All Stories

  1. Health & Medicine

    Support goes a long way to boost birth control effectiveness

    The HER Salt Lake Contraceptive Initiative’s approach, which centered the user and made refills easy, meant all types of methods worked well.

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  2. Archaeology

    Neandertal babies were a lot like ours — but didn’t stay that way

    Two studies of Neandertal remains suggest their newborns were about the same size as those of modern humans but developed faster through infancy.

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  3. Climate

    Can geoengineering blunt El Niño’s fury?

    Marine cloud brightening could cool part of the Pacific and weaken extreme El Niños, simulations suggest. But the approach could have risks.

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  4. Space

    A shoebox-sized satellite could expose hidden nuclear weapons in space

    There’s never been a good method to check for violations of the Outer Space Treaty’s prohibition of nuclear weapons in space.

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  5. Artificial Intelligence

    AI tools meant to vet science are surprisingly easy to fool

    The gold standard of scientific review, peer review by researchers’ colleagues, is in crisis. AI might offer a solution but has problems of its own.

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  6. Climate

    A robot swarm is on a mission to map Greenland’s perilous ice sheets

    The ambitious expedition aims to fill data gaps about the glacier-sea boundary to predict when the world might tip into a catastrophic climate regime.

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  7. Agriculture

    Scientists say Beefalo are all beef, no -alo. Breeders disagree

    A whole-genome analysis of Beefalo, a hybrid bison-cattle breed, suggests very few individuals have any bison DNA at all, a new study reports.

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  8. Health & Medicine

    Many U.S. teens underestimate fentanyl’s deadly risk

    A majority of 8th-graders and roughly a third of 10th- and 12th-graders do not see great risk in using fentanyl once or twice, a study reports.

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  9. Physics

    Pickles glow when you plug them in. Science explains why

    A scientist, a jar of pickles and a power strip walk into a room. The punchline involves physics, glowing condiments and a scientific party trick.

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  10. Anthropology

    ‘Hobbits’ likely scavenged dragons’ kills

    Homo floresiensis may have scavenged Komodo dragon leftovers instead of hunting small elephant relatives.

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  11. Plants

    Giant trees have tricks to work around drought

    Samples collected at daring heights provide evidence for an untested theory of tree drought adaptation, while countering another.

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  12. Life

    The natural history of every U.S. state is on display at a new D.C. exhibit

    The Smithsonian Natural History Museum’s latest exhibit, “From These Lands,” connects visitors with America’s natural history.

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