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  • Wed May 13

The U.S. stockpiles oil in huge underground salt caverns. Here’s why

1d
Scientific AmericanS

Collapsing stars could spawn mini-universes, offering new path to gravastars

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P

'She should have seen it coming': How radicalization policies put the burden on Muslim mothers

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P

Meet LEV-2, a baseball-sized and absurdly cute moon robot

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Scientific AmericanS

Measles has no treatments. Changing that may not be easy

1d
Science NewsS

Global map reveals the vast scale of underground fungal networks

2d
New ScientistN

Have we finally worked out how Venus flytraps snap shut?

2d
New ScientistN

Sharks, seals, hunters, tourists: How wildlife‑human interactions matter for conservation

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P

Chemists snap together complex 3D molecules from highly reactive 'radicals'—without losing their shape

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P

Behind every overconfident leader might be a 'rational sycophant,' veteran game theorists find

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P

Cyclone Gabrielle-style storms may unleash tens of thousands more North Island landslides

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P

Carbon dioxide removal slow to take off, alarming scientists

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P

El Niño has started and the weather could get weird

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New ScientistN

These Overlooked Pollutants Cause About 15 Percent of Global Warming

2d
NautilusN

Smuggled dinosaur fossils return to Mongolia after two decades

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P

This is how supermassive black holes feed themselves

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P

Forest gaps and deadwood boost bird and bat diversity in woodlands

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P

The Venus Flytrap Mystery That Vexed Darwin, Solved

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NautilusN

Indoor urban agriculture isn't necessarily low carbon, study shows

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P

First global map of mycorrhizal fungi reveals true scale of underground networks across the planet

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P

Organic molecule with ultranarrow emission spectrum could lead to better LEDs

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P

Physicists introduce phase contrast to electron microscopy, delivering sharper images of our body's tiniest proteins

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P

Prescribed fires can cut smoke pollution for years, miles beyond burn areas

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P

Overlooked pollutants are responsible for about 15% of current global warming, study shows

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P

See the hidden fungal network so big it could stretch to Proxima Centauri and back

2d
Scientific AmericanS

Children’s zip codes change their brains, new study finds

2d
Scientific AmericanS

Using history to breed better cherries

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P

Wasp spider reveals rapid genetic adaptation during decades-long march into northern Europe

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P

First leather bag made from T-Rex cells fails to sell at Paris auction

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El Nino is here and scientists fear it'll be big, bad and costly with heat, floods, droughts, fires

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P

Rare deep-sea goblin sharks filmed in natural habitat for first time

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P

AI doesn't just help us think, it thinks instead of us: What this means for the process of learning

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P

Amazon deforestation is falling, but progress is stalling

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P

Why animal calls sound alike in time: Most species share a common communication tempo

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P

Ocean glow meets 3D printing with living gels that sense mechanical force

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Municipal governments are often slow to act, except when FIFA comes to town

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P

Novel nanowire device offers rapid, noninvasive cancer detection

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P

Earth's energy imbalance has doubled—here's why that matters

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P

How a shape-shifting tiny rover inspired by Japanese toys autonomously explored the moon

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Life after death: From burned trees to bleached corals, how dead organisms live on as the building blocks of new life

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Why shame is an evolution-based defense mechanism

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P

Private space tourism is taking off—but laws on outer space are from another era

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P

Humans and AI race to ‘blow up’ math’s toughest equations

2d
Scientific AmericanS

Massive Kamchatka earthquake has extended rupture that overlaps 1952 event, researchers find

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P

Farmers are key to restoring native woodlands—here's what's holding them back

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P

Toy universe shows that time could be a quantum illusion

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New ScientistN

'Janus-faced' nanomaterials pave the way for selectively capturing radioactive pollutants

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Firms with independent board members are more willing to challenge risky CEO pay structures, says new research

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Tilly Edinger: The paleoneurologist saved by her science

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Scientific AmericanS

Clocks made from an atomic nucleus just ticked on for the first time

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Science NewsS
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Entries updated Jun 13, 2026 09:37:46 AM PDT

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