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  • Mon Jan 5

Your Lifespan May Depend Much More on Genes Than Previously Thought

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NautilusN

Our lifespans may be half down to genes and half to the environment

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New ScientistN

Why termite kings and queens are monogamous: Scientists uncover surprising answer

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What ice-fishing competitions reveal about human decision-making

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AI models retrace evolution of genetic control elements in the brain

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Genes may shape how long we live more than once thought

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Science NewsS

Caribbean heat waves intensify over five decades, study finds

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Learning about happiness could improve economics education

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From metabolism to disease: Mitochondria's hidden signaling networks unveiled

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'Jerk' volcano early warning method uses single seismometer to detect magma movement

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The chemical genius of Katharine Burr Blodgett

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Scientific AmericanS

Can Morality Survive Climate Collapse?

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NautilusN

Novel quantum refrigerator benefits from problematic noise

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Hidden toxin risks during nutrient-starved algal blooms uncovered

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Biodegradable bark–plastic composite lets engineers predict product lifetime from tensile tests

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Male or female? How one frog gene 'hijacked' sex determination about 20 million years ago

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How mining legacy dust leaves a uranium fingerprint in children's hair

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Did a tsunami hit the Bristol Channel four centuries ago? Revisiting the great flood of 1607

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Rethinking Troy: How years of careful peace, not epic war, shaped this bronze age city

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Welcome to the 'Homogenocene': How humans are making the world's wildlife dangerously samey

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EPA's new way of evaluating pollution rules hands deregulators a license to ignore public health

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Gravitational wave signal tests Einstein's theory of general relativity

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Weakening the soy moratorium in Brazil: A political choice that ignores the science

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Pubs are far more valuable to society than the tax they pay

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King's Trough: How a shifting plate boundary and hot mantle material shaped an Atlantic mega-canyon

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Crosstalk inside cells helps pathogens evade drugs, study finds

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2D discrete time crystals realized on a quantum computer for the first time

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Climate change is reshaping how companies do business

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Cleaner ship fuel changed clouds, but not their climate balance

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Map shows the far-flung places Colorado's wolves traveled in the past month

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Burning satellites in the stratosphere: Emerging questions for climate

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Men are embracing beauty culture—many of them just refuse to call it that

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Is time a fundamental part of reality? A quiet revolution in physics suggests not

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The first headbutting paravian: Bird-like dinosaur likely used thick skull to win over mates

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AI enables a who's who of brown bears in Alaska

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ICE not only looks and acts like a paramilitary force—it is one, and that makes it harder to curb

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What is extremism, and how do we decide?

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Submarine mountains and long-distance waves stir the deepest parts of the ocean

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Will killing dingoes on K'gari make visitors safer? We think it's unlikely

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P

Svalbard’s polar bears are showing remarkable resilience to climate change

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Scientific AmericanS

Polar bears are getting fatter in the fastest-warming place on Earth

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New ScientistN

Svalbard polar bears show improved fat reserves despite sea ice loss

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Polar bears in the Barents Sea are staying fat despite rapid sea ice loss

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Science NewsS

Artificial lungs kept a man alive until he could get a transplant

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Science NewsS

Self-employed working hours return to pre-COVID levels after five year slump

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New white paper offers actions for managing trauma in the workplace

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Wetlands do not need to be flooded to provide the greatest climate benefit, shows study

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How tree rings help scientists understand disruptive extreme solar storms

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Fossilized plankton study gives long-term hope for oxygen-depleted oceans

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Living and working under the sea fills aquanauts with wonder and awe—the phenomenon is called the 'underview effect'

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Entries updated Feb 5, 2026 08:37:59 AM PST

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