Read More Scince News Space 7 months ago Climate Tipping Points: Coral Reefs, Ice Sheets, and Risk The Global Tipping Points Report 2025 warns coral reefs have likely passed their thermal tipping point and parts of polar ice sheets may be committed to melt. The report urges rapid emissions cuts and policies to trigger positive tipping toward clean energy.
Read More Scince News Health 7 months ago Selective RAS–PI3K Inhibitor Enters Human Trials Now A new drug candidate that selectively blocks the RAS–PI3K interaction has entered human trials. Preclinical tests show tumor suppression without metabolic side effects, and researchers are testing combinations to improve outcomes.
Read More Scince News Health 7 months ago Diet and Sugary Drinks Tied to Rising Fatty Liver Risk A large UK Biobank study links both sugar-sweetened and artificially sweetened drinks to higher MASLD (fatty liver) risk and liver fat; swapping either beverage for water lowered that risk.
Read More Scince News Nature 7 months ago Wild Honeybees Now Endangered in the European Union Wild Apis mellifera populations have been classified as endangered within the EU after coordinated research distinguished free-living colonies from managed hives, highlighting habitat loss, disease and hybridisation as key threats.
Read More Scince News Space 7 months ago Mars' Wind Speeds Far Higher Than Scientists Expected A global study using Mars Express and ExoMars imagery reveals dust-devil winds up to 160 km/h. The new wind maps improve understanding of Martian dust hazards for robotic and human missions.
Read More Scince News Space 7 months ago Tabletop Detector Could Open a New Gravitational Window A compact detector using optical cavities and atomic clock tech could probe the milli-Hertz gravitational-wave band, revealing hidden black hole mergers, white dwarf binaries, and early-universe signals long before space missions arrive.
Read More Scince News Health 7 months ago Ultra-Processed Foods: Hidden Inflammation Like Smoking A large U.S. study links heavy consumption of ultra-processed foods to higher hs-CRP levels, a marker of chronic inflammation tied to heart disease, some cancers and premature death. Explore findings, risks and public-health implications.
Read More Scince News Health 7 months ago COVID Alters Sperm in Mice, Linked to Anxiety in Offspring A mouse study shows COVID-19 can alter sperm RNA and hippocampal gene activity, linking paternal infection to increased anxiety-like behaviour in offspring; human relevance requires more research.
Read More Scince News Health 7 months ago Calorie-Reduced Mediterranean Diet Cuts Diabetes Risk 31% PREDIMED-Plus finds that a calorie-reduced Mediterranean diet with exercise and professional support lowers type 2 diabetes risk by 31%, with additional weight and waistline reductions—offering a scalable prevention model.
Read More Scince News Scientific 7 months ago Atomic Clock for Fossils: Dinosaur Eggs Dated to 85 Ma Scientists applied carbonate U–Pb dating to dinosaur eggs from Qinglongshan, China, producing the first direct age for egg fossils (~85 Ma). The method acts as an "atomic clock" for eggshell carbonates and refines Late Cretaceous timelines.
Read More Scince News Health 7 months ago Ketogenic Diet Preserves Brain Energy, Cuts Alzheimer Risk University of Missouri research shows a ketogenic diet can preserve brain energy and alter the gut microbiome in APOE4 carriers—especially females—supporting precision nutrition approaches to reduce Alzheimer’s risk.
Read More Scince News Nature 7 months ago Half Male, Half Female: Bilateral Spider Found in Thailand Researchers in Thailand discovered a new spider species, Damarchus inazuma, including a rare bilateral gynandromorph showing a near-perfect male-female split. The find reveals developmental and taxonomic insights.
Read More Scince News Health 7 months ago Older Fathers Increase Risk of Heritable Disease Mutations New high-precision sequencing shows older fathers have a higher risk of passing disease-causing mutations to children due to clonal expansion of mutated sperm stem cells; implications for screening and fertility preservation.
Read More Scince News Nature 7 months ago Physics Confirms Moai Statues Walked on Easter Island New experiments and simulations show that Easter Island's Moai could be moved by a coordinated rope-and-rock "walking" method. A 4.35-ton replica moved ~100 m in 40 minutes, supporting oral histories and archaeological evidence.
Read More Scince News Space 7 months ago Uranus Moon Ariel: Evidence for a 100-Mile Deep Ocean New Icarus research finds Ariel, a moon of Uranus, may have hosted a subsurface ocean up to 100 miles (170 km) deep. Models linking surface fractures and tidal stress point to past orbital heating and interior oceans.
Read More Scince News Space 7 months ago Quasar J0529 Shrinks: Outflow Cuts Mass Estimate Tenfold GRAVITY+ observations of quasar J0529 reveal a 10,000 km/s outflow that inflated emission-line widths. Correcting for the outflow lowers the black hole mass estimate tenfold, reshaping early-Universe growth models.
Read More Scince News Health 7 months ago Living Fungal Hydrogels: A New Frontier in Wound Healing Researchers report that Marquandomyces marquandii can form living mycelial hydrogels with layered porosity and 83% water retention, offering a potential new biomaterial for wound healing and tissue scaffolds.
Read More Scince News Health 7 months ago Alzheimer's as Autoimmune: New Immune-Based Perspectives An immune-centered view of Alzheimer’s suggests the brain’s defenses may mistakenly target neurons. This article examines the autoimmune hypothesis, beta-amyloid’s dual role, alternative theories, and treatment implications.
Read More Scince News Health 7 months ago Simple Blood Test Predicts Severe Liver Disease Risk Researchers at Karolinska Institutet developed CORE, a simple risk model using age, sex and three routine liver enzymes to predict severe liver disease up to 10 years ahead, improving early detection in primary care.
Read More Scince News Space 7 months ago Million-Sun-Mass Dark Object Detected by Global Radio Array Astronomers using a global radio-telescope array have detected a million-solar-mass dark object through gravitational lensing. The finding supports cold dark matter models and opens new searches for hidden substructures.