Month: January 2026
Sciworthy Newsletter
“How to keep good gene on, innovations for 2026, a better way to treat canine cancer.”
Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.
Accesses on 15 January 2026, 1919 UTC.
Content and Source: “Sciworthy Newsletter-January 2026.”
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URL–sciworthy.com.
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Russ Roberts (https://hawaiisciencejournal.com).
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News from Science (AAAS)
“Tyrannosaurus Rex didn’t reach full size until age 40.”
Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.
Accessed on 15 January 2026, 1447 UTC.
Content and Source: “News from Science (AAAS).”
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URL–https://www.science.org.
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Russ Roberts (https://hawaiisciencejournal.com).
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Smithsonian Magazine
“The mysterious gas cloud around a dead star is beautiful, but it shouldn’t be there.”
Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.
Accessed on 14 January 2026, 2201 UTC.
Content and Source: “Smithsonian Magazine-Science & Innovation.”
https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#inbox/FMfcgzQfBQDczlxsQMxkSxCQSbtzXlSD
URL–https://www.smithsonianmag.com.
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| Researchers were shocked to find a shock wave around a dead star. (ESO / K. Ilkiewicz and S. Scaringi et al. Background: PanSTARRS) | |
This Mysterious Gas Cloud Spotted Around a Dead Star Is Beautiful—but Astronomers Say It Shouldn’t Be There |
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| The stellar corpse is spewing star stuff, which is heating and compressing surrounding gas, resulting in a multicolored display. But it’s missing a component thought to be necessary for this phenomenon | |
| Margherita Bassi | |
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After Living Alongside Humans for Millennia, These Italian Brown Bears Have Evolved to Become Less Aggressive |
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When Some Elephants Raid Farms, They Might Not Be After a Snack. They Could Be Looking for Medicinal Plants |
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The High-Stakes Quest to Make Snakebites Survivable Took Leaps Forward in 2025, With Promising New Avenues to Safer Antivenoms |
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Don’t Miss These Ten Celestial Events in 2026, From Aligned Planets to a Total Solar Eclipse |
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Naked Mole-Rats Prefer Low-Oxygen Air That Would Kill Most Mammals, Adding to Their List of Death-Defying Superpowers |
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Not Getting Enough Sleep? You Might Be Shortening Your Life Span |
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When Male Deer Mark Trees, Those Spots May Glow Like Neon Lights at Dusk and Dawn, Though Humans Usually Can’t See Them |
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Maggots Are an Incredibly Efficient Source of Protein, Which May Make Them the Next Superfood for Humans |
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Trail Cameras in Vermont Captured Something Strange: Moths Sipping a Moose’s Tears |
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Astronomers Find an Odd Space Cloud, Like a Galaxy Without Stars, That Could Shed Light on the Secrets of Dark Matter |
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Earthquakes Deep Below Antarctic Waters Seem to Have Surprising Effects on Life at the Surface |
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Sharklike Fish With Weird, Buzz-Saw Jaws Sliced Through the Seas, Then Vanished. Now, Paleontologists Are Unraveling Their Secrets |
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Rockhopper Penguins’ Athleticism Makes Them the Daredevils of the Animal World. Will a Warming Climate Slow Them Down? |
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ScienceBlog.com Newsletter
“Extended singlehood in your twenties linked to declining well-being.”
Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.
Accessed on 14 January 2026, 1527 UTC.
Content and Source: “ScienceBlog.com Newsletter.”
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URL–scienceblog.com.
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Russ Roberts (https://hawaiisciencejournal.com).
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Read: Extended Singlehood In Your Twenties Linked To Declining Well-Being
Post-Meal Blood Sugar Spikes May Increase Alzheimer’s Risk By 69 Percent
Why Monkeys Mount Each Other: Environment And Social Stress May Be Key
Depression Drug Failures May Have Blamed The Wrong Thing
Why “10 Years Old” Feels Longer Than “Made In 2015”
T. Rex Didn’t Hit Peak Size Until Age 40
Why Shaving Cream Resembles AI Training
What Happens When Bacteria-Killing Viruses Go To Space
For The Hardest Cases Of Depression, A Steady Pulse Of Hope
Mega-Analysis Shows Why Memory Declines With Age
How A Common Virus May Trigger Multiple Sclerosis
A Bigger Paycheck, A Safer Pregnancy
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Nature Briefing
“Same-sex sex is a normal part of some primates’ lives.”
Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.
Accessed on 13 January 2026, 2024 UTC.
Content and Source: “Nature Briefing.”
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URL–https://www.nature.com.
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Russ Roberts (https://hawaiisciencejournal.com).
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| In golden snub-nosed monkeys (Rhinopithecus roxellana), which cope with cold climates, same-sex sexual behaviour tends to occur alongside bond-strengthening grooming. (Thomas Marent/Nature Picture Library) | |||||
Same-sex sex is no big deal for primatesSexual behaviour between primates of the same sex is part of the normal lives of some species and could play an important part in their long-term success. Researchers identified instances of same-sex sexual behaviour in 59 species of non-human primate, and suggest that it might be a response to harsh environments, predation and complex social hierarchies. “A lot of people have long regarded same-sex behaviour as an accident, or rare,” says evolutionary biologist and study co-author Vincent Savolainen. But “it’s part of the normal social life of primates”. Nature | 4 min read |
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Tasty treats to quash unwelcome squirrelsAlmost £5 million ($6.6 million) will be spent stashing contraceptive-laden hazelnut butter in special squirrel feeders to suppress the population of invasive grey squirrels (Sciurus carolinensis) in the United Kingdom. Researchers have been working on a world-first contraceptive for grey squirrels and a prototype feeder that allows heavy greys to access the buttery bait, but prevents lighter red squirrels (Sciurus vulgaris) from getting inside. If it works, the approach could be cheaper and more effective than culling at protecting the country’s much loved rodents. The Economist | 4 min read (free registration required) |
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EPA to stop taking saved lives into accountThe US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) will reverse decades of policy and stop including human health in cost–benefit analyses when setting air-pollution limits, reports The New York Times. Instead, the agency will only tally the cost to industry of regulating two of the most widespread toxic pollutants: fine PM2.5 particulate matter and ozone. “The idea that EPA would not consider the public health benefits of its regulations is anathema to the very mission of EPA,” says legal scholar Richard Revesz. |
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| Ultraviolet light helps to reveal soft tissue preserved along with the bones of an Archaeopteryx fossil at the Field Museum in Chicago, Illinois. (Delaney Drummond/Field Museum) | |||||
Where did birds come from?For more than a century, Archaeopteryx was the earliest known bird genus, and the only one known from the Jurassic period, when birds first evolved. Last year, fossils of a newly discovered genus revealed that Archaeopteryx wasn’t alone: a creature called Baminornis also walked the Jurassic Earth — and flew as well. These two genera of birds are so different that some researchers suggest that the first birds predated them both. The findings are revealing clues about how and why birds evolved, and hint that the evolutionary story of birds has an even earlier chapter than researchers thought. |
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Ask AI for reasoning help, not answersTo boost their creativity, people should ask artificial intelligence models how to think, not what to think, argues complexity-science researcher Brian Uzzi. The best collaborators help others to discover their own knowledge, and help to link ideas from seemingly disparate schools of thought, Uzzi says — two qualities that users can find in AI. If users ask bots for a reasoning process, not outright answers, “we can create partnerships that push past conventions and promote scientific innovation”, writes Uzzi. |
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Some climate progress is irreversibleNine climate researchers and policy leaders, including the chair of the UK Climate Change Committee, argue that “key elements of climate action are irreversible” despite factors “such as the deliberate efforts by the current US administration to weaken climate policies, discredit climate science and promote fossil fuels”. They point to backstops that prevent regression, such as the proliferation of long-lived infrastructure to carry renewable energy. Another essential positive force: talking about what’s going well. “Stories that envision a positive, achievable future are themselves feedback loops,” they write. |
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Quote of the day“I was so lucky to have both visions of both sides of the fence that it made it much easier for me to relate to students, no matter what gender they were.”Coming out as a transgender woman to students and colleagues in 1997 helped her become a better teacher and advisor, says ecologist Shannon Bros. (Nature Careers Off Limits podcast | 20 min listen) |
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Science News
Top science news: “New dietary guidelines flip the food pyramid.”
Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.
Accessed on 13 January 2026, 1536 UTC.
Content and Source: “Science News” via email subscription from https://feedly.com.
https://feedly.com/i/subscription/feed%2Fhttps%3A%2F%2Fwww.sciencenews.org%2Ffeed
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Russ Roberts (https://hawaiisciencejournal.com).
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Smithsonian Magazine-the Daily
“Why does this bizarre fish have a hole in its head?”
Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.
Accessed on 13 January 2026, 0210 UTC.
Content and Source: “Smithsonian Magazine-the Daily.”
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Russ Roberts (https://hawaiisciencejournal.com).
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| Three-dimensional reconstructions of the rockhead poacher’s insides hint that the fish may beat its cranial pit like a drum (Louisiana State University) | |
This Bizarre Fish Has a Hole in Its Head. The Creature Might Use It Like a Drum to Rock Out |
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| The rockhead, or deep-pitted, poacher may use its ribs to beat the inside of its head cavity to communicate with other creatures, according to a new study | |
| Sara Hashemi | |
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Archaeologists Unearth Ancient War Trumpet That Once Struck Fear in the Hearts of Enemies on the Battlefield |
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See the Record-Breaking Bluefin Tuna the Size of a Grizzly Bear That Sold for $3.2 Million at a Tokyo Fish Market |
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Could Leonardo da Vinci’s DNA Be Hiding Inside One of His Renaissance Sketches? |
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FROM THE ARCHIVETube of Ancient Red Lipstick Unearthed in Iran |
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The Time When New York City Seriously Considered Seceding From the United States |
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It’s Almost ‘All Systems Go’ for Artemis 2 to Take the Next Giant Leap Toward Stepping on the Moon Again |
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IN CASE YOU MISSED ITRare Red-Necked Ostriches Introduced in Saudi Arabia to Replace Birds That Went Extinct More Than 80 Years Ago |
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You Can Buy President Jimmy Carter’s Paintings, Furniture, Mementos and a Love Letter to His Wife |
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How White Southerners Distorted the History of Ancient Egypt to Justify Slavery in the U.S. |
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| PHOTO OF THE DAY | |
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The Shoreline Explorer© Timea Ambrus |
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Wired Science
“The ancient art of nasal rinsing might protect you from a cold.”
Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.
Accessed on 12 January 2026, 2125 UTC.
Content and Source: https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#inbox/FMfcgzQfBQBKmFnHLXjRHKrkxxnqqzMM
URL–https://www.wired.com.
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Russ Roberts (https://hawaiisciencejournal.com)
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SciTechDaily.com Newsletter
“Brazil may hold the keys to extreme human longevity.”
Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.
Accessed on 12 January 2026, 1359 UTC.
Content and Source: “SciTechDaily.com Newsletter.”
https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#inbox/FMfcgzQfBQBKScbnJlzzbGFVksQTFSfl
URL–scitechdaily.com.
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Russ Roberts (https://hawaiisciencejournal.com).
| SciTechDaily Newsletter |
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