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Science Explorer
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1 y

Plasmodesmata study uncovers plant cell growth mechanism
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Plasmodesmata study uncovers plant cell growth mechanism

Channels in plant cell walls, called plasmodesmata, provide molecules with a bridge to move between cells, an essential phenomenon for cellular growth and development. The mystery has long been how these important channels form.
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Science Explorer
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Indian Ocean study finds an exception to Ekman's theory of wind-driven ocean currents
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Indian Ocean study finds an exception to Ekman's theory of wind-driven ocean currents

A team of planetary scientists and oceanographers from NOAA, the Indian National Center for Ocean Information Services, and the University of Zagreb, has found an example of an exception to Ekman's theory of wind-driven ocean currents—wind and surface flow in the Bay of Bengal.
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Science Explorer
1 y

Climate change could bring more severe bacterial infections, including in corals
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Climate change could bring more severe bacterial infections, including in corals

Could the fungal apocalypse of The Last of Us have roots in reality? A new UBC study published in the journal PLOS Biology shows that climate warming can potentially make bacterial and fungal infections deadlier for cold-blooded animals like corals, insects, and fish, raising questions about the broader risks warming temperatures pose to ecosystems and biodiversity—and potentially humans.
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Science Explorer
1 y

Listening to the past: How medieval pilgrims found faith in the roaring sea
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Listening to the past: How medieval pilgrims found faith in the roaring sea

What did the historical world sound like, and how did humans interact with nature? Associate Professor Britton Elliott Brooks from Kyushu University's Faculty of Languages and Cultures has explored these questions in a unique arena: the open sea in early medieval English literature. This conceptually vast body of water, isolated from land, appears in medieval authors' works not only through visual imagery, but often through sound.
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Science Explorer
1 y

Unlocking nickel's potential: New study reveals how to use single atoms to turn CO₂ into valuable chemical resources
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Unlocking nickel's potential: New study reveals how to use single atoms to turn CO₂ into valuable chemical resources

Nickel and nitrogen co-doped carbon (Ni-N-C) catalysts have shown exceptional performance in converting CO2 into CO, a valuable chemical feedstock. However, the exact working mechanism of these catalysts has remained elusive—until now.
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Science Explorer
1 y

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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Science Explorer
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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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Science Explorer
1 y

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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Science Explorer
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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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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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