| Antarctica’s Ancient Ice Cycles Once Controlled Life in Distant Oceans |
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2026-03-30 11:24:42 +00:00
Ancient Antarctic ice sheet cycles affected subtropical ocean productivity by altering nutrient circulation. The 40,000-year obliquity cycle played an unexpectedly strong role, revealing deep global climate connections. Fluctuations in Antarctica’s ice sheets once influenced marine life far beyond the polar regions, shaping biological productivity in subtropical oceans thousands of miles away. This conclusion comes from […]
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| Warming Waters Are Supercharging an Invasive Predator in Alaska |
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2026-03-30 10:49:10 +00:00
Warming river temperatures are causing invasive northern pike to eat more fish, threatening already declining salmon populations. The trend is expected to worsen with continued climate change, raising concerns about ecosystem impacts. Rising temperatures in a river in south-central Alaska are fueling a growing appetite among invasive northern pike, raising concerns for native salmon and […]
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| The Mediterranean Isn’t Safe: Scientists Warn of Inevitable Tsunami |
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2026-03-30 10:14:39 +00:00
Contrary to common belief, the Mediterranean holds a significant and underrecognized tsunami risk, with waves capable of striking coastlines in minutes. The Mediterranean Sea is often dismissed as a low-risk zone for tsunamis, but that assumption is increasingly being challenged. Historical records and modern simulations show that powerful waves have already struck the French Riviera […]
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| This Deadly Parasite Stays Invisible by Shredding Its Own Genes |
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2026-03-30 09:00:28 +00:00
A deadly parasite stays hidden by shredding its own genetic instructions—now scientists finally know how. To survive inside the human bloodstream, the African trypanosome parasite disguises itself with a protective “cloak” made of proteins called variant surface glycoproteins (VSG). New research published in Nature Microbiology has identified a key protein that helps the parasite carefully […]
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| Researchers Uncover Hidden Genetic World Beneath Antarctic Seas |
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2026-03-30 03:32:49 +00:00
A sweeping genetic survey of Antarctic waters reveals a hidden microbial world with untold influence on Earth’s climate. The ocean surrounding Antarctica may look remote and empty, but it quietly helps regulate the planet’s climate. This region, known as the Southern Ocean, absorbs enormous amounts of heat and carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. Much of […]
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| Scientists Capture Elusive Sodium Pump in Action, Solving a Long-Standing Biological Mystery |
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2026-03-30 02:57:59 +00:00
A long-standing mystery in bacterial bioenergetics is beginning to unravel as researchers capture fleeting structural states of a sodium-pumping enzyme in action. The enzyme Na⁺-NQR acts as a sodium pump that fuels respiration in many marine and disease-causing bacteria. It relies on redox reactions, which involve the transfer of electrons between molecules, to move sodium […]
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| Scientists Say Washing Dishes With a Sponge Has a Concerning Side Effect |
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2026-03-30 02:22:50 +00:00
Kitchen sponges shed microplastics, but water use drives most environmental harm. Real-world and lab data show reducing water consumption has the greatest impact. Kitchen sponges may look harmless, but each scrub can release tiny plastic fragments that slip unnoticed down the drain. These microplastics, now found everywhere from oceans to drinking water, have many sources, […]
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| Scientists Break 50-Year-Old Bottleneck To Supercharge Cancer Drug Production |
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2026-03-29 20:32:27 +00:00
A long-standing challenge in cancer drug manufacturing may be shifting. An international team of scientists has reported a major advance in how doxorubicin, a widely used chemotherapy drug, can be produced. Their work pinpoints and overcomes key molecular “bottlenecks” that have restricted natural production of the drug for more than 50 years. First approved in […]
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| Scientists Identify Biological Pathway That Could Reverse Memory Loss |
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2026-03-29 19:57:15 +00:00
Gut microbiome changes may drive age-related memory loss via inflammation and disrupted brain signaling, but interventions in mice show this process can be reversed. Memory tends to decline with age, but this pattern is not the same for everyone. Some individuals remain mentally sharp even at 100, while others begin experiencing noticeable memory issues much […]
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| Popular Weight-Loss Drug Wegovy Linked to Sudden Vision Loss |
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2026-03-29 19:22:58 +00:00
Researchers analyzing millions of safety reports identified a possible link between a popular obesity drug and an increased reporting of “eye stroke,” a condition tied to reduced blood flow to the optic nerve. Wegovy, a widely used GLP-1 medication for weight loss, may carry a higher risk of sudden vision loss than similar drugs, according […]
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| 3,500-Year-Old Loom Discovery Reveals Secrets of Bronze Age Weaving |
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2026-03-29 16:47:14 +00:00
A reconstructed Bronze Age loom from Cabezo Redondo reveals advanced textile production, including potential early twill weaving, suggesting a shift toward more complex fabrics and wool use. Researchers have analyzed and partially rebuilt a warp-weighted loom from the second millennium BC site of Cabezo Redondo in Spain, offering a rare look at how textile technology […]
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| 2000-Year-Old Mystery: Researchers May Have Decoded the Lost Script of Teotihuacan |
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2026-03-29 16:11:37 +00:00
Researchers decoded Teotihuacan symbols as an early Uto-Aztecan writing system, possibly linked to Nahuatl speakers and reshaping theories about the city’s people. More than 2,000 years ago, Teotihuacan was a major city in central Mexico, home to as many as 125,000 people. Known for its massive pyramids, it served as a key cultural hub in […]
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| Ancient Whale Hunters of Brazil Challenge Long-Held Scientific Assumptions |
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2026-03-29 15:36:55 +00:00
Ancient Brazilian communities hunted whales earlier than previously thought, using advanced technologies. The discovery reshapes views of early maritime societies and provides new ecological insights. Whaling dates back much deeper in history than previously recognized. A new study by the Institute of Environmental Science and Technology at the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona (ICTA-UAB) and the […]
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| Extraordinary Fossil Reveals Fatal Duel Between Ocean Titans 80 Million Years Ago |
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2026-03-29 15:01:51 +00:00
A fossil discovery from Alabama reveals a rare and dramatic glimpse into the dangers of Cretaceous oceans, where even top predators were vulnerable. The oceans covering North America during the Cretaceous period were filled with life. Massive fish and large marine reptiles dominated the Western Interior Seaway. A newly described fossil now offers rare evidence […]
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| Scientists Finally Capture Elusive Lipids in Action Inside Cells |
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2026-03-29 11:57:26 +00:00
A new imaging approach is shedding light on one of cell biology’s most elusive questions: how lipids are organized and sorted within membranes. Cell membranes are far from simple barriers. They are highly organized landscapes made up of tiny patches called nanodomains, where lipids (fats) and proteins cluster together to carry out essential tasks such […]
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| Scientists Track Bees in 3D and Discover Remarkable Secret Navigation Skills |
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2026-03-29 11:22:22 +00:00
Honeybees fly consistent, landmark-guided routes with remarkable precision, revealing better navigation than their waggle dance suggests. A research team at the University of Freiburg, led by neurobiologist and behavioral biologist Prof. Dr. Andrew Straw, investigated how honey bees fly between their hive and a nearby food source. Using a drone, the scientists tracked bees traveling […]
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| New Carbon Nanotube Coating Could Supercharge 6G Technology |
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2026-03-29 02:27:26 +00:00
Ultrathin nanotube films absorb terahertz waves, boosting 6G performance and enabling advanced shielding and medical applications. Researchers at Skoltech, working with colleagues from KTH Royal Institute of Technology in Sweden, have developed a key technology that could support future 6G communications and enable faster wireless data transfer. Instead of a traditional device component, the innovation […]
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| Scientists Smash Superconductivity Record at Normal Pressure |
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2026-03-29 01:52:25 +00:00
Scientists have set a new record for superconductivity at normal pressure, bringing the field closer to practical, real-world applications. Researchers at the University of Houston have achieved a major milestone in the race toward practical superconductors, setting a new temperature record under everyday pressure conditions. The advance could eventually help reduce energy waste, lower costs, […]
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| 100x Less Power: The Breakthrough That Could Solve AI’s Massive Energy Crisis |
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2026-03-29 01:17:19 +00:00
A new hybrid AI approach may drastically cut energy use while improving reliability. Artificial intelligence is not just changing software. It is also driving a sharp rise in electricity use. In the United States alone, AI systems and data centers consumed about 415 terawatt-hours of electricity in 2024, according to the International Energy Agency. That […]
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