Warming, Rising Acidity and Pollution: Top Threats to the Ocean
Since the last World Oceans Day, we’ve documented trash in the deep sea, sea snails with acid-weakened shells, high ocean temperatures and more
Gestures of Human and Ape Infants Are More Similar Than You Might Expect
Comparing the body language of baby chimps, bonobos and humans suggests that gesticulation came first in the evolution of speaking
Scientists Discover the Genetic Reason Why Birds Don’t Have Penises
Developing bird embryos do have penis precursors, it turns out, but a genetic signal causes the penis cells to die off during gestation
Evidence for the Oldest Ever Bone Tumor Was Just Found in a Neanderthal Fossil
A 120,000-year-old rib bone, originally found in Croatia, shows that tumors aren’t always caused by exposure to pollution
VIDEO: This Helicopter is Controlled Entirely By A Person’s Thoughts
A new device can read your brain patterns to steer a toy helicopter—the mere thought of clenching your right fist veers the chopper right
Don’t Listen to the Buzz: Lobsters Aren’t Actually Immortal
Contrary to memes circulating online, lobsters can’t live forever—but they do keep growing and growing until they die
When Large Birds Disappear, Rainforests Suffer
A century after toucans and toucanets disappeared from patches of Brazilian jungle, trees have evolved to have smaller, weaker seeds
World’s Newest Atomic Clock Loses 1 Second Every 50 Billion Years
Tired of your clocks losing time? A new clock, which is the most accurate ever, uses ytterbium atoms and lasers to precisely define a second
Plants Frozen Under a Glacier for 400 Years Can Come Back to Life
Long-buried mosses recently exposed in the wake of a Canadian glacier’s retreat are sprouting new growth, a study shows
New Study Finds That King Richard III Was Buried in a Hurry
The British king’s remains, discovered in a parking lot, were dropped in an awkward position in a grave that wasn’t dug large enough
Discovered: The Molecule Responsible for Itchiness
A neurotransmitter called Nppb, we now know, plays a vital role in the sensation of an itch—and removing it can prevent itchiness entirely
Save the Amazon, Increase Malaria
People in Brazil living close to forests are 25 times more likely to catch malaria than those living near places where all the trees have been cut down
Doctors Use a Dissolvable 3D-Printed Tracheal Splint to Save a
An infant’s collapsing airway now has a device holding it open; as his tissue strengthens, the splint will be absorbed into his body
Once in a Blue Moon and Other Idioms That Don’t Make Scientific Sense
From “where there’s smoke, there’s fire” to “hard as nails,” several sayings just don’t pass scientific scrutiny
Scientists Finally Pinpoint the Pathogen That Caused the Irish Potato Famine
DNA analysis of 166-year-old potato plant leaves has revealed the disease strain that caused the starvation of millions
Endangered Ocean Creatures Beyond the Cute and Cuddly
Marine species threatened with extinction aren’t just whales, seals and turtles—they include fish, corals, mollusks, birds, and a lone seagrass
Earthworms in Your Garden May Help Prevent Invasive Slugs from Devouring Plants
In the lab, the presence of earthworms can reduce the number of leaves damaged by slugs by 60 percent, a new study finds
Solving an Alligator Mystery May Help Humans Regrow Lost Teeth
A gator can replace all of its teeth up to 50 times—learning what triggers these new teeth to grow may someday keep us from needing dentures
Leaproaches, Mutant Butterflies and Other Insect News That the 17-Year Cicadas Missed
Since 1996, scientists have found the oldest fossil insect, the largest living bug, a new taxonomic order and more
The World According to Twitter, in Maps
A new geographic analysis of millions of tweets provides a remarkably broad view of humanity, by language, location and other factors
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