Science Ticker

A roundup of research and breaking news

  1. Health & Medicine

    Five things to know about Zika

    Last week, a public health poll pointed to some myths that have been circulating about Zika. Let’s bust them.

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  2. Archaeology

    Possible second Viking site found in Newfoundland

    Newfoundland excavation reveals possible Norse settlement.

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  3. Animals

    White-nose bat disease jumps the Rockies to Washington state

    For the first time, the bat-killing white-nose syndrome shows up west of the Rockies.

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  4. Health & Medicine

    Fridge-sized contraption makes drugs on demand

    A new drug-making system rapidly produces a variety of medications on demand.

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  5. Animals

    Green was this ancient snake’s signature color

    Scientists have reconstructed the skin coloration of a fossilized snake that’s about 10 million years old.

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  6. Animals

    These cyborg beetles walk the walk

    New beetle biobots come with speed and gait control.

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  7. Climate

    Maximum size for Arctic sea ice hits a new low

    Warm temperatures helped drop the Arctic sea ice maximum to the smallest size on record.

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  8. Astronomy

    Japan’s new X-ray space telescope has gone silent

    Japan’s newest orbiting X-ray telescope, ASTRO-H, has gone silent and might have broken into several pieces, the Japanese space agency reports.

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  9. Microbes

    Diverse yeasts make their home on coffee and cacao beans

    Yeasts in coffee and cacao are shaped by geography and human migration, genetic analysis finds.

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  10. Astronomy

    Two chunks of the same comet buzzing Earth this week

    Two comets, one a possible fragment of the other, will slip past Earth on March 21 and 22.

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  11. Agriculture

    Wine quality subject to climate change

    Wine quality could suffer as climate change desynchronizes warm temperatures and droughts, preventing grape growers from harvesting at the optimum time.

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  12. Life

    How Paralympic sprinters lose speed on curves

    Amputee runners may lose more speed on curves when the leg on the inside of the curve is the one bearing a prosthetic, a biomechanics study finds.

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