Top Stories

Foul Fumes Pose Pollinator Problems

A team led by researchers at the University of Washington has discovered a major cause for a drop in nighttime pollinator activity — and people are largely to blame.

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Scientists Reveal Why Blueberries Are Blue

Tiny external structures in the wax coating of blueberries give them their blue colour, researchers at the University of Bristol can reveal.

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Pregnant Women Should Avoid Ultraprocessed, Fast Foods

In a study, the consumption of fast food and ultraprocessed foods were associated with higher levels of phthalates in pregnant persons.

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Potent Storm Drenches California

An unusually strong winter storm parked over California for several days in early February 2024, dropping a tremendous amount of rain that spurred widespread flash floods and hundreds of mudslides. 

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Amid Record Drop in Fossil Power, Europe Sees Wind Overtake Natural Gas

Researchers led by University of Tsukuba, based on the internal nitrogen status of a leguminous plant, have discovered peptide factors that function in the shoot and root systems to transport iron into the root nodules colonized by nitrogen-fixing bacteria.

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Ancient Rocks Improve Understanding of Tectonic Activity Between Earthquakes

Rocks once buried deep in ancient subduction zones — where tectonic plates collide — could help scientists make better predictions of how these zones behave during the years between major earthquakes, according to a research team from Penn State and Brown University.

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Ice Cores Provide First Documentation of Rapid Antarctic Ice Loss in the Past

Researchers from the University of Cambridge and the British Antarctic Survey have uncovered the first direct evidence that the West Antarctic Ice Sheet shrunk suddenly and dramatically at the end of the Last Ice Age, around 8,000 years ago.

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Permafrost Restrains Arctic Rivers—and Lots of Carbon

New research from Dartmouth provides the first evidence that the Arctic’s frozen soil is the dominant force shaping Earth’s northernmost rivers. 

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Researchers at UMass Amherst Discover Key to Molecular Mystery of How Plants Respond to Changing Conditions

A team of researchers from the University of Massachusetts Amherst recently published a pioneering study that answers a central question in biology: how do organisms rally a wide range of cellular processes when they encounter a change—either internally or in the external environment—to thrive in good times or survive the bad times? 

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EVs that Go 1,000km on a Single Charge: Gel Makes It Possible

Futuristic advancements in AI and healthcare stole the limelight at the tech extravaganza Consumer Electronics Show (CES) 2024. 

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