All Stories

  1. Tech

    Mosquitos use it to suck blood. Researchers used it to 3-D print

    A mosquito proboscis repurposed as a 3-D printing nozzle can print filaments around 20 micrometers wide, half the width of a fine human hair.

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  2. Humans

    ‘Black Religion in the Madhouse’ examines psychiatry and race post-Civil War

    In the aftermath of slavery, white psychiatrists diagnosed Black people with “religious excitement” and claimed they were unfit for freedom.

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  3. Earth

    Early Earth’s belly held onto its water

    When the early Earth’s magma ocean crystallized 4.4 billion years ago, the deep mantle trapped an ocean’s worth of water, scientists say.

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  4. Life

    How these strange cells may explain the origin of complex life

    The tiny pantheon known as the Asgard archaea bear traits that hint at how plants, animals and fungi emerged on Earth.

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  5. Animals

    Bats might be the next bird flu wild card

    Finding that vampire bats along Peru’s coast carried H5N1 antibodies raises concerns that multiple bat species could become reservoirs for the virus.

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  6. Archaeology

    Neandertals mastered fire-making tools 400,000 years ago

    Archaeologists found flint, iron pyrite to strike it and sediments where a fire was probably built several times at an ancient site in England.

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  7. Life

    From viruses to elephants, nature thrives on tiled patterns

    A compilation of 100 examples of biological tilings shows how repeated natural motifs enhance strength, flexibility and other key functions.

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  8. Animals

    Trucked-in honeybees may edge out bigger bumblebee foragers

    The finding could guide beekeepers to keep hives out of most vulnerable areas of the Irish heathlands.

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  9. Artificial Intelligence

    A look under the hood of DeepSeek’s AI models doesn’t provide all the answers

    A peer-reviewed paper about Chinese startup DeepSeek's models explains their training approach but not how they work through intermediate steps.

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  10. Psychology

    Some irritability is normal. Here’s when it’s not

    Irritability is a normal response to frustrations, but it can sometimes signal an underlying mental health disorder, like depression or anxiety.

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  11. Animals

    Huge relatives of white sharks lived earlier than thought

    Lamniform sharks such as great whites and tiger sharks are famous for their size. The first such giants evolved 15 million years earlier than thought.

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  12. Health & Medicine

    GLP-1 drugs failed to slow Alzheimer’s in two big clinical trials

    Tantalizing results from small trials and anecdotes raised hopes that drugs like Ozempic could help. Despite setbacks, researchers aren’t giving up yet.

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