Health & Medicine
How to scout a safe summer swimming hole
Best practices, including checking public E. coli reports and keeping your head above water can keep you safe while swimming.
By Nikk Ogasa
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Best practices, including checking public E. coli reports and keeping your head above water can keep you safe while swimming.
We summarize the week's scientific breakthroughs every Thursday.
Found near Australia, Solenostomus snuffleupagus is a shaggy swimmer that closely resembles Mr. Snuffleupagus from Sesame Street.
A study of 50 crab species in Japan traces the iconic sideways walk to a single ancestor, suggesting the trait drove the group's remarkable diversity.
British chef Mike Keen will ski across Greenland eating only fermented seal. Researchers will study how the Inuit diet shapes gut health.
Female rats prefer gentler tickling, a finding that could reshape animal happiness research.
Scientists still don’t know why Andes hantavirus is the only one shown to spread from person to person.
Male primates may be larger than females partly because of pressure from rival groups, not just competition with males inside their own group.
Scientists use simulated dinosaurs to trigger real insect brains and test how wings originally evolved.
DNA damage from inflammation outpaces the cells’ ability to self-repair. The finding, in human brain cells and mice, could point to new MS treatments.
A new study shows learning to fly in virtual reality with virtual wings can reshape the brain, making it treat wings more like body parts.
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