Live Science Magazine

“Scientists discover that stalagmites adhere to a single mathematical rule.”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.  Accessed on 17 October 2025, 1439 UTC.

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Live Science
Stalagmites adhere to a single mathematical rule, scientists discover
Scientists discover all stalagmites growing from cave floors follow a mathematical rule that explains how these mineral formations develop into different shapes.
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Did you know some credit cards can actually help you get out of debt faster? Yes, it sounds crazy. But it’s true. The secret: Find a card with a “0% intro APR” period for balance transfers. Then, transfer your debt balance and pay it down as much as possible during the intro period. No interest means you could pay off the debt faster. Learn More

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History & Archaeology

Live Science
5,000 years ago, Stone Age people in China crafted their ancestors’ bones into cups and masks
Archaeologists in China found a collection of human bones that showed signs of being “worked” like any other natural material.
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Space

Live Science
‘Most pristine’ star ever seen discovered at the Milky Way’s edge — and could be a direct descendant of the universe’s first stars
Astronomers have discovered a surprisingly “pristine” red giant with the lowest concentration of heavy elements ever seen in a star. It is likely a direct descendant of one of the universe’s first stars.
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Space Exploration

Live Science
Record-breaking ‘dark object’ found hiding within a warped ‘Einstein ring’ 10 billion light-years away
Researchers have found a suspected clump of dark matter lurking within the luminous halo of a well-known “Einstein ring.” The mysterious object, the smallest of its kind ever seen, could help shed light on the universe’s missing matter.
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Technology

Live Science
Toyota to launch world’s first EV with a solid-state battery by 2027 — they’re expected to last longer and charge faster
New solid-state batteries will be made from a new “highly durable” cathode material and will power a car for much longer than conventional EV batteries.
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Scientific American

“Which anti-inflammatory supplement actually works?”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.  Accessed on 17 October 2025, 0256 UTC.

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Russ Roberts (https://hawaiisciencejournal.com).

SciAm | Today in Science
 
October 16, 2025—Which anti-inflammatory supplements are worth your time? Plus, a concerning cancer trend among women, and the government shutdown is hurting science.
Andrea Gawrylewski, Chief Newsletter Editor

TODAY’S NEWS

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Anti-Inflammatory Supplements

Supplements to fight inflammation are a booming business. These pills, capsules and powders are projected to become a $33-billion industry by 2027. Although thousands of products claim to “support immunity” or “reduce inflammation,” most lack solid evidence. Scientific American reviewed dozens of studies and spoke with researchers to find out whether any supplements demonstrate anti-inflammatory activity not just in laboratory animals and cultured cells but in human trials. Just three compounds, it turns out, have good evidence of effectiveness: omega-3 fatty acids, curcumin and—in certain ailments—vitamin D.
What we looked at: Scientific studies vary in how they’re designed and carried out. We looked for consistent results across several studies that scientists described as large and well designed. Ones that passed muster tended to focus on biomarkers that researchers use to track inflammation in the body. These include C-reactive protein (CRP), a molecule produced by the liver when inflammation is active, and cytokines, which are chemical messengers. For example, omega-3 fatty acids, which have the most compelling evidence behind them, come in two forms, and they signal the production of molecules in the body that block certain cytokines associated with inflammation.
What the experts say: Inflammation involves hundreds of different types of cells and many signaling pathways, says Prakash Nagarkatti, director of the National Institutes of Health Center of Research Excellence in Inflammatory and Autoimmune Diseases at the University of South Carolina. This complexity makes it difficult to prove that any supplement works consistently.

WATCH THIS

Jeffery DelViscio/Scientific American; Getty Images

A Concerning Trend

Lung cancer is the deadliest cancer among women in the United States, surpassing the mortality numbers of breast and ovarian cancer combined. And surprisingly, younger women who have never smoked are increasingly being diagnosed with the disease. What’s going on? Science, Quickly host Rachel Feltman sat down with Jonathan Villena, a thoracic surgeon at NewYork-Presbyterian and Weill Cornell, to try to get to the bottom of it. Watch the whole interview here.

EXPERT PERSPECTIVES

  • No federal agency in the U.S. fully oversees the clinical testing and chemical verification of supplements or nutraceuticals (pills and powders derived from foods that make various health claims), and these products are often plagued by quality and safety problems (and are associated with tens of thousands of ER visits a year). Congress should empower the Food and Drug Administration to start treating these products more like drugs, which undergo stringent testing and regulation, the editors of Scientific American wrote in 2023: “The FDA should be empowered to verify nutraceutical products by chemically confirming their ingredients, enforcing recalls and product bans, and maintaining a publicly searchable database of all supplement and nutraceutical health products with their associated ingredients and efficacy studies.” | 3 min read

SCIENTISTS AT WORK

Andrea Varela

  • Conservation biologist Amy MacLeod runs a program called Iguanas from Above, which uses drones to study the population of marine iguanas (Amblyrhynchus cristatus) on the Galápagos Islands. Bolstered by 17,000 online volunteers, the project has now surveyed the whole archipelago, some parts of which were previously inaccessible. “I’m proud that the use of drones for wildlife survey is now a tool that other scientists can test in remote places around the world,” she says.​ Nature | 3 min read
Content courtesy of Nature Briefing
 
You may be asking yourself why store shelves are filled with so many supplements in the form of pills, powders or tonics claiming to be anti-inflammatory or “detoxing” if they’re not all effective at what they claim. Here in the U.S., supplements are largely self-regulated under loose post-market oversight, whereas in other places, like the European Union, dietary supplements face the same kind of scrutiny as food—ingredients and health claims must be proven safe and authorized before they hit the market. This means the responsibility for judging what’s safe or effective often falls to the consumer—and, ideally, an informed doctor.
Thanks for reading. Send comments or feedback on this newsletter to: newsletters@sciam.com. See you tomorrow!
—Andrea Gawrylewski, Chief Newsletter Editor
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Science Adviser (AAAS)

“Science Adviser (AAAS):  Did lead poisoning doom the Neanderthals?”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.  Accessed on 16 October 2025, 1410 UTC.

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16 October 2025
Today’s Deep Dive delves into how lead may have shaped human prehistory. But first, catch up on the latest science news, including some high-tech sun protection and how toads conquered the world.
Evolution  |  News from Science
Poisonous sacs helped toads conquer the world
a toad
The Asian common toad, which was accidentally introduced to Madagascar by humans, secretes deadly toxins from specialized glands behind its eyes.  Christopher Raxley
When Asian common toads were spotted in Madagascar, scientists immediately sounded the alarm. These invasive amphibians secrete a toxic slime, stored in specialized glands behind their eyes, that could spell death for any native predators that try to eat them. Cane toads, which remain toxic long after they’re dead, created a similar problem when they were introduced to Australia in the 1930s.

But these poisonous sacs, known as parotoid glands, don’t just allow toads to wreak havoc as invasive species. They may also have helped the iconic amphibians, which originated in South America about 61 million years ago, conquer large parts of the planetAccording to new research, which analyzed DNA from 124 species across six continents, early toads took an unexpected route: Instead of dispersing into Asia from North America via the Bering land bridge, as was previously theorized, they appear to have crossed directly from South America to Africa. Toads might have traveled through Antarctica, the study authors suggest, or sailed directly across the Atlantic Ocean on floating mats of vegetation.

The team also discovered an explosive rise in the number of new species shortly after toads began spreading out of South America. During that same period, toads evolved their parotoid glands, which ward off predators by secreting milky-white alkaloid substances called bufotoxins—an adaptation that likely helped this warty group of frogs rapidly colonize new habitats. “The parotoid gland,” study co-author Wei Xu explains, “was the real gamechanger.”

Read the full story
Technology  |  Science Advances
Sun protection goes high-tech
Have you ever lathered up with sticky sunscreen, only to get an itchy, red burn anyway? The consequences aren’t just uncomfortable; prolonged and repeated sun exposure can generate reactive oxygen compounds in the body that increase the risk of cancer and cause noticeable aging. The solution may be closer—and higher-tech—than you think.

Researchers have designed a new wearable detector for the specific kind of longwave ultraviolet radiation that causes sunburns: UVA. The devices are fully transparent, allowing 75% of the sunlight to reach the semiconductor at their centers. That’s an advantage over previously developed, opaque sensors that allow less sunlight through and achieve less accurate measures of sunburn risk. The devices could connect with a smartphone or smartwatch to alert the user when they have received 80% of the UVA dose likely to cause a sunburn based on their skin type.

Though the solution may sound like a quick fix, it’s important to maintain usual sun protection like sunscreen or covering layers. But the authors noted that the technology “demonstrates its potential as a practical approach to prevent risks associated with prolonged UV exposure.”

Read the paper
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Deep Dive
an old tooth
Lead may have dulled the social skills of ancient hominins and apes, including Gigantopithecus blacki, one of whose massive molars is shown here.  Wang Wei/Xinhua via ZUMA
Getting the lead out
Hundreds of thousands of years ago, Neanderthals were in many ways the equal to our species. They lived in complex societies, made sophisticated stone tools, painted art on cave walls, and decorated their bodies with beads, body paint, and feathers. So, why does our lineage persist into the modern day while theirs blinked out tens of thousands of years ago? One surprising hypothesis is that modern humans evolved innate protections against lead poisoning—which was apparently rampant in hominins dating back some 2 million years.

The bold idea draws on evidence from lead found in fossil teeth from great apes and human ancestors such as Australopithecus africanusParanthropus robustus, the massive extinct ape Gigantopithecus blacki, ancient orangutans and baboons, Neanderthals, and early modern humans. “We expected some isolated findings, but to see consistent evidence across continents and species, from Australopithecus to Homo sapiens, was astonishing,” Renaud Joannes-Boyau, co-author on the new paper, told Science Adviser.

In modern humans, childhood exposure to the neurotoxic element—for example, through paint—has been linked to disordered emotional regulation and poorer impulse control and executive functioning. Such deficits might have set a sort of “ceiling” on just how complex ancient societies could become, the authors argue. “Lead exposure could have affected social behavior, communication, and even brain development in subtle but cumulative ways,” noted co-author Manish Arora.

To look for evidence of that, researchers turned to brain organoids—test tube minibrains engineered to have both modern and Neanderthal versions of a key brain gene called NOVA1. When they exposed these minibrains to lead in the lab, certain neurons in the Neanderthal organoids were severely damaged, while in the modern human organoids, these neurons remained essentially unharmed. “That was our eureka moment,” said lead author and neuroscientist Alysson Muotri.

The findings show that “environmental toxins aren’t just a modern challenge; they’ve been shaping biology and behavior for millions of years,” Arora added. “That’s an entirely new dimension to human evolution.”

The upshot, according to the team, is that our lineage must have evolved partial protection against the neurotoxic effects of lead at some point, clearing the way for humans to develop more cohesive societies that helped them weather climatic shifts and other existential threats. Neanderthals, by contrast, never developed these protections—and the ceiling on their social complexity may have been a contributing factor to their demise.

Read the Science Advances Paper
Read the full story
Et Cetera
Make glass in case of emergency
Radioactive waste is finally being made into glass at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Hanford Site. “We’ve still got a ways to go before we’re anywhere near done, but today’s success is worth celebrating—let’s make glass!” U.S. Senator Patty Murray (D–WA) said in a statement.
Read more at ScienceInsider
A bright idea for data storage
Researchers may have found the key to unlock a new kind of ultrafast information storage. Instead of using electricity or magnetism to input binary codes, researchers have figured out how to use pulses of light to control the loops of microscopic electric dipoles in ferroaxial materials. The work “is a further demonstration of how the application of basic principles of symmetry can lead to entirely new functionalities,” one of the researchers said.
Science Paper and PERSPECTIVE  |  Read more at The University of Oxford
The mystery of the rubies
Since 2022, astronomers have been puzzling over the source of little red dots—sometimes called rubies—in JWST images of the universe. Most now think they are strange black holes surrounded by hot, dense gas. “It’s extremely rare that you get to work on a truly new physical phenomenon like this,” one astronomer said. “It’s almost a shame that we’re starting to figure them out.”
Read more at Nature
60%
The increase in obesity rate in U.S. adults using a new definition of the condition.
In January, a team of more than 50 doctors proposed a new definition for obesity—one that goes beyond a simple Body Mass Index calculation, acknowledging that some people have high BMIs but are metabolically fit. Researchers applied the new definition to more than 300,000 U.S. adults in the All of Us study , and found that the obesity rate jumped from 42.9% to 68.6%. “In this cohort study, adoption of the new definition of obesity significantly increased obesity prevalence with major implications for clinical practice and public policy,” the team wrote.
JAMA Network Open
Last but not least
I kind of love the fact that all of us are, in fact, glowing all the time.
Christie Wilcox, Editor, ScienceAdviser

With contributions from Phie Jacobs, Hannah Richter, and Michael Price

Do you have a burning science question you can’t seem to find a good answer for? Submit it to Ask Science! Selected questions will receive responses from Science editors right here in ScienceAdviser.

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Sciworthy Newsletter, October 2025

“Spooky action at a distance, Quantum Physics, Weird Science, Zombie Microbes, Planet eating star.”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.  Accessed on 16 October 2025, 0228 UTC.

Content and Source:  “Sciworthy Newsletter, October 2025.”

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Welcome to the Sciworthy newsletter! October is here, and with it comes longer nights, changing leaves, and a touch of mystery in the air. In the spirit of the spooky season, we’re exploring the eerie, the strange, and the wonderfully weird corners of science, from mystery radiation to zombie-like microbes. No tricks, just science treats!
Spooky Action at a Distance

From October 6th through 13th, the Nobel Foundation honored achievements in the fields of medicine, physics, chemistry, literature, peace, and economic sciences by announcing the 2025 Nobel Prizes. Two and a half weeks later, many of us will celebrate Halloween, the spookiest holiday of the year. But in 2022, both the Nobel announcement and Halloween were “spooky” in their own ways.

That year, the committee awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics to Alain Aspect, John F. Clauser, and Anton Zeilinger for studying the counterintuitive phenomenon in quantum mechanics known as entanglementEntanglement refers to the fact that, under specific conditions, pairs or systems of particles can become linked in such a way that they’re always acting as parts of one system, no matter the distance between them.

Quantum Physics – Waves And Particles” by Gerd Altmann is licensed under CC0 Public Domain.

If a pair of photons or electrons becomes entangled, you could send them to opposite ends of the Galaxy, and measuring the properties of one will still give you information about the properties of the other. For example, if the pair conserves a quantum mechanical property called spin, when you measure one to have clockwise spin, you instantly know the other has counterclockwise spin.

Albert Einstein famously objected to quantum entanglement, framing the phenomenon as “spooky action at a distance.” Einstein, along with the scientists Boris Podolsky and Nathan Rosen, cited the phenomenon as evidence that quantum mechanics was an incomplete theory for explaining reality. They proposed that entangled particles must either communicate with each other faster than light, which is impossible according to Einstein’s Theory of Special Relativity, or have some kind of hidden, underlying properties that physicists have yet to find that explain their long-range connection.

Over the subsequent decades, quantum physicists like Aspect, Clauser, and Zeilinger have produced experimental evidence that challenges the assumptions underlying the Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen paradox. They’ve shown that both conditions are false. Somehow, in a way totally unlike ordinary objects, entangled particles must exhibit corresponding behaviors without communicating with each other or sharing hidden properties that exist before they are observed. Spooky indeed.

Weird Science
Mysterious radiation from space, designed using Canva AI

Astronomers model mystery radiation from space. Researchers tracked high-energy radiation from outside the Milky Way Galaxy using data from the Hubble Space Telescope and the Fermi Gamma-Ray Telescope. They estimated that distant star-forming galaxies can only account for about half of this radiation, meaning that strange and so-far undetected interactions, like dark matter annihilation, could be part of the puzzle. Read about it here.

Zombie microbes, designed using Canva AI

Zombie microbes help search for life on Mars. Researchers from West Virginia University found the oldest salty traces of life on Earth in halite fluid inclusions in the 830-million-year-old Browne Formation from central Australia. Salt minerals like these are widespread on Mars and could also preserve traces of past Martian life. The next step will be to test whether these zombie salt microbes can be revived. Read about it here.

Scientists discover a planet-eating star. Astronomers examined light emissions from the star system ZTF SLRN-2020 and determined that it had consumed and partially spat out an orbiting planet. They saw no sign of any remaining core of the planet still orbiting the star, meaning it must have been fully engulfed rather than only losing its outer layers. They labeled this event a new area for physics since it’s the first time anyone’s ever observed a planet-eating star! Read about it here.

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Scientific American

“New issue out now:  Life’s Big Bangs and chronic inflammation.”

Views expressed in this science, health, and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.  Accessed on 15 October 2025, 1249 UTC.

Content and Source:  “Scientific American.”

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Russ Roberts (https://hawaiisciencejournal.com).

November 2025 Issue
November 2025 Issue
Dear Russell Roberts,
Everyone agrees that complex life originated on Earth about 1.6 billion years ago. Everyone except geochemist Abderrazak El Albani, who says he’s found multicellular organisms in rock layers dating back two billion years —a time when that should be impossible. Our November cover story examines the implications of this discovery, which could upturn our understanding of life on Earth.
Elsewhere in the new issue, we look into new research into chronic inflammation –and why the multibillion-dollar dietary supplement industry that promises to treat it may be selling snake oil. Once you’ve read that, check out our article about the science of morality: Neuroscientists believe that lying tends to numb our brain and create neural habituation that can lead to ethical collapse; cheat one customer, and it gets easier and easier until you’re selling sugar water as a cancer treatment to lots of unsuspecting victims.
We’ve also got a fantastic scientific detective story. Scientific American senior editor Dan Vergano has followed a trail of theft, lies, smuggling and death to track how the ninth-largest meteorite in the world disappeared into a sketchy world of black market collecting.
Finally, be sure you check out the results of our #SciAmInTheWild photo competition. Entrants participated by taking photographs of a print issue of Scientific American placed in a setting where science meets scenery. I think the winning entries are funny and creative and smart –just like our readers.
Enjoy the full issue with 50% off a Digital subscription, a special offer from me to you. ​
Chase wonder, catch truth,
David M. Ewalt
Editor in Chief
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Discover Magazine-The Sciences

“Revived 40,000-year-old microbes in the Arctic could release greenhouse gases.”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.  Accessed on 14 October 2025, 1951 UTC.

Content and Source:  “Discover Magazine-The Sciences.”

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Scientific American

“Health & Medicine:  COVID vaccines are as powerful as ever, reducing risk of disease and death.”

Views expressed in this science, health, and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.  Accessed on 13 October 2025, 2028 UTC.

Content and Source:  “Scientific American-Health & Medicine.”

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Russ Roberts (https://hawaiisciencejournal.com).

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October 13—A new study found that people of all age groups who received an updated COVID vaccine had reduced risk of severe disease and death, regardless of immunity from prior infection or vaccination. And a pig liver surgery in a patient with an incurable cancerous tumor brings us closer to transplants from other species.

Plus, I sit down for a conversation with a former physician to the president for a recent episode of Science Quickly. Find that and more news below!

Lauren Young, Associate Health Editor


A former White House physician reveals the medical realities of caring for the president of the U.S.

The health of President Trump and former President Biden has recently come under the spotlight, causing the public and medical experts to discuss how age-related health issues—from cognition to cancer to cardiovascular conditions—should be evaluated among our top elected officials. To get some insight on what White House medicine looks like, I interviewed former physician to the president, Jeffrey Kuhlman, in a recent episode of Science Quickly. In an edited excerpt of our conversation below, Kuhlman addresses age and politics.

Young: You brought up age. How much of the public’s concern around a political figure’s age is actually warranted from a medical perspective?

Kuhlman: I would state the obvious: age is the number-one risk factor for heart disease, it’s the number-one risk factor for cancer, and it’s the number-one risk factor for neurodegenerative conditions or cognitive decline.

I think that age is important. We have a gerontocracy. We have the oldest person ever elected to be president as the current president, and he’ll be 82 when he completes his second term. We have a senator who’s 91. New York Times invited me to write an essay about neurocognitive assessment. It is a fact of science, it’s not a political attack, that humans past the age of 60, [nearly] every single human starts to have cognitive decline.

The current president, who’s 79, he would benefit from a neurocognitive assessment. And that’s testing that does memory, reasoning, speed of processing, spatial visualization. So it just needs to be [a] more comprehensive assessment for these senior citizens that are in elected positions of great decision-making in the world.

Listen to the full interview with Jeffrey Kuhlman on Science Quickly, and wherever you listen to your podcasts.

Connect with me via email (lauren.young@sciam.com) or on Bluesky @laurenjyoung.bsky.social‬.

—Lauren Young

 
Top Stories
Annual COVID Vaccines Protect People against Severe Disease, Even with Prior Immunity

A new study shows that receiving an updated COVID vaccine reduced people’s risk of severe disease and death in all age groups, regardless of immunity from prior infection or vaccination

RFK, Jr., Says Tylenol Use for Circumcision Causes Autism. Here’s Why That Claim Is Flawed

Studies suggesting circumcision rates are linked with autism are “riddled with flaws”

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“Mary Roach is her own genre of book—gonzo, hilarious, wildly educational. This is Roach at her finest.” —Daniel Kraus, author of Whalefall. Learn more about the book here.

Pig Liver Surgery Moves Us Closer to Transplants from Other Species

Surgeons in China transplanted part of pig liver into a patient with an incurable cancerous tumor, and it functioned for more than a month

If you’re enjoying this newsletter, consider a subscription to Scientific American. Dive deeper into the health news that matters most to you!
Nobel Prizes, COVID Vaccine Updates and Malnutrition in Gaza

The CDC updates COVID vaccine guidance and stirs controversy over childhood immunizations. And global health experts warn of rising child malnutrition in Gaza.

Supreme Court Weighs Ban on Scientifically Discredited ‘Conversion Therapy’

The U.S. Supreme Court will determine whether Colorado’s ban on conversion therapy, an ineffective and often harmful practice targeting LGBTQ+ youth, violates a therapist’s right to free speech

AI Reads Your Tongue Color to Reveal Hidden Diseases

Inspired by principles from traditional Chinese medicine, researchers used AI to analyze tongue color as a diagnostic tool—with more than 96 percent accuracy

Babies Are Born with High Levels of Alzheimer’s-Linked Proteins in Their Brains

Researchers hope the finding could point to new therapeutic approaches for the disease

Bacteria Use Viral Naps to Build Immunity

New research shows how microbes use napping viruses to vaccinate themselves

Scientists Perform First-of-Its-Kind Transplant Using Kidney with a Converted Blood Type

A man diagnosed with brain death received a kidney that was modified to be type O, which is compatible with all blood types

 
What We’re Reading
  • The Trump Administration lays off dozens of CDC officials, including high-ranking scientists. | The New York Times
  • Former President Biden undergoes radiation therapy as his prostate cancer care enters new phase. | NBC News
  • U.S. measles cases continue to climb, with outbreaks in multiple states across the country. | NPR
 
From The Archive
Biden Is Out—And the Discussion of Aging in Politics Is In

The current presidential race has ensured that age will be a key and likely fraught consideration in future elections. Can science help determine how old is too old for a candidate before politics does?

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“As U.S. shutdown drags on, ‘it’s just one blow after another…uncertainty about the future.”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.  Accessed on 13 October 2025, 1336 UTC.

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