All Stories

  1. Embracing the collective nature of science

    Editor in chief Nancy Shute celebrates this year's SN10: Scientists to Watch and novel approaches to research.

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  2. Readers discuss the psychedelic psilocybin, frogs and UFOs

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  3. Space

    50 years ago, satellites threatened astronomers’ view of the cosmos

    As satellite launches ramp up and the spacecraft clog the skies, astronomers fear for their data.

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  4. Oceans

    A transatlantic flight may turn Saharan dust into a key ocean nutrient

    Over time, atmospheric chemical reactions can make iron in dust from the Sahara easier for organisms to take in, helping to create biodiversity hot spots.

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  5. Animals

    Some tadpoles don’t poop for weeks. That keeps their pools clean

    Eiffinger’s tree frog babies store their solid waste in an intestinal pouch, releasing less ammonia into their watery cribs than other frog species.

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  6. Astronomy

    Barnard’s star has at least one planet orbiting it after all

    After decades of searching, a telltale gravitational wobble points to an exoplanet orbiting the nearby red dwarf every 3.15 days.

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  7. Health & Medicine

    An mRNA vaccine protected mice against deadly intestinal C. difficile bacteria

    An mRNA vaccine that targets several aspects of C. difficile’s ability to cause severe disease prevented major symptoms and death in mice.

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  8. Health & Medicine

    Brain-controlled bionic limbs are inching closer to reality

    Bionics engineers typically view biology as something to be worked around. “Anatomics” engineers the body to be part of the system.

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  9. Animals

    Dolphins’ open-mouth behaviors during play are like smiles, a study claims

    Experts urge caution in calling bottlenosed dolphins’ gesture a humanlike “smile,” but agree it seems to be important for how the animals communicate.

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  10. Neuroscience

    Scientists have traced all 54.5 million connections in a fruit fly’s brain

    By tracing every single connection between nerve cells in a single fruit fly’s brain, scientists have created the “connectome,” a tool that could help reveal how brains work.

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  11. Physics

    Thunderstorms churn up a ‘boiling pot’ of gamma rays 

    A thunderstorm seen in gamma-ray vision is a complex, frenetic lightshow when viewed from above the clouds.

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  12. Health & Medicine

    A hurricane’s aftermath may spur up to 11,000 deaths

    Hurricanes like Helene may indirectly cause deaths for years. Stress, pollution and a loss of infrastructure could all contribute to tropical cyclone fatalities.

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