Scientific American

“The next wave of GLP-1 drugs, Fire amoebas, What even is a seahawk?”

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February 6, 2026—The next wave of GLP-1 drugs, fire amoebas and what even is a seahawk?
Robin Lloyd, Contributing Editor

TODAY’S NEWS

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Life Loves Tessellation 

First, biologist Mason Dean noticed a tiled pattern of hexagons and pentagons in the cartilaginous scales on a ray skeleton. The observation sparked a fruitful search for similar tiling patterns elsewhere in nature. Dean and his colleagues found these “tessellations” in diverse organisms and structures, including on the outer coatings of millet seeds, shark skin and even microscopic amoebae. Now, the team’s published catalog of so-called true tessellations throughout nature reveals how widespread they are.
How it works: Dean’s team defines true tessellations as discrete geometric plates connected by soft seams. They’re not purely visual, like the hexagons formed by the negative space in honeycomb. A typical example of true tessellation is reptile scales. They form polygonal shapes and are connected by soft tissue. A less obvious example is tree bark: the outer layer of most tree trunks consists of layered plates. These tessellations can form protective layers that are the perfect combination of stiff and flexible. Geometry and growth push vastly different life forms toward the same solutions, writes freelance journalist Anirban Mukhopadhyay.
What the experts say: The catalog could help more researchers recognize these patterns in nature, the authors hope. “Once you start paying attention to that, you see it everywhere,” Dean says. His colleague and co-author, zoologist Jana Ciecierska-Holmes, agrees: “You kind of go into the tessellation world.”
Emma Gometz, newsletter editor
 

Fiery Amoeba

Amoebas, animals, plants, seaweeds and other cellular lifeforms with a membrane-bound nucleus are unable to survive in temperatures above 60 degrees Celsius. Or so scientists have long thought. Now, a newly discovered amoeba species can divide and reproduce at 63 degrees C, and even survive temperatures up to 70 degrees C, a team of scientists reported. The organism was discovered in hot, watery pits at Lassen Volcanic National Park in California.
Why this matters: The discovery of the so-called fire amoeba expands the definition of potentially habitable places in our universe. And insights into how organisms survive high heat could help researchers develop heat-tolerant proteins and enzymes for practical applications, such as more efficient laundry detergent.
The takeaway: “The difference between 60 and 63 degrees C may sound small but represents a relatively large shift in our current understanding of eukaryotic limits,” says microbial ecologist and astrobiologist Luke McKay, who was not involved with the study.
Emma Gometz, newsletter editor

IMAGE OF THE DAY

Two galaxies are shown mid-collision against a background of more distant galaxies.

A composite image of the colliding galaxies of Arp 107 (plus hundreds of far more distant background galaxies), based on infrared data from NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope. NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI

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The first question of today's science quiz
  • Test your scientific knowledge with today’s science quiz. Also, see how many words you can find in today’s Spellements. This week, Amir C and Robert W found hexane, Robert W also found nonane, Amir C also found anagen (a phase of hair growth), and Joaquin M found enneagon (a polygon with nine sides and nine angles). If you spot any science terms missing from the puzzle, email them to games@sciam.com.

MOST POPULAR STORIES OF THE WEEK

  • NASA’s Artemis II moon mission engulfed by debate over its controversial heat shield | 5 min read
  • Software is becoming something you speak into existence | 3 min read
  • Scientists discover brain network that may cause Parkinson’s disease | 4 min read
 
Opening ceremonies kicked off at 2pm Eastern for the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan Cortina. The games are set to continue for about two weeks, with the Paralympic Winter Games set to follow from March 6 to March 16. Scientific American’s coverage of the games’ science and tech aspects is under way, with new stories set to go live in the coming days about a spectacular figure skater, skiing injuries and curling equipment. That’s just the beginning. Visit our Olympics coverage page daily for updates.
Please send feedback, comments and questions about the newsletter to: newsletters@sciam.com. Hope you have a great weekend!
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“Controversial Danish vaccine research group faces new allegations.”

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Science | The Guardian

“‘Part of our biological toolkit’:  Newborn babies can anticipate rhythm in music.”

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Brain activity suggests newborns can detect and predict patterns relating to rhythm, study says Newborn babies can anticipate rhythm in pieces of music, researchers have discovered, offering insights into a fundamental human trait. Babies in the womb begin to respond to music by about eight or nine months, as shown by changes in their heart rate and body movements, said Dr Roberta Bianco, the fir
An ape was able to identify the location of imaginary objects in pretend scenarios, researchers find Whether it’s playing at being doctors or hosting a toy’s tea party, children are adept at engaging in make-believe – now researchers say bonobos can do it too. While there have been anecdotal reports of apes using imaginary objects, including apparently dragging pretend blocks across the floor, ex
‘Giveaway’ competitions on WhatsApp and Telegram for retatrutide and other drugs described as ‘extremely dangerous’ Hidden-market promoters of weight-loss drugs are running social media “giveaway” competitions that offer powerful, unlicensed medicines as prizes. The Guardian has been monitoring WhatsApp and Telegram groups promoting substances such as retatrutide – a medicine unlicensed in the UK

Today

As fewer people choose to pair up, let alone marry, it could be that our species’ mating patterns are moving closer to the natural order Monogamy, you may have heard, is in crisis. Fewer people are in relationships , let alone opting to be in one ’til death . And even those who have already exchanged vows seem to be increasingly looking for wiggle room. “Quiet divorce” – mentally checking out of
On a recent trip to Lake Geneva in Switzerland, biodiversity reporter Phoebe Weston witnessed the impact of one of the planet’s most potent invasive species, the quagga mussel. In just a decade the mollusc, originally from the Ponto-Caspian region of the Black Sea, has caused irreversible change beneath the surface of the picturesque lake. While ecologists believe invasive species play a major ro
My wife, Lelia Duley, who has died aged 67, was an obstetric epidemiologist who studied health outcomes related to pregnancy, childbirth and its aftermath. Working alongside frontline clinicians, she designed large-scale trials to test commonly used, but under-evaluated, treatments for pregnant women. Continue reading…

Yesterday

By age 20 diagnosis rates for men and women almost equal, research finds, challenging assumptions of gender discrepancy Females may be just as likely to be autistic as males but boys are up to four times more likely to be diagnosed in childhood, according to a large-scale study . Research led by the Karolinska Institutet in Sweden scrutinised the diagnosis rates of autism for people born in Swede
Two-decade study indicates a diet rich in foods such as olive oil, nuts and vegetables can cut risk of every type of stroke A Mediterranean diet can reduce the risk of every type of stroke, in some cases by as much as 25%, a large study conducted over two decades suggests. A diet rich in olive oil, nuts, seafood, whole grains and vegetables has previously been linked to a number of health benefit
We don’t have a single verb to express smelling something nice. Welsh and Croatian, by contrast, are never caught short when something fragrant gets right up your nose I remember the first time I remembered a smell. This was remembering to the extent that it stopped me in my tracks, taking me back to a specific moment, a specific place and a specific feeling. The smell was that of a bike shop. Ma
While some benefits such as stress relief are backed by solid evidence, they can be achieved without expensive hyped-up courses Read more in the Antiviral series Get our breaking news email , free app or daily news podcast In the 2012 film adaptation of the Dr Seuss book The Lorax, a fable about capitalist greed, air is a commodity. The mayor of Thneedville deprives the city’s residents of trees
Novo Nordisk share price plunges after blaming lower US drug prices, patent protection issues and rising competition The maker of Wegovy and Ozempic, Novo Nordisk, has predicted a sharp drop in revenues this year owing to what its boss described as a “painful” push by Donald Trump to lower US weight-loss drug prices, rising competition, and the loss of important patent protections. Denmark’s Novo

Feb 3, 2026

A genomic entrepreneur’s guide to the coming revolution in biology raises troubling questions about ethics and safety The prophet Ezekiel once claimed to have seen four beasts emerge from a burning cloud, “sparkling like the colour of burnished brass”. Each had wings and four faces: that of a man, a lion, an ox and an eagle. Similarly, a creature called Buraq, something between a mule and a donke
Researchers say waste dumping and climate breakdown have contributed to rise in brick, concrete and glass on beaches As much as half of some British beaches’ coarse sediments may consist of human-made materials such as brick, concrete, glass and industrial waste, a study has suggested. Climate breakdown, which has caused more frequent and destructive coastal storms, has led to an increase in thes
Artemis II mission was due to begin as early as next week and astronauts have spent almost two weeks in quarantine Nasa has postponed its historic mission to send astronauts around the moon and back again, after issues arose during a critical test of its most powerful rocket yet. The US space agency had planned to launch the Artemis II mission from Kennedy Space Center in Florida as early as next

Feb 2, 2026

Aerospace business and artificial intelligence firm to unite for IPO as world’s most valuable private company Musk is taking SpaceX’s minority shareholders for a ride | Nils Pratley Elon Musk’s aerospace company SpaceX has acquired his artificial intelligence business xAI, in a $1.25tn (£910bn) merger that consolidates part of Musk’s empire as SpaceX prepares to go public later this year. The two
Just like men, women are increasingly being told by online influencers that the classic symptoms of middle age could be down to low testosterone. In the second part of this miniseries exploring the hormone, Madeleine Finlay finds out what testosterone supplementation is doing for women. She hears from science journalist Linda Geddes, who is taking testosterone for low libido, and from prof Susan
UPFs are made to encourage addiction and consumption and should be regulated like tobacco, say researchers Ultra-processed foods (UPFs) have more in common with cigarettes than with fruit or vegetables, and require far tighter regulation, according to a new report. UPFs and cigarettes are engineered to encourage addiction and consumption, researchers from three US universities said, pointing to t
The answers to today’s problems Earlier today I set you these three problems about the number 11. Here they are again with solutions. 1. Funny formation odd positions: 9,7,5,3,1 sum to 25; even positions: 8,6,4,2,0 sum to 20. Continue reading…

Feb 1, 2026

Every second, 11m bits of information enter our brains, which then efficiently prioritise them. We need to learn to work with the process, rather than against it It’s believed that we have about 50,000 thoughts a day: big, small, urgent, banal – “Did I leave the oven on?”. And those are just the ones that register. Subconsciously, we’re constantly sifting through a barrage of stimuli: background
Puzzles one louder than ten UPDATE: Solutions can be read here It’s two decimal digits long, it’s prime, it’s a palindrome and it’s the number of players in a football team. Let’s hear it for “legs” eleven! Continue reading…
Straddling the celestial equator, the constellation is visible in both hemispheres Orion, the hunter, one of the most recognisable constellations in the night sky, is well placed for observation from the northern hemisphere during February. Straddling the celestial equator – the projection of Earth’s equator on to the night sky – the constellation is also visible from the southern hemisphere. Fro
We are living longer and longer, but many of us are unprepared for the challenges age brings, says the novelist and psychotherapist Frank Tallis We have never lived so long, so well, nor had more available advice on how to do so: don’t smoke, don’t drink, don’t eat ultraprocessed foods; lift weights, get outside, learn a language. Cosmetics – or surgery – have never been so available, so advanced
Recreating cosmic dust may help answer questions about how meteorites hitting Earth came to contain organic matter Get our breaking news email , free app or daily news podcast How does one acquire star dust? One option, as the Perry Como song suggests, is to catch a falling star and put it in your pocket, so to speak. Thousands of tonnes of cosmic dust bombard the Earth each year, mostly vaporisi

Jan 31, 2026

Nick Carter says easing controls on MDMA will allow drug to be used as alternative treatment for those with PTSD A former head of the British military is calling for the government to ease restrictions on the party drug MDMA so that it can be tested more cheaply as a treatment for veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Sir Nick Carter, who was chief of the defence staff until 2021,
Researchers tell ‘human story’ about crisis during plague of Justinian, which killed millions in Byzantine empire A US-led research team has verified the first Mediterranean mass grave of the world’s earliest recorded pandemic, providing stark new details about the plague of Justinian that killed millions of people in the Byzantine empire between the sixth and eighth centuries. The findings, publ
Champion of respiratory medicine who was passionate about building bridges between academics and clinicians Mike Morgan, who has died aged 75, was a leading figure in respiratory services in Leicester for more than 30 years. He also championed respiratory medicine at the highest level. It had long been a poor relation compared to other areas of medicine but, as the national clinical director for

 

Smithsonian Magazine-the Daily

“Astronomers spot a huge cluster of galaxies forming earlier in cosmic history than thought possible.”

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Astronomers Spot a Huge Cluster of Galaxies Forming Earlier in Cosmic History Than Thought Possible image
The JADES-ID1 protocluster (X-ray: NASA / CXC / CfA / Á Bogdán; Infrared: NASA / ESA / CSA / STScI; Image Processing: NASA / CXC / SAO / P. Edmonds and L. Frattare)

Astronomers Spot a Huge Cluster of Galaxies Forming Earlier in Cosmic History Than Thought Possible

The young galaxy cluster existed about 12.8 billion years ago and has an estimated mass 20 trillion times that of the sun
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ScienceAdviser (AAAS)

“They’re not dead yet:  Cell spits off ‘zombosomes.'”

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Scientific American-Technology

“Scientific American-Technology:  Viral AI that runs your digital life.”

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February 3—Hi everyone, happy February. Here’s what to know this week: buoyant spiders inspire unsinkable metalAI agent OpenClaw goes viral; and—rejoice!—Heathrow lifts the ban on flying with anything but the smallest containers of liquids. Please enjoy.

And reach out to me with your technology comments and questions at eric.sullivan@sciam.com.

—Eric Sullivan, Senior Desk Editor, Technology & Engineering

 
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Elon Musk fuses SpaceX with xAI

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Spiders taught scientists how to make unsinkable metal

Researchers mimicked the air-trapping tricks of diving bell spiders to create aluminum that stays afloat—even when punctured

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Software is becoming something you speak into existence

Coding for the rest of us finally feels possible now that tools like Claude Code turn plain English into working software

OpenClaw—what happens when AI stops chatting and starts doing

This open-source agent installs software, makes calls and runs your digital life—redefining what “digital assistants” are supposed to do

Heathrow dropped its 100-ml liquids rule. This scanner tech made it possible

New CT scanners can build a 3D model of your carry-on, helping airport staff spot risks without making you unpack or decant liquids into tiny bottles

 
WHAT WE’RE READING
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From the Archive
U.S. Glossed Over Cancer Concerns Associated with Airport X-Ray Scanners

Experts say the dose from the backscatter is negligible when compared with naturally occurring background radiation, but a linear model shows even such trivial amounts increase the number of cancer cases

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Science | The Guardian

“‘Adjustments must be made’:  How to live well after mid-life.”

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Accessed on 03 February 2026, 0113 UTC.

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Most popular

We are living longer and longer, but many of us are unprepared for the challenges age brings, says the novelist and psychotherapist Frank Tallis We have never lived so long, so well, nor had more available advice on how to do so: don’t smoke, don’t drink, don’t eat ultraprocessed foods; lift weights, get outside, learn a language. Cosmetics – or surgery – have never been so available, so advanced
The answers to today’s problems Earlier today I set you these three problems about the number 11. Here they are again with solutions. 1. Funny formation odd positions: 9,7,5,3,1 sum to 25; even positions: 8,6,4,2,0 sum to 20. Continue reading…
The Earth-size planet HD 137010 b has a ‘50% chance of residing in the habitable zone’ of its sun-like star, scientists say Astronomers have discovered a potentially habitable new planet about 146 light-years away which is Earth-sized and has conditions similar to Mars. The candidate planet, named HD 137010 b, orbits a sun-like star and is estimated to be 6% larger than Earth. Continue reading…

Yesterday

Every second, 11m bits of information enter our brains, which then efficiently prioritise them. We need to learn to work with the process, rather than against it It’s believed that we have about 50,000 thoughts a day: big, small, urgent, banal – “Did I leave the oven on?”. And those are just the ones that register. Subconsciously, we’re constantly sifting through a barrage of stimuli: background
Puzzles one louder than ten It’s two decimal digits long, it’s prime, it’s a palindrome and it’s the number of players in a football team. Let’s hear it for “legs” eleven! Continue reading…
Straddling the celestial equator, the constellation is visible in both hemispheres Orion, the hunter, one of the most recognisable constellations in the night sky, is well placed for observation from the northern hemisphere during February. Straddling the celestial equator – the projection of Earth’s equator on to the night sky – the constellation is also visible from the southern hemisphere. Fro
Recreating cosmic dust may help answer questions about how meteorites hitting Earth came to contain organic matter Get our breaking news email , free app or daily news podcast How does one acquire star dust? One option, as the Perry Como song suggests, is to catch a falling star and put it in your pocket, so to speak. Thousands of tonnes of cosmic dust bombard the Earth each year, mostly vaporisi

Jan 31, 2026

Nick Carter says easing controls on MDMA will allow drug to be used as alternative treatment for those with PTSD A former head of the British military is calling for the government to ease restrictions on the party drug MDMA so that it can be tested more cheaply as a treatment for veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Sir Nick Carter, who was chief of the defence staff until 2021,
Researchers tell ‘human story’ about crisis during plague of Justinian, which killed millions in Byzantine empire A US-led research team has verified the first Mediterranean mass grave of the world’s earliest recorded pandemic, providing stark new details about the plague of Justinian that killed millions of people in the Byzantine empire between the sixth and eighth centuries. The findings, publ
Champion of respiratory medicine who was passionate about building bridges between academics and clinicians Mike Morgan, who has died aged 75, was a leading figure in respiratory services in Leicester for more than 30 years. He also championed respiratory medicine at the highest level. It had long been a poor relation compared to other areas of medicine but, as the national clinical director for

Jan 30, 2026

Weather service research concludes that less accurate probability-based predictions are still considered helpful The Met Office is to lean into one of Britain’s favourite pastimes – talking about the weather – by launching a new two-week forecast. At present, the publicly funded weather and climate service offers a seven-day forecast on its website and app with an hourly breakdown for the first f
Rocket company examining feasibility of both options before potential $1.5tn stock market flotation, report says Business live – latest updates SpaceX is reportedly considering a potential merger with the electric carmaker Tesla, or a tie-up with artificial intelligence firm xAI, as Elon Musk looks at options to consolidate his global empire. The rocket company is examining the feasibility of a t

Jan 29, 2026

Swedish study of 100,000 women found higher rate of early detection, suggesting potential to support radiologists The use of artificial intelligence in breast cancer screening reduces the rate of a cancer diagnosis by 12% in subsequent years and leads to a higher rate of early detection, according to the first trial of its kind. Researchers said the study was the largest to date looking at AI use
Agency updates guidance after increase in reports of condition to its yellow card scheme Patients on weight-loss jabs and diabetes injections should be aware there is a small risk of developing severe acute pancreatitis, the UK medicines regulator has said. About 1.6 million adults in England, Wales and Scotland used GLP-1 medication, such as semaglutide (Wegovy, Ozempic) and tirzepatide (Mounjar
New study into ‘heritability’ shows that 50% of the variation in human lifespan could be down to genetics Some people who live to a great age put it down to an evening tot of whisky, others to staying out of trouble. Now scientists think they may have unlocked a key secret to long life – quite simply, genetics. Writing in the journal Science , the researchers described how previous studies that h

Jan 28, 2026

Light scattering creates the shade we see when we look skyward, and studies show the process varies around the world On holiday the sky may look a deeper shade of blue than even the clearest summer day at home. Some places, including Cape Town in South Africa and Briançon in France, pride themselves on the blueness of their skies. But is there really any difference? The blue of the sky is the pro
If TikTok influencers are to be believed, testosterone, or T, is the answer to everything from fitness frustrations and fatigue to low libido. But doctors are warning that social media misinformation is driving men to seek testosterone therapy that they don’t need. This in turn comes with risks for health and fertility. In part one of a miniseries exploring the popularity of testosterone, Madelei

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