We Live in a Special Part of the Universe?—According to a tenet scientists call the cosmological principle, our place in space is in no way exceptional. But recent observations could overturn t...
- + Scientific American - Global: Some of These Whales May Live Twice as Long as Scientists Thought—Bowhead whales were known to live up to 200 years, and a new study finds that southern right whales may live up to age 150 if they aren’t being ...
- + Scientific American - Global: Meet Pearl Young, Who ‘Raised Hell’ at NASA’s Predecessor—Pearl Young joined the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics in 1922, working across departments before becoming a technical editor
- + Scientific American - Global: Nearly Forgotten ‘Phage Therapy’ Fights Antibiotic Resistance—In a new book, a science journalist recounts the story of a lifesaving treatment for infection that scientists broadly dismissed until recently
- + Scientific American - Global: Northern Lights May Adorn New Year’s Sky after Solar Outbursts—Will still more auroras ring out 2024, a year marked by the celestial displays?
- + Scientific American - Global: Auroras May Light Up New Year’s Sky after Solar Outbursts—Will still more auroras ring out 2024, a year marked by the celestial displays?
- + Scientific American - Global: How Frazzled Parents Can Be More Present with Kids during the Holidays—Future-oriented thinking, rather than careening from moment to moment, can help parents have more meaningful moments with their children
- + Scientific American - Global: Why Countries Are Color-Coding Healthy Foods at Grocery Stores—European Union countries and Australia have rolled out front-of-package nutrient profiling. Color-coding or star rankings let shoppers make quick choi...
- + Scientific American - Global: Outrage Fatigue Is Real. Here’s Why We Feel It and How to Cope—Repeated exposure to outrage-inducing news or events can lead to emotional exhaustion. An expert who studies online outrage says there are ways to cop...
- + Newswise - SCIENCE: AANEM Announces 2025 Neuromuscular and Clinical Neurophysiology Fellowship Match —The American Association of Neuromuscular & Electrodiagnostic Medicine (AANEM) is excited to host the neuromuscular (NM) and clinical neurophysiol...
- + Newswise - SCIENCE: Breaking Barriers in Polymer Tech: PBS Vitrimers for Greener Futures—Recent advancements in polymer science have led to significant improvements in poly(butylene succinate) (PBS), a biodegradable polyester. By incorpora...
- + Newswise - SCIENCE: PPPL leading two CHIPS and Science Act projects—The U.S. Department of Energy has selected the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory to receive two prestigious Microelectronics Science Research Center...
- + DailyMail - Science & tech | Mail Online: iPhone users are MORTIFIED to discover their calculator app has a secret history - here's how to find yours—iPhone users have been shocked to find that the calculator app has been recording all their embarrassingly simple sums since the latest iOS 18 update....
- + DailyMail - Science & tech | Mail Online: The superyacht that knows what you want before you do: Futuristic concept uses AI to anticipate passengers' desires by spying on them—Although it sounds like something out of science fiction, this futuristic superyacht will use AI to predict its guests' behaviours and anticipate thei...
- + DailyMail - Science & tech | Mail Online: Scientists may be about to discover the secret to happiness in the largest study of its kind ever attempted—At least 30,000 people from around the globe are set to take part in the biggest happiness study ever attempted in the hopes of finally revealing what...
- + DailyMail - Science & tech | Mail Online: Experts uncover misleading information on air fryers that has fooled millions of customers—Experts from Which? have uncovered misleading information on air fryers that has fooled millions of customers. [Link to media]
- + DailyMail - Science & tech | Mail Online: Frozen Disney World may close as Florida braces for Arctic weather and snow ruins vacations across the South—An arctic blast bound for Florida has parts of Disney World's resorts set to close temporarily, with temperatures that could leave its water parks fro...
- + DailyMail - Science & tech | Mail Online: The 10 foods high in cancer-causing microplastics... and 'the easy swaps' to avoid them—An expert has revealed 10 foods that are high in microplastics, and 'the easy swaps' that can help you avoid them. Microplastics are found in almost e...
- + DailyMail - Science & tech | Mail Online: Experts reveal Kessler Syndrome could affect us all more than first feared—An ex-NASA physicist tells DailyMail.com that space junk could strip Earth's atmosphere in an accidental 'geoengineering experiment' that experts cal...
- + DailyMail - Science & tech | Mail Online: Moment 'glowing red UFO' soars over Disney World baffles parkgoers—Baffling glowing red objects in the sky have been a staple of UFO reports for decades - including a glowing red orb reported by an ambulance pilot to...
- + DailyMail - Science & tech | Mail Online: Secret CIA 'workbook' claims repeating a five-digit number can reduce pain signals in the body—A secret US Army program claimed to have cracked the code for reducing pain signals in the body by repeating a five-digit number. The 21-page document...
- + DailyMail - Science & tech | Mail Online: See the birth of a new STAR: Once-in-a-lifetime 'Blaze Star' is set to ignite in the night sky 'any day now' - here's how to spot it—The 'blaze star' T Coronae Borealis is set to flare into life any day now, going from invisible to as bright as the North Star overnight in a spectacu...
- + The Economist: Science and technology: Cancer vaccines are showing promise at last—Trials are under way against skin, brain and lung tumours
- + The Economist: Science and technology: New firefighting tech is being trialled in Sardinia’s ancient forests—It could sniff out blazes long before they spread out of control
- + The Economist: Science and technology: The other billionaire space company—Might Blue Origin at last become a contender in the private space race?
- + Scientific American Content: Global: Nanotech Scientists Build on an Insect’s Odd Soccer Ball-Like Excretions to Design Ingenious Camouflage—Artificial versions of nanoscale soccer-ball-like structures called brochosomes might be used to make new forms of military camouflage, self-cleaning ...
- + Scientific American Content: Global: Do We Live in a Special Part of the Universe?—According to a tenet scientists call the cosmological principle, our place in space is in no way exceptional. But recent observations could overturn t...
- + Scientific American Content: Global: Some of These Whales May Live Twice as Long as Scientists Thought—Bowhead whales were known to live up to 200 years, and a new study finds that southern right whales may live up to age 150 if they aren’t being ...
- + Scientific American Content: Global: Meet Pearl Young, Who ‘Raised Hell’ at NASA’s Predecessor—Pearl Young joined the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics in 1922, working across departments before becoming a technical editor
- + Scientific American Content: Global: Nearly Forgotten ‘Phage Therapy’ Fights Antibiotic Resistance—In a new book, a science journalist recounts the story of a lifesaving treatment for infection that scientists broadly dismissed until recently
- + Scientific American Content: Global: Northern Lights May Adorn New Year’s Sky after Solar Outbursts—Will still more auroras ring out 2024, a year marked by the celestial displays?
- + Scientific American Content: Global: Auroras May Light Up New Year’s Sky after Solar Outbursts—Will still more auroras ring out 2024, a year marked by the celestial displays?
- + Scientific American Content: Global: How Frazzled Parents Can Be More Present with Kids during the Holidays—Future-oriented thinking, rather than careening from moment to moment, can help parents have more meaningful moments with their children
- + Scientific American Content: Global: Why Countries Are Color-Coding Healthy Foods at Grocery Stores—European Union countries and Australia have rolled out front-of-package nutrient profiling. Color-coding or star rankings let shoppers make quick choi...
- + Scientific American Content: Global: Outrage Fatigue Is Real. Here’s Why We Feel It and How to Cope—Repeated exposure to outrage-inducing news or events can lead to emotional exhaustion. An expert who studies online outrage says there are ways to cop...
- + New Scientist: AI chatbots fail to diagnose patients by talking with them—Although popular AI models score highly on medical exams, their accuracy drops significantly when making a diagnosis based on a conversation with a si...
- + New Scientist: Will there be another pandemic after covid-19 and are we prepared?—Covid-19 is responsible for the deaths of millions of people around the world, but researchers fear the next global outbreak could be even worse, maki...
- + New Scientist: Everything we know about long covid - including how to reduce the risk—Some people have been living with long covid for five years, but we are still just starting to learn about its exact causes and how best to treat the ...
- + New Scientist: People ate lots of foxes and wildcats 10,000 years ago—Foxes and cats weren’t just caught for their pelts, hint cut marks and burns on bones found at a site in Israel
- + New Scientist: Blinking may give your brain a micro break during cognitive tasks—When reading a book, we tend to blink over less familiar words, which suggests it may have a cognitive role
- + New Scientist: Physicists bend atoms in ‘impossible’ experiment—Entire atoms have been put through a classic quantum experiment for the first time and the breakthrough could lead to better detectors for picking up ...