All Stories

  1. Planetary Science

    Venus has a massive lava tube

    A collapsed lava tube detected in 30-year-old radar data from Venus may be part of a much wider network of underground caves.

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  2. Archaeology

    Iron Age mass grave may hold unusual victims: mostly women and children

    A land dispute may have led to the massacre 3,000 years ago, suggesting Europe’s transition to farming wasn’t always peaceful.

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  3. Genetics

    Wanderlust may be written in our DNA

    A new study suggests that inherited traits explain a small but measurable share of why some people relocate far from where they were born.

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  4. Health & Medicine

    This itch-triggering protein also sends signals to stop scratching

    The TRPV4 protein’s dual nature, found in studies with mice, may complicate the hunt for human itch treatments

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  5. Finding the story

    Editor in Chief Nancy Shute discusses how our reporters find unique stories, from vaccine beer to a particle collider’s retirement to the rise of AI scientists.

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  6. Health & Medicine

    Meds like Ozempic could ease arthritis

    A study in mice and people with osteoarthritis suggests semaglutide can bulk up cartilage between bones, though bigger trials are needed to confirm.

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  7. Science & Society

    Project Hail Mary made us wonder how to survive a trip to interstellar space

    We can take some clues from hibernation and cryogenics, but humans aren't yet built for that kind of deep sleep.

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  8. Climate

    Halting irreversible changes to Antarctica depends on choices made today

    Antarctic Peninsula projections show accelerating ice loss, warming oceans and global sea level impacts tied to greenhouse gas emissions.

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  9. Chemistry

    Machine learning streamlines the complexities of making better proteins

    The framework predicts how proteins will function with several interacting mutations and finds combinations that work well together.

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  10. Climate

    Snowball Earth might have had a dynamic climate and open seas

    Sediments from Scotland hint that ocean-atmosphere interactions continued more than 600 million years ago despite widespread ice.

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  11. Paleontology

    A mouth built for efficiency may have helped the earliest bird fly

    A flexible tongue, sensitive beak and teethlike cones in the mouth may have helped Archaeopteryx generate enough energy to fly.

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  12. Health & Medicine

    Home HPV tests won’t replace the ob-gyn

    Breast exams, birth control and family planning are just some of the reasons not to skip your annual ob-gyn appointment.

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