|
A 700-year-old mummy from the Bolivian Andes is quietly reshaping what scientists thought they knew about ancient diseases. Inside a single preserved . |
|
A 700-year-old mummy from the Bolivian Andes is quietly reshaping what scientists thought they knew about ancient diseases. Inside a single preserved . |
|
It's factually correct that light is crucial for photosynthesis, but research from Osaka Metropolitan University uncovers an intriguing contradiction:. |
|
Dreams can feel chaotic, vivid or strangely disconnected from reality, yet new research suggests they are far from random. A study from the IMT School. |
|
In a stark Soviet laboratory in the 1950s, a photograph captured a scene that still unsettles viewers today. A large dog stood while the head and fore. |
Not gold or lithium, this quiet Korean wine town is sitting on a massive mineral you use every day |A newly discovered vast deposit of illite mineral in Yeongdong County, South Korea, could transform the future of skincare and battery technology, as scientists explore its implications for various industries. |
|
Millions of graphene-based toothbrushes have already reached consumers, long before scientists fully understood how the material actually works. Now, . |
|
The Gulf of Panama experiences a historic failure in essential ocean upwelling, disrupting local ecosystems and fishing communities, prompting urgent questions about climate change effects on global ocean systems. |
|
Research reveals that stressed rocks emit chemical signals before collapsing, allowing potential prediction of landslides and earthquakes. A breakthrough study maps these signals and could lead to real-time hazard warnings for vulnerable communities. |
|
People often say that science is a disciplined search for the truth that is based on evidence, observation, and reasoning. But the way people think an. |
|
New research is bringing scientists closer to detecting Alzheimer's earlier than ever before, raising hopes for timely intervention. |