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The US federal government suffered one of the most severe losses of scientific expertise in its modern history in 2025, with more than 10,000 STEM PhD. |
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The US federal government suffered one of the most severe losses of scientific expertise in its modern history in 2025, with more than 10,000 STEM PhD. |
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Dr. Mariano Barbacid, a pioneering Spanish cancer scientist, alongside his team have eliminated aggressive pancreatic tumours in mice using a triple-drug therapy targeting the KRAS pathway. While not yet a human cure, the breakthrough offers one of the most promising paths so far toward effective pancreatic cancer treatment., World News, Times Now |
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A Spanish research team says it has developed a treatment that completely eliminated the most aggressive form of pancreatic cancer in laboratory mice,. |
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Scientists cite escalating wars, climate failures and rising nationalism as threats that are multiplying faster than solutions. |
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There is a rigorous scientific process that scientists followed before setting the Doomsday Clock at 85 seconds this year. Experts analyse data from nuclear physics to climate science to determine survival. |
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The Doomsday Clock now stands at 85 seconds before midnight. The change was announced by the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. Last year, it was set . |
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The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists has moved the Doomsday Clock to 85 seconds to midnight for 2026. This unprecedented setting reflects a world grappling with nuclear tension and climate instability. |
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For 30 years, scientists have known that cuttlefish, which are related to squids and octopuses, can see the orientation of light waves, and that parts of a cuttlefish's body can reflect polarized light. |
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The scientists pointed towards increasingly aggressive behaviour by nuclear powers -- Russia, China and the United States -- and fraying nuclear arms control agreements, ongoing wars in Ukraine and the Middle East, and growing unease over how artificial intelligence could be misused. |
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Ageing is often described as a slow accumulation of damage, but a new study suggests something more subtle may be happening inside our cells. Research. |