All Stories

  1. Archaeology

    The oldest known plague outbreak struck hunter-gatherers 5,500 years ago

    Plague DNA in ancient graves near Siberia's Lake Baikal suggests the disease threatened people long before farming and crowded settlements.

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  2. Science & Society

    How real is the Cyclops in The Odyssey?

    The iconic one-eyed monster coming to movie screens in July in The Odyssey might have more in common with tiny water critters than with humans.

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  3. Plants

    Chinese money plant leaves hide a mathematical pattern

    Tiny water-secreting pores appear to organize the major veins of the plant leaves into an arrangement known as a Voronoi diagram.

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  4. Health & Medicine

    A blood test for dementia may tell you if you have more than one type

    AI helped researchers develop an experimental blood test that might let doctors diagnose overlapping dementias.

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  5. Planetary Science

    NASA seems to be backing away from hunting for life on Mars

    Viking 1 kicked off the search for Martian life 50 years ago. Now NASA’s shifting priorities are putting the quest in limbo.

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  6. Climate

    The North Atlantic’s ‘cold blob’ may signal a major current’s decline

    A cold blob of water in the North Atlantic points to a weakening of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation, researchers report.

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  7. Health & Medicine

    Why more male than female newborns may get the crucial vitamin K shot

    Vitamin K lowers the risk of bleeding, including in a circumcision. That procedure may explain a disparity in which infants are more likely to get the shot.

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  8. Space

    Otherworldly music albums feature space weather data

    A science-art team uses research data to make music featuring sounds of Antarctica and outer space

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  9. Health & Medicine

    A popular sunscreen ingredient can finally be sold in the United States

    The FDA will allow bemotrizinol in sunscreen. The chemical is long-lasting and defends against solar radiation that ages skin.

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  10. Chemistry

    A new method could spot fentanyl variants no one has cataloged yet

    Researchers used machine learning to help predict chemical signatures for over 1 billion possible fentanyls, including variants never seen before.

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  11. Crossword: Power play

    Solve the crossword from our July 2026 issue, in which we raise our solving skills to the next level.

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  12. Physics

    Here’s what would happen if you tried to break a photon in half

    A mathematical model shows that attempting to sever a fundamental particle of light could conjure new ones out of thin air.

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