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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
38 w

How a middle schooler found a new compound in a piece of goose poop
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How a middle schooler found a new compound in a piece of goose poop

A group of young students became bonafide biomedical scientists before they even started high school. Through a partnership with a nearby university, the middle schoolers collected and analyzed environmental samples to find new antibiotic candidates. One unique sample, goose poop collected at a local park, had a bacterium that showed antibiotic activity and contained a novel compound that slowed the growth of human melanoma and ovarian cancer cells in lab tests.
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38 w

Barbarian warriors in Roman times used stimulants in battle, findings suggest
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Barbarian warriors in Roman times used stimulants in battle, findings suggest

Small, spoon-shaped objects found on the end of warriors' belts at archaeological sites across northern Europe could have been used to dispense stimulants before battle, a study suggests.
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38 w

Zebrafish study provides new insights into spinal column development
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Zebrafish study provides new insights into spinal column development

Northwestern Medicine scientists have uncovered new details about how the spinal column forms in developing vertebrates, according to a study published in Developmental Cell.
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38 w

Climate model combines generative AI and physics data to predict patterns 25 times faster than current methods
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Climate model combines generative AI and physics data to predict patterns 25 times faster than current methods

The algorithms behind generative AI tools like DallE, when combined with physics-based data, can be used to develop better ways to model the Earth's climate. Computer scientists in Seattle and San Diego have now used this combination to create a model that is capable of predicting climate patterns over 100 years 25 times faster than the state of the art.
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38 w

New method discovered for controlling molecular patterns on liquid droplets
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New method discovered for controlling molecular patterns on liquid droplets

A team of researchers has uncovered a previously unknown phenomenon that could improve the way we design materials at the molecular level. By unlocking a transformation between two types of structural defects on the surface of liquid droplets, the research opens new possibilities for controlling molecular patterns with unprecedented precision. This discovery has broad applications across a range of technologies, including vaccine design, the creation of self-assembling structures, and the synthesis of complex nanoparticles.
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Science Explorer
38 w

Nutrients related to vitamin B12 influence microbial growth and reshape soil microbiomes, research finds
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Nutrients related to vitamin B12 influence microbial growth and reshape soil microbiomes, research finds

Communities of microbes (microbiomes), particularly in soils, can be startlingly diverse, with as many as 10,000 species in just a cup of material. Scientists are working to understand how microbiomes and their members respond to their environments. These processes can profoundly shape the properties and composition of soils.
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38 w

Rare whitefly fossils found in New Zealand shed light on ancient forest life
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Rare whitefly fossils found in New Zealand shed light on ancient forest life

Newly discovered insect fossils are so small they can barely be seen by the human eye but have been preserved in an extraordinary way. Published in the journal Palaeobiodiversity and Palaeoenvironments, a study reveals rare whitefly insect fossils have been found in Miocene age crater lake sediments at Hindon Maar, near Dunedin.
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38 w

Implementing ancient agricultural practices to confront modern-day challenges of water scarcity and food insecurity
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Implementing ancient agricultural practices to confront modern-day challenges of water scarcity and food insecurity

As global water resources become more strained, the insights gained from traditional agricultural systems could pave the way for the development of innovative, low-water-use agricultural practices to confront the growing challenges of water scarcity and food insecurity in arid and marginal regions.
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38 w

Unveiling a century of stress and deformation: Insights from Kīlauea Volcano's 1975 earthquake
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Unveiling a century of stress and deformation: Insights from Kīlauea Volcano's 1975 earthquake

Researchers from the University of Hawai'i at Mānoa Department of Earth Sciences assessed an unprecedented 120 years of data from Kīlauea Volcano on Hawai'i Island, uncovering, for the first time, century-spanning patterns of deformation and stress changes. They had a particular focus on the transformative 1975 magnitude 7.7 Kalapana earthquake, which also resulted in a 20-foot high tsunami. Their study was published recently in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth.
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38 w

Deep-sea marvels: How anglerfish defy evolutionary expectations
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Deep-sea marvels: How anglerfish defy evolutionary expectations

A Rice University study sheds light on the extraordinary evolution of anglerfish, a group of deep-sea dwellers whose bizarre adaptations have captivated scientists and the public alike. The research, published in Nature Ecology & Evolution, uncovers how these enigmatic creatures defied the odds to diversify in the harsh, resource-poor environment of the bathypelagic zone—part of the open ocean that extends from 3,300 to 13,000 feet below the ocean's surface.
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