File |
Title |
1 |
The 'breath' between atoms--a new building block for quantum
technology--ScienceDaily |
2 |
Speaking up for the annoying fruit fly |
3 |
Thermal energy stored by land masses has increased
significantly--ScienceDaily |
4 |
Banning multibuy discounts shown to drive sales rather than
curb appetites |
5 |
Overfishing linked to rapid evolution of codfish--ScienceDaily |
6 |
UN aims to deliver draft plastics treaty by year's end |
7 |
Male babies 'talk' more in the first year than female babies
do--ScienceDaily |
8 |
Chile says recent mass seabird death not due to avian flu |
9 |
If other visual cues are missing, ants build higher nest hills
to facilitate homing of foraging nest mates--ScienceDaily |
10 |
Major US firms agree to $1.2 billion 'forever chemicals'
settlement |
11 |
Honeybee health blooming at federal facilities across the
country |
12 |
Can movie reviews predict box office success? |
13 |
Study shows more mutations likely with genetically engineered
synthetic DNA |
14 |
Are fairy tales fair? AI helps find gender bias in children's
storybooks |
15 |
Pathogenic fungus found to infect dung beetles in Australia |
16 |
Recombinant and tunable spidroin hydrogels for drug release
and cell culture |
17 |
Researchers develop new tool to identify nematode pest in
beech leaf disease |
18 |
We've already breached most of the Earth's limits--a safer,
fairer future means treading lightly |
19 |
How chocolate could counter climate change |
20 |
Don't count on whales as 'climate savers,' says study |
21 |
Saving moths may be just as important as saving the bees |
22 |
Fungi seem to 'sweat' to stay cool and scientists don't know
why |
23 |
Resolving a mathematical puzzle in quarks and gluons in
nuclear matter |
24 |
How studying poop may help boost white rhino populations |
25 |
Burmese pythons are helping rats take over Florida's
Everglades--and that could help spread disease |
26 |
Amount of warming triggering carbon dioxide in air hits new
peak, growing at near-record fast rate |
27 |
Crocodiles and gharials are getting bizarre orange 'tans' in
Nepal. Here's why. |
28 |
10 Australian companies have embraced the 4-day week--here's
what they say about it |
29 |
Shingles vaccine may protect against dementia |
30 |
Metallic flying orbs seen around the world, baffling NASA and
the Pentagon--National |
31 |
River diversions may cause microplastics to remain longer on
land and in streams before reaching oceans |
32 |
Lung cancer pill drastically cuts risk of death after surgery |
33 |
Pond emission measurements improve climate predictions |
34 |
Extinct human relative buried their dead 100,000 years before
modern humans did, study claims |
35 |
Canada braces for possible worst wildfire season ever |
36 |
NASA's Webb Space Telescope peers behind bars--ScienceDaily |
37 |
Using statistics in a new way to decipher the universe |
38 |
Robot 'chef' learns to recreate recipes from watching food
videos--ScienceDaily |
39 |
New strategy can harvest chemical information on rare isotopes
with a fraction of the material |
40 |
Viruses hidden in coral symbiont's genetic material are a
potential threat to reefs--ScienceDaily |
41 |
How Sierra Nevada snowpack confounds Central Valley
groundwater readings |
42 |
New digital tool enables farmers' decisions for sustainable
agriculture |
43 |
River diversions may cause microplastics to remain longer on
land and in streams before reaching oceans--ScienceDaily |
44 |
Germany returns 'stolen' dinosaur fossil to Brazil |
45 |
Microbes key to sequestering carbon in soil--ScienceDaily |
46 |
California's honey bees await the famous sunshine |
47 |
The look of your eyebrows is in your genes; A new study
uncovers genes that define the appearance of eyebrows--ScienceDaily |
48 |
Orcas rip rudder off boat and follow it all the way to port,
in 1st known attack of its kind |
49 |
Australian mother thanks 'science' for child murder pardon |
50 |
Researchers demonstrate secure information transfer using
spatial correlations in quantum entangled beams of light--ScienceDaily |
51 |
Man survives crocodile attack by prying its jaws off his head.
How did he escape such a powerful bite? |
52 |
Research reveals ants inflict pain with neurotoxins |
53 |
Webb Space Telescope detects universe's most distant complex
organic molecules--ScienceDaily |
54 |
Tracking a tiger shark to see how it fares when moved from
captivity back to the ocean |
55 |
Researchers are now calling for fungi to be considered more
heavily in conservation and biodiversity policies, and are investigating whether we can increase how much carbon the
soil underneath us can hold--ScienceDaily |
56 |
Brazilian algorithm aims to project future of Amazon
rainforest and predict changes in carbon capture |
57 |
An innovative treatment device tackles the hissing sound of
silence--ScienceDaily |
58 |
How cats and dogs affect the climate--and what you can do
about it |
59 |
Programmable 3D printed wound dressing could improve treatment
for burn, cancer patients--ScienceDaily |
60 |
2,300-year-old Buddhist elephant statue from India is one of
the oldest known |
61 |
Arctic will likely see summer free of ice by 2030, research
says |
62 |
Very long baseline array finds classical novae are anything
but simple |
63 |
How does dopamine regulate both learning and
motivation?--ScienceDaily |
64 |
Mathematicians end decades-long quest to find elusive 'vampire
einstein' shape |
65 |
Rsearcher finds factors linked with chronic school absenteeism |
66 |
When pigeons dream--ScienceDaily |
67 |
James Webb Space Telescope finds one of the earliest galaxies
ever seen |
68 |
Study explains the evolutionary origins and advantages of
masturbation |
69 |
First detection of secondary supermassive black hole in a
well-known binary system--ScienceDaily |
70 |
Virgin birth' recorded in crocodile for 1st time ever |
71 |
Development of communication in chimpanzees echoes that of
human infants |
72 |
Swarming microrobots self-organize into diverse
patterns--ScienceDaily |
73 |
AI predicts 5-year breast cancer risk better than standard
tools--but we aren't sure how it works |
74 |
Arctic could be ice-free a decade earlier than thought |
75 |
How well toxic elements leach out of coal ash depends on the
ash's nanoscale composition--ScienceDaily |
76 |
Research shows why our taste in music can't be siloed into
catch-all genres |
77 |
Electrical synapses in the neural network of insects found to
have unexpected role in controlling flight power--ScienceDaily |
78 |
Number of deaths in armed conflicts doubled between 2021 and
2022, says new report |
79 |
The study's findings offer a potential alternative to surgical
spaying--ScienceDaily |
80 |
Does evening 'recovery' affect a person's mood at work the
next day? |
81 |
Weather anomalies are keeping insects active
longer--ScienceDaily |
82 |
Researchers discover chemical evidence for pair-instability
supernova from a very massive first star |
83 |
How studying feces may help us boost white rhino
populations--ScienceDaily |
84 |
Siberia's 'gateway to the underworld' megaslump is revealing
650,000 year-old secrets from its permafrost |
85 |
Three-quarters [of coral] will likely be diseased by next
century |
86 |
To groom or not to groom? 'Triage' in the ant kingdom |
87 |
Very long baseline array finds classical novae are anything
but simple--ScienceDaily |
88 |
Ethereal 'halo' and light arcs around the sun captured in
photos of ultra-rare phenomena |
89 |
How an earthquake becomes a tsunami |
90 |
Measuring greenhouse gas from ponds improves climate
predictions--ScienceDaily |
91 |
Pablo Escobar's 'cocaine hippos' top 200, twice as many as we
thought |
92 |
New research reveals the suffering of people whose dogs died
after eating 1080 poison baits |
93 |
Sponge makes robotic device a soft touch--ScienceDaily |
94 |
Primordial steroids solve long-standing mystery about how the
1st complex life-forms evolved |
95 |
Warm is the new norm for the Great Barrier Reef--and a likely
El Nino raises red flags |
96 |
Proposed design could double the efficiency of lightweight
solar cells for space-based applications--ScienceDaily |
97 |
Do you really need to wear a lead apron to get an X-ray? |
98 |
Crocodile found to have impregnated itself in 1st-known
'virgin birth' for species--National |
99 |
Using pressure and steam to create shrimp with fewer allergens |
100 |
Whales not to be counted on as 'climate savers'--ScienceDaily |
101 |
Dying stars build humongous 'cocoons' that shake the fabric of
space-time |
102 |
Gradual supported release of primates into the wild shown to
be effective |
103 |
Newly discovered brain mechanism linked to anxiety,
OCD--ScienceDaily |
104 |
How many oceans are there? |
105 |
Astronomers observe giant tails of helium escaping
Jupiter-like planet |
106 |
Air quality stations have collected vast stores of DNA by
accident, a potentially 'game-changing' discovery for tracking global biodiversity--ScienceDaily |
107 |
James Webb Space Telescope discovers oldest organic molecules
in the known universe, 12 billion light-years from Earth |
108 |
Birds and bats enhance yields for cacao farmers in northern
Peru, study finds |
109 |
Can exercise help counteract genetic risk of
disease?--ScienceDaily |
110 |
Primates have been masturbating for at least 40 million years |
111 |
Comprehensive new report tackles food safety risks in the
informal sector of developing countries |
112 |
Global response to antimicrobial resistance
'insufficient'--ScienceDaily |
113 |
World's largest captive croc turns 120, giving scientists
'serious knowledge on longevity |
114 |
Gravitational waves innovation could help unlock cosmic
secrets |
115 |
Even some species that fared well caused management
challenges--ScienceDaily |
116 |
King Tut's likeness revealed in vivid new facial approximation
of ancient Egyptian pharaoh |
117 |
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118 |
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119 |
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120 |
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