Researchers who took a closer look at a 1995 tsunami in the Gulf of Elat-Aqaba, at the northeastern tip of the Red Sea, say that the gulf’s surrounding countries should prepare for future tsunami hazards in the economically developing vital region.
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Dolphins Form Friendships Through Shared Interests Just Like Us, Study Finds
When it comes to making friends, it appears dolphins are just like us and form close friendships with other dolphins that have a common interest.
Stanford Researchers Synthesize Healing Compounds in Scorpion Venom
A scorpion native to Eastern Mexico may have more than just toxin in its sting.
NASA Explores Our Changing Freshwater World
Water is so commonplace that we often take it for granted.
Old Ice and Snow Yields Tracer of Preindustrial Ozone
Using rare oxygen molecules trapped in air bubbles in old ice and snow, U.S. and French scientists have answered a long-standing question: How much have “bad” ozone levels increased since the start of the Industrial Revolution?
Checkmate for Hepatitis B Viruses in The Liver
Researchers at Helmholtz Zentrum München and the Technical University of Munich, working in collaboration with researchers at the University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf and the University Hospital Heidelberg, have for the first time succeeded in conquering a chronic infection with the hepatitis B virus in a mouse model.