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  1. Tech

    No, SpudCells aren’t alive. But they’re a step toward the first synthetic life

    The lab-made cells open a window into what’s possible for synthetic life, researchers say.

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  2. Anthropology

    Many universities hold seized human remains. What should they do with them?

    Biological anthropologist Fatimah Jackson is leading an effort to prevent history from repeating.

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  3. Math puzzle: A sequence of odd events

    Solve the math puzzle from our August 2026 issue, in which a family investigates an odd happening.

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  4. Archaeology

    Ancient Egyptian princesses knew their way around weapons of war

    Analysis of six mummies from ancient Egypt challenges the idea that the bows and daggers buried with some royal women were merely ceremonial.

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  5. Astronomy

    This “exotic weirdo” exoplanet has a rocky surface and an atmosphere

    Astronomers found a helium atmosphere around a rocky exoplanet — a good sign for the search for life outside the solar system.

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  6. Genetics

    Genes offer new clues to stopping Huntington’s disease in its tracks

    A new generation of therapies aims to intervene at a recently discovered gap between the disease’s molecular march and its neurological consequences.

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  7. Archaeology

    An ancient Maya astronomer finally has a name

    A Maya calendar formula bears the name Sak Tahn Waax, the first known Classic Maya mathematician-astronomer directly credited for such work.

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  8. Space

    The 2024 New Jersey meteorite contains amino acids

    The brine-formed meteorite that crashed into a New Jersey roof in 2024 could teach us about how life first arrived on Earth.

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  9. Artificial Intelligence

    AI is not ready to fly solo in space

    In sci-fi, AI can navigate the unknowns and — ideally — keep human travelers safe. But it’s not intelligent enough to do that yet.

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  10. Health & Medicine

    A new sort of Alzheimer’s drug shows glimmers of promise

    Clinical trial results show an experimental drug lowered tau levels in the brain and slowed some memory loss, but the data came with a surprise twist.

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  11. Climate

    A new map traces the sky’s water highways

    Atmospheric rivers bring heavy rain and floods, but if they don’t come around, it could mean drought. A new global map reveals little-known pathways.

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  12. Astronomy

    A quasar breaks the record for most distant supermassive black hole

    The Euclid space telescope discovery could help researchers understand how black holes grew so massive so quickly in the early universe.

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