Read More Scince News Health a month ago San Francisco Sues Food Giants Over Processed Foods San Francisco has sued major food and beverage companies over ultra-processed products, alleging harm to public health and $100 billion in annual healthcare costs tied to diet-related disease and obesity.
Read More Scince News Health a month ago Driving Habits May Reveal Early Cognitive Decline Risks Researchers found that GPS-recorded driving patterns — fewer trips, simpler routes and less speeding — can help detect mild cognitive impairment early. Combining driving data with tests identified decline with high accuracy.
Read More Scince News Scientific a month ago Biocomputers Grown from Human Brain Cells: Are We Ready? Biocomputers built from human brain cells are emerging as experimental platforms. This article explains organoid intelligence, technical progress, practical uses, and the ethical questions scientists and policymakers must face.
Read More Scince News Space a month ago Cosmic Tornado: Longest Rotating Filament Discovered Astronomers have found a 49-million-light-year rotating filament of galaxies, the longest spinning structure observed. Multiwavelength data show coherent rotation, hydrogen-rich gas, and implications for galaxy spin and cosmic web dynamics.
Read More Scince News Nature a month ago 18,000 Dinosaur Tracks Found in Bolivia's Lost Lake Nearly 18,000 dinosaur tracks were recorded at Carreras Pampa in Bolivia's Torotoro National Park. This Lagerstätte-quality site preserves walking, running and swim traces, revealing late Cretaceous behavior.
Read More Scince News Health a month ago What Sugar Does to Your Mouth: Teeth, Acid, and Biofilm Discover what happens in your mouth the moment sugar arrives: rapid acid production, plaque biofilm formation, and enamel erosion — plus practical, science-backed tips to protect your teeth.
Read More Scince News Nature a month ago Why Most Octocorals Lost Their Bioluminescent Glow Now New work shows bioluminescence was likely ancestral in octocorals but lost across many species. Scientists explore genetic loss, ecological shifts, and implications for Cambrian ocean ecology.
Read More Scince News Nature a month ago Tsunami Seen from Space: SWOT Reveals Wave Breakup SWOT satellite data captured the 29 July 2025 Kuril-Kamchatka tsunami in unprecedented detail, revealing the wave fragmented into a large leading pulse and smaller trailing waves — a finding that could improve forecasting and warnings.
Read More Scince News Space a month ago Cold Supermoon on December 4: How to Photograph It The Cold Supermoon on December 4, 2025 will appear larger and brighter as the Moon reaches perigee. Learn the science, timing, and practical photography tips to capture this clear winter moonrise.
Read More Scince News Health a month ago Scientists 'Recharge' Aging Cells by Swapping Mitochondria Researchers used molybdenum disulfide nanoflowers to boost mitochondrial production in stem cells, enabling a "battery swap" of organelles that re-energizes aging or damaged cells — a promising step for regenerative medicine.
Read More Scince News Nature a month ago Maine’s Offshore Kelp Model: Cutting Costs, Boosting Jobs UMaine researchers produced the most detailed U.S. cost model for offshore kelp farming, revealing key bottlenecks and showing how technology and workforce development can make kelp a viable economic and ecological resource for coastal communities.
Read More Scince News Space a month ago Curiosity Cracked a Mars Rock and Uncovered Elemental Sulfur A routine drive by NASA's Curiosity rover accidentally exposed vivid yellow crystals of elemental sulfur in Gediz Vallis, an unexpected discovery that raises new questions about Mars' geological and chemical history.
Read More Scince News Health a month ago Everyday Plastics: Early Exposure and Children's Health A major review links prenatal and childhood exposure to common plastic chemicals with obesity, infertility, asthma and neurodevelopmental impacts, urging household steps and stronger global policies.
Read More Scince News Health a month ago New Oral Pill Burns Fat, Preserves Muscle in Diabetes An engineered oral β2 agonist that targets skeletal muscle shows promise for lowering blood sugar and burning fat while preserving lean mass. Early animal and phase I human data support a phase II trial.
Read More Scince News Nature a month ago Ancient Snake Fossil Hints at Early Aquatic Origins Paradoxophidion, a mysterious fossil snake, may be an early caenophidian with aquatic ties. Researchers compare it to Acrochordids and Palaeophis while studying overlooked museum specimens for clues to snake evolution.
Read More Scince News Nature a month ago Ocean’s Hidden Carbon Vault: Lava Breccia Stores More CO2 Deep-sea drilling reveals lava breccia on the South Atlantic seafloor stores 2–40x more CO2 than expected. New IODP cores show seawater-driven calcium carbonate cementation makes these rubble layers a major long-term carbon sink.
Read More Scince News Space a month ago Superionic Heart: Carbon Softens Earth's Inner Core High-pressure experiments show Earth's inner core may be superionic: an iron lattice with fluid-like carbon diffusion, explaining slow shear waves, high Poisson’s ratio, and implications for the geodynamo and planetary interiors.
Read More Scince News Space Editor's choice a month ago Turning Space Junk into Reusable Spacecraft Materials As satellite launches accelerate, researchers propose a circular space economy: design satellites to be repaired, refueled and recycled, deploy robotic debris removal and use AI to cut collisions and waste in orbit.
Read More Scince News Health a month ago Rising Risk: Why Younger Women Need Earlier Breast Screening New regional data show that roughly one-quarter of breast cancers occur in women aged 18–49. Many are invasive and aggressive, highlighting the need for earlier, risk-based screening and tailored evaluation.
Read More Scince News Health a month ago How Brain Immune Cells Shift to Shield Against Alzheimer's Researchers find a microglia subtype that, in mice, reduces amyloid and tau pathology by lowering PU.1 and increasing CD28. This immune switch could guide future immunotherapies for Alzheimer's.