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  • Wed Apr 1

Century of data shows global decline in fish growth

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Gravitational waves may have created dark matter in the early universe

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Magnet with near-zero external field could reshape future electronics

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The platypus is even weirder than thought, scientists discover

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How accelerating evolution could help corals survive future heat waves—new study

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Giant octopuses may have ruled the oceans 100 million years ago

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Saturday Citations: Cruise ship pathogen spread in ancient Rome; Plus: Pomegranates, retinal implants

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Inside 18 years of ape minds, a vast record that may upend how human intelligence began

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‘Bat feast’ animal videos at African cave offer clues to how deadly viruses spread

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Scientific AmericanS

Can electric air taxis carry passengers? Vertical Aerospace’s VX4 just cleared a key test

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Scientific AmericanS

Mollusk shells could pave the way to greener materials

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Scientific AmericanS

Giant prehistoric insects didn’t need high oxygen after all, study finds

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Scientists just found what keeps plant cells from growing out of control

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Can jarrah forests be recovered after bauxite mining?

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The most energetic neutrino ever detected could be primordial

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Low wages, poor training put security guards—and the public—at risk, study finds

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Education saves lives: New study reveals global link between learning and longevity

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New study reveals how video games support children's well-being

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Chernobyl's exclusion zone is a beacon of biodiversity—but it faces new threats from Russia's invasion

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Neutrinos caught on camera: Testing the first prototype of a new elementary particle detector

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El Niño season predicted to start as early as next month

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High-resolution imaging shines light on nanoscale nuclear organization

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Light near surface of ultra-thin optical fibers can sort twisted nanoparticles

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Why Volcanoes Sometimes Shoot Out Lightning

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NautilusN

Re-engineered human cells boost gene-editing particle potency across multiple delivery systems

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Bipartisan-cited science is rarely used by policymakers, study finds

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Light-activated electrolyte oxidizes water to promote tumor cell death

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Machine learning identifies catalyst 'sweet spot' for greener urea from waste gases

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These Bees Change Color with the Weather

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NautilusN

Simplifying clean hydrogen production with a new all-in-one photocatalytic cocatalyst

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Natural-language AI helps chemists design molecules step by step

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One scientist’s 10-year quest to calculate the strength of gravity

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Scientific AmericanS

Human-altered estuaries now drive stronger tides farther inland

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This New Model May Explain Why You’re Not a Twin

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NautilusN

Chromosomes condense in three timed chemical waves during cell division, study shows

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Scientists call for integrating three energy demand goals into climate policy by 2035

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Promising H5N1 vaccine protects dairy calves and mice against severe disease

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A mother's gift: Plastid-derived structures help sea urchin development and dispersal

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When “Extinct” Volcanoes Reawaken

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NautilusN

Genomic tool untangles how microbes spread—even when they look almost identical

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Gravity's strength measured more reliably than ever before

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New ScientistN

Extra sets of chromosomes may help aggressive tumor cells spread, study finds

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Inside the competition for capital at some of the world's biggest banks

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Self-regulating process governs cosmic order inside star clusters

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RFK, Jr., praises ibogaine for depression treatment. Is the psychedelic a magic bullet?

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Scientific AmericanS

Carbon nanotubes are closing the gap on copper conductivity

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Waste biomass helps unlock hydrogen and formate in lower-energy electrolysis

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Scientists map hidden magnetism on the sun's far side

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Why delaying climate action now means higher seas by 2100

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The earliest evidence of the first stars may lie in a distant gas clump

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Science NewsS
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Entries updated May 1, 2026 07:00:41 PM PDT

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