Scientific American

“Today in Science:  Does Tylenol during pregnancy cause autism?”

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September 22, 2025—The sordid tale of a meteorite smuggled out of Somalia to China. Plus, landslides are increasing all over the world, and a weak link between acetaminophen and autism.
Andrea Gawrylewski, Chief Newsletter Editor

TODAY’S NEWS

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TOP STORIES

A large puckered red rock sits in an arid, sandy environment.

The El Ali meteorite’s original landing site in Somalia is a dry valley without much vegetation. From “El Ali Meteorite: From Whetstone to Fame and to the Tragedy of Local People’s Heritage,” by Ali H. Egeh, in Meteoritics and Planetary Science; June 12, 2025.

Meteorite Smugglers

Thousands of years ago, a meteorite weighing 13.6 metric tons landed outside the village El Ali in Somalia, in East Africa. Called Shiid-birood (“the iron rock”), the object became a landmark in the region for generations, even featured in folklore, lullabies and poems. Now the El Ali meteorite is gone. A shaky cell-phone video from May 2023 suggests the rock is being held in storage in Yiwu, a midsize city in the Chinese province of Zhejiang, and is being offered for sale in pieces at $200 a gram or at $3.2 million for the entire thing, according to one researcher Scientific American‘s Dan Vergano spoke to. Last month, a Somali cultural minister called for its return.
What happened: Sometime in February 2020, the stone was removed from the village El Ali, with some accounts claiming it was forcibly taken amid gunfights and bloodshed. Local militia then reportedly sold it to the Kureym mining company for $264,000. Scientists first learned about Shiid-birood later in 2020 when the mining company reached out to experts to get the meteorite analyzed for publication in a scientific journal, a necessity to verify its provenance as a meteorite. Scientists have since asked for clarification of the origin of the object, but the mining company has cut off communication.
Why this matters: The case of Shiid-birood demonstrates how commonly meteorites are looted from their original communities. Clear rules of meteorite ownership exist within the U.S. and tracking meteorites is done in many countries under a 1970 UNESCO agreement. However, Sharia law currently governs the area the object was taken from, and scholars aren’t sure how the law treats meteorites. China has become a destination for smuggled meteorites in recent years. In 2019 customs authorities seized 857 kilograms of “dolomite” that turned out to be meteorites taken from Kenya. The Kamil impact crater in Egypt was reportedly “strip-mined” for iron meteorites sometime between 2020 and 2023. “There are museums full of stolen stuff,” says A. J. Timothy Jull, an expert on dating meteorites at the University of Arizona.
 

Landslides Increase

As the climate continues to warm, landslide risk is expected to increase across much of the world. Climate change is causing more frequent bursts of rain that fall over a short period in concentrated areas. Such intense rainfall events are known to be the biggest trigger of landslides. In 2024 the U.S. Landslide Susceptibility Index revealed that 44 percent of the land in the U.S. could potentially experience landslide activity.

Why it matters: The U.S. states are unevenly conducting landslide risk surveys and incorporating them into guidelines. For example, the city of Juneau, Alaska, carried out a risk mapping project in 2024, highlighting areas of concern, but the community vehemently rejected it. In Vermont, as in many places, evidence of slope instability—or even past failures—hardly factors into development or the issuing of building permits.
What the experts say: The year with the greatest number of landslides was 2024. “Last year was completely off the scale,” says geologist David Petley, who has been maintaining a database of deadly landslides worldwide since 2004. “The most simple hypothesis is that it was the year with the highest-ever global temperature. Last year I saw an extraordinary frequency of big storms that were triggering hundreds of thousands of landslides,” Petley says. They occurred at different locations all over the world.

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MONDAY MATH PUZZLE

 
Welcome to a new week of scientific discovery! What does discovery actually mean? In 1934 legendary philosopher of science Karl Popper wrote: “We do not take even our own observations quite seriously, or accept them as scientific observations, until we have repeated and tested them.” For Popper, it was perhaps more important to show that a finding was not true than to prove something correct. How else to filter out random, coincidental observations? “Discovery,” then, cannot be proclaimed willy-nilly. It is the end result of many studies examining the same phenomenon. And more often than not, those studies take time.
From one discovery lover to another, thank you for reading Today in Science. Send any feedback to: newsletters@sciam.com. See you tomorrow!
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Science Adviser | AAAS

“Keto diet may have long-term health consequences.”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.  Accessed on 22 September 2025, 1953 UTC.

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22 September 2025
Today’s Logbook looks at this year’s Ig Nobel Prizes. But first, catch up on the latest science news, including the tasty look of Mars’s atmosphere and how scientists are hacking AI.
Health  |  Science Advances
Keto diet may have long-term health consequences
Going “keto”—following a strict high-fat, low-carb diet—can help people struggling to lose weight, and has been recommended for a variety of conditions, including obesity and diabetes. But eating that way long-term may cause serious health effects, a study in mice suggests.

The keto diet gets its name from ketone bodies: an alternative energy source made from fats when the body doesn’t receive enough carb-based fuel. They’re why eating keto can help with weight loss over the short term, but it’s remained unclear whether the diet has effects when maintained for years or decades. To find out, researchers turned to mice, as it’s easier to keep them on a strict regimen. After 8 months on a keto diet, mice weighed less than those that ate a regular diet (though they were heavier than ones given a low-fat diet instead). But that wasn’t all—the keto mice had lots of fat in their blood, which is a sign of cardiovascular disease. Male mice on the regimen also had fatty, malfunctioning livers. But perhaps most concerningly, the keto animals showed signs of glucose intolerance. More specifically, they struggled to produce insulin, the hormone that directs the removal of the sugar glucose from the blood. That is similar to what happens in some people with type 2 diabetes—calling into question the diet’s use to treat the condition, the authors noted. On the upside, when the mice stopped eating keto, their glucose tolerance returned to normal.

Mind you, 8 months in a mouse’s life is like decades for a person, so we’re talking serious adherence to the diet for years and years—which many people don’t do, because it is so restrictive. And there’s the usual caveat that mice aren’t people, so researchers would need to confirm that similar outcomes occur in humans who eat keto long-term. Still, “it’s a cautionary tale,” physiologist Amandine Chaix told Science News; “this is not a magical dietary approach.”

Read the paper
Astronomy  |  Science Advances
Martian millefeuille
layers of Martian atmosphere
Horizontal layers in Mars’s atmosphere as observed by the Colour and Stereo Surface Imaging System (CaSSIS; colors indicate different filters or combination of filters). Thomas et al./Science Advances (2025)
If the Moon looks like cheese, Mars looks like a French pastry—well, at least its atmosphere does, says a new study. Using the European Space Agency’s ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter, a team found that the Martian atmosphere has distinct layers reminiscent of the puff pastry and cream layers of a millefeuille.

Studying the Martian atmosphere can tell scientists about the planet’s past and present, as well as help them determine its habitability. So, a team compiled imaging data from the spacecraft, which travels 400 kilometers above the Martian surface, to analyze the area above Mars’s limb—the fuzzy boundary where the planet seems to merge with space. By looking at the way the atmosphere scattered light, they teased out the concentrations of aerosols in different atmospheric sections. They found that the atmosphere was highly layered, with some swaths less than one km in depth, and that layers’ relative colors (the ratio of their redness to blueness) differed significantly.

One of the biggest open questions about Mars is how its dusty and icy aerosols change with the years and seasons. Visualizing its atmosphere’s pastry-layer like composition should improve models of the Red Planet’s climate, write the authors. Next, they hope to build a database of their findings and further probe this alien sky.

Read the paper
Artificial Intelligence  |  News from Science
Researchers customize AI tools at global ‘hackathon’
Last week, the third edition of an AI hackathon attracted more than 1200 researchers and developers from around the world. Over the course of 48 hours and countless pizzas, participants teamed up virtually and at in-person sites to harness the power of tools known as large language models (LLMs) for materials science and drug discovery. Vying for small cash prizes, more than 100 teams submitted two-minute videos showcasing their projects. All submissions are being compiled into a paper to demonstrate the breadth of potential AI applications, from hypothesis generation to data management and material property prediction. The entries also highlight a key challenge: building specialized pipelines to collect and standardize the data needed to turn an LLM into a customized research tool.

One participant was physicist Daniel Speckhard, who teamed up to test how well LLMs could predict how the crystal structure of a material relaxes to its lowest-energy configuration—a critical step for predicting its properties. Although the group only had time to train their AI model on a small dataset, the initial results were promising, Speckhard says.

Speckhard says he was more impressed by how easy it was to tailor the LLM. By coaxing other LLMs to help write code to import and parse data, the team accomplished in two days what would have taken Speckhard more than a month. He now sees LLMs as a promising partner in his research. Before the event, “I thought they take all the joy out of doing science,” he says. “But after this experience, I’m 100% convinced.”

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Logbook
a frying pan
Doesn’t this Teflon look tasty?  Pixabay | CC0
Get a slice of the Ig Nobels
The Ig Nobels are science’s most wacky, whimsical night, known for awarding prizes to work that first “makes people laugh, then think.” This year, the event had a noticeable dark cloud: nearly half of the winning teams were absent for reasons including President Trump’s research and border policies, international wars, and visa complications. Still, the science shone bright. Here are two of the winning works from the 35th ceremony, told through exclusive interviews with ScienceAdviser.

Cheesin’ about evolution
People and naughty pets aren’t the only pizza lovers; African rainbow lizards also have quite the Italian appetite, found the winners of this year’s nutrition prize. When conducting field work in Togo, tropical ecologist Luca Luiselli learned that lizards had been stealing pizza from tourists at a seaside resort. He and his colleagues decided to investigate the behavior by laying multiple kinds of pizza on the ground and seeing what enticed the rainbow lizards down from the trees. The lizards’ favorite? Four-cheese pizza.

In fact, the slices weren’t just a dinnertime preference, but an evolutionary boon: female lizards that ate four-cheese pizza produced more eggs than those that ate a typical diet of insects. The researchers hypothesize that the stinkiness of the cheese makes the food source easy to find, while its high fat content helps the females invest in reproduction. In his day-to-day research, “It is obviously not the pizza stuff that is important,” says Luiselli. “But through the pizza stuff, you can understand how fast the immediate adaptation of species to the changing environment [is].”

Mmmm, plastic
Health advocates and environmentalists alike have turned away from nonstick cookware in recent years. Rotem Naftalovich, an anesthesiologist and winner of the chemistry prize, went in the opposite direction: What if we ate nonstick coatings on purpose?

The idea, for which he has since gotten a U.S. patent , began when Naftalovich was concerned with obesity as a medical resident. Part of the struggle for obese patients is not feeling satiated when dieting. If people padded their diets with food that can’t be digested, he realized, they could fill up their stomachs without the extra calories. The natural example is fiber. The unnatural example he studied was polytetrafluoroethylene, an inert polymer best known as Teflon. Naftalovich suggests, for example, a chocolate bar whose composition is 25% Teflon: the dieter wouldn’t taste any difference but would poop out the undigestible polymers and get a lower-calorie treat. “People look at it and raise an eyebrow,” he says of his and typical Igs research. “But this is the nature of actual innovation … you’re thinking about things from a different perspective.”

Read more about the Ig Nobels
Et Cetera
Gold reaction
To create solid gold hydride, researchers had to compress and heat gold and hydrocarbons to an extreme degree. Still, the fact that the material was made at all suggests that gold and other so-called inert substances can behave unexpectedly under extreme conditions.
Angewandte Chemie Paper  |  Read more at Chemistry World
Mind the fat
A study of more than 18,000 adults links where fat is stored on the body and the size and shape of certain brain regions. Although causality could not be established, the findings suggest that targeting fat in certain places could be better for brain health than indiscriminate weight loss.
Nature Mental Health Paper  |  Read more at New Scientist
Quasi tagging along
Astronomers have spotted a tiny asteroid—less than 16 meters wide—following a similar path as our planet, making it among the smallest quasi-moons known. They estimate it’ll hang around until 2083, giving astronomers lots of time to study it.
RNAAS Paper  |  Read more at The New York Times
"
This administration doesn’t buy the idea that the government’s investment in basic research buys us anything useful.
—Former NSF official
Feature  |  19 SEptember 2025  |  Jeffrey Mervis
Many science policy experts say changes from the Trump administration move NSF away from its founding principles, laid out in a 1945 report to then-President Harry Truman, to maintain U.S. leadership in science by funding the best ideas across all fields and training the next generation of researchers.
Last but not least
I love that this year’s Ocean Photographer of the Year was awarded for a photo of wee amphipods. It just goes to show that there’s so much overlooked beauty on this planet.
Christie Wilcox, Editor, ScienceAdviser

With contributions from Zack Savitsky and Hannah Richter

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Discover Magazine-The Sciences

“Breakthrough for organ transplants may be realized by turning organs into glass.”

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Smithsonian Magazine-The Weekender

“Metal barrels dumped off the coast of Los Angeles are encircled by mysterious white halos….”

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Metal Barrels Dumped Off the Coast of Los Angeles Are Encircled by Mysterious White Halos—and Scientists Think They Finally Know Why image
Some of the barrels off the coast of Los Angeles are surrounded by mysterious white halos in the sediment. (Schmidt Ocean Institute)

Metal Barrels Dumped Off the Coast of Los Angeles Are Encircled by Mysterious White Halos—and Scientists Think They Finally Know Why

At least some of the barrels contain caustic alkaline waste, which has made the surrounding ecosystems inhospitable to most life forms, a new study suggests
Sarah Kuta
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Live Science Newsletter

“The world’s oldest mummy, xenoparity with ants, ancestors of ostriches and emus arrived at six landmasses via flight.”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.  Accessed on 20 September 2025, 2301 UTC.

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Science news this week

This week’s science news is stuffed with a menagerie of weird and wonderful animal discoveries. Topping the list are Iberian harvester ants (Messor ibericus), which mate with the male ants of a distantly related species (Messor structor) to procreate.

That’s odd enough on its own, but now scientists have discovered that the harvester ants don’t even need nearby M. structor colonies to achieve this — in a bizarre first, they simply clone the males when they need them.

It’s a “science fiction” feat that has led to the naming of an entirely new reproductive method. With this system, called “xenoparity,” the ants blur the lines between species in a completely unprecedented way.

And that’s far from the only fascinating news from the animal world this week. We also learned that the ancestors of ostriches and emus arrived on the six landmasses they call home today via flight.

Meanwhile, a jaguar was recorded smashing the record for the species’ longest documented swim; scientists got insight into how pachycephalosaurs grew their built-for-smashing heads; and an adorable, never-before-seen bearded snailfish was snapped swimming in the depths off California’s coast. The iconically grumpy-looking Pallas’s cat has also been found in a new range, having tripped a camera trap (and posed just in time) for a photo in the eastern Himalayas.

Fresh findings

‘The sun is slowly waking up’: NASA warns that there may be more extreme space weather for decades to come
Live Science
If the above stories didn’t rock your world, this one will certainly set off geomagnetic storms in the sky above it: This week, NASA scientists announced that the sun’s activity is set to rise in the coming decades, likely sending more dangerous space weather our way.

That comes as a big surprise, as sunwatchers mostly expected our star to cycle through a period of low activity in the years ahead. But observations of an unusually hyperactive sunspot cycle have upended those predictions. The upshot is that more powerful X-class solar flares and coronal mass ejections will be hurled at Earth. That could prove problematic, given our increasing reliance on satellites and the growing “second space race” to colonize the skies, the moon and even Mars.

Read more
Life’s Little Mysteries

Why do AI chatbots use so much energy?
Live Science
Chatbots are infamous energy guzzlers, with their rapid rollout and adoption in the past few years leading them to suck up increasingly large shares of electricity from power grids. With their energy consumption expected to skyrocket even higher, we looked into why the greedy bots require so much power and what can be done about it.

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Strange science

World’s oldest mummies were smoke-dried 10,000 years ago in China and Southeast Asia, researchers find
Live Science
When you think of mummies, your mind will likely travel to Egypt and the roughly 4,500-year-old preserved bodies sealed inside its elaborate tombs. But the discovery of some 10,000-year-old dried human remains deposited in dozens of ancient graves in Southeast Asia and China shows that the world’s oldest known mummies were from a different part of the world.

The remains were smoke-dried over a fire before burial. The ancient practice, which is still performed today, went beyond mere preservation and was likely freighted with spiritual and cultural significance. The scientists who found the mummies also believe they could support a “two-layer model” of migration across Southeast Asia, since the funeral ritual of ancient hunter-gatherers who arrived in the region 65,000 years ago was distinct from the burial rites of Neolithic farmers who arrived 4,000 years ago.

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Also in the news this week

Science Spotlight

‘Like trying to see fog in the dark’: How strange pulses of energy are helping scientists build the ultimate map of the universe
Live Science
They arrive as brief flashes in the cosmic dark, powerful jolts of energy that discharge more energy in a few milliseconds than the sun does over an entire year. Yet as much as scientists have puzzled over what processes could be causing these fast radio bursts (FRBs), they still do not fully know what the pulses are.

What is apparent is that FRBs are produced through completely unexpected processes, and far more often than expected. And that makes them very useful to astronomers. In this week’s Science Spotlight, we investigated how scientists are using FRBs to create the ultimate map of our universe.

Read more
Something for the weekend

Photo of the week

James Webb telescope’s ‘starlit mountaintop’ could be the observatory’s best image yet — Space photo of the week
Live Science
The James Webb Space Telescope has gifted us with a deluge of stunning space images since it first came online in 2022, and this week we covered the release of one of its best yet.

Soaring like a rocky mountain against a starry blue sky, the image spotlights Pismis 24, a stellar nursery at the core of the Lobster Nebula. The craggy spires of gas and dust in the foreground span multiple light-years in height, and are being actively sculpted by the radiation of nearby baby stars. “It’s a breathtakingly gorgeous scene,” and contains two of the brightest stars in our entire Milky Way, measuring 74 and 66 times the size of our sun.

See more

This week’s newsletter was written by Ben Turner
This week's newsletter was written by Ben Turner
Ben Turner is a U.K. based staff writer at Live Science. He covers physics and astronomy, among other topics like tech and climate change. He graduated from University College London with a degree in particle physics before training as a journalist. When he’s not writing, Ben enjoys reading literature, playing the guitar and embarrassing himself with chess.
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News from Science (AAAS)

“Under Trump, NSF faces worst crisis in its 75-year history.”

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Scientific American-Latest Stories

“Writing in your books is good for your brain–Here’s why.”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.  Accessed on 19 September 2025, 2012 UTC.

Content and Source:  “Scientific American-Latest Stories.”

URL–https://www.scientificamerican.com/latest/

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

Latest Stories

A traditional Italian spaghetti cacio e pepe dish, featuring al dente pasta coated in a creamy blend of Pecorino Romano cheese and freshly ground black pepper
CultureSeptember 19, 2025

Tipsy Bats and Perfect Pasta Win Ig Nobel Prizes for Weird Science Research

Person highlighting book pages
NeuroscienceSeptember 19, 2025

Writing in Your Books Is Good for Your Brain—Here’s Why

An artist's concept showing a grid of dozens of diverse exoplanets against a dark background. The planets vary in color, size, and texture, illustrating the vast variety of worlds discovered beyond our solar system
ExoplanetsSeptember 19, 2025

Astronomers’ Exoplanet Haul Tops 6,000 Alien Worlds

A jagged rainbowlike spectrum produced by Hubble Space Telescope observations of the core of the galaxy M84. Blue coloration (left) and red coloration (right) indicates where motions of stars and gas were towards and away from our solar system, respectively. These features can collectively be used to weigh the hidden supermassive black hole at M84's heart.
The UniverseSeptember 19, 2025

How Do You Weigh a Black Hole?

A series of yellow speech bubbles with the words
Social SciencesSeptember 19, 2025

The Linguistic Science behind Viral Social Media Slang

Earthquake epicenter diagram
GeologySeptember 18, 2025

Strong Earthquake Hits Kamchatka. Tsunami Risk Waning

Conceptual illustration of doctor with stethoscope made of neural network
Artificial IntelligenceSeptember 18, 2025

New AI Tool Predicts Which of 1,000 Diseases Someone May Develop in 20 Years

Three overlapping speech bubbles made from puzzle pieces
LanguageSeptember 18, 2025

Genetics Can Track How Languages Mixed in the Past

Border collie holding toy ball in mouth
AnimalsSeptember 18, 2025

Some Dogs Can Learn Categories like Human Toddlers Do

Masked healthcare worker injects vaccine into seated person's arm
VaccinesSeptember 18, 2025

RFK, Jr.’s Overhauled Vaccine Panel Meets Today. Here’s What We’re Watching

Two people hold and point at map and a GPS device
TechnologySeptember 18, 2025

The World’s Largest Treasure Hunt Turns 25

Person using DeepSeek app on a smartphone
Artificial IntelligenceSeptember 17, 2025

Secrets of DeepSeek AI Model Revealed in Landmark Paper

 

News from Science (AAAS)

“How the yellow fever mosquito conquered the world.”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.

Accessed on 19 September 2025, 1432 UTC.

Content and Source:  “News from Science (AAAS).”

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

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Science X Newsletter

“Study finds people with conservative political leanings more likely to believe in health disinformation.”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.  Accessed on 19 September 2025, 0204 UTC.

Content and Source:  “Science X Newsletter.”

https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/?tab=rm&ogbl#inbox/FMfcgzQcpnQgsPzPLdjBNhvdSgDpxKDq

URL–https://sciencex.com.

Please check email link, URL, or scroll down to read your selections.  Thanks for joining us today.

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

Here is your customized Science X Newsletter for September 18, 2025:

Spotlight Stories Headlines

Universal scheme efficiently generates arbitrary two-qubit gates in superconducting quantum processors

Spider-inspired magnetic soft robots could perform minimally invasive gastrointestinal tract procedures

MicroBooNE detector excludes electron neutrino cause of MiniBooNE anomaly

Astronomers detect a new black-widow pulsar

New light-powered gears fit inside a strand of hair

People with conservative political leanings more likely to believe in health disinformation, study finds

The AI model that teaches itself to think through problems, no humans required

Jaguar swims over a kilometer, showing dams are not absolute barriers to large carnivores

Carbon credits have little to no effect on making companies greener, study reveals

Primordial black hole’s final burst may solve neutrino mystery

Dogs can extend word meanings to new objects based on function, not appearance

ChatGPT appears to improvise when put through ancient Greek math puzzle

Flexible optical touch sensor simultaneously pinpoints pressure strength and location

Discovery of insects trapped in amber sheds light on ancient Amazon rainforest

Oil rig study reveals vital role of tiny hoverflies

Earth news

U.S. faces rising death toll from wildfire smoke, study finds

Wildfires burning across Canada and the Western United States are spewing smoke over millions of Americans—the latest examples of ashy haze becoming a regular experience, with health impacts far greater than scientists previously estimated.

Droughts sync up across India’s major rivers as the climate changes, 800 years of streamflow records suggest

Streamflow drought—when substantially less water than usual moves through rivers—can seriously disrupt the welfare of nearby communities, agriculture, and economies. Synchronous drought, in which multiple river basins experience drought simultaneously, can be even more severe and far-reaching.

A major shift in the US landscape: ‘Wild’ disturbances are overtaking human-directed changes

If it feels like headlines reporting 100 or 1,000-year floods and megafires seem more frequent these days, it’s not your imagination.

Meet the microbes: What a warming wetland reveals about Earth’s carbon future

Between a third and half of all soil carbon on Earth is stored in peatlands, says Tom and Marie Patton Distinguished Professor Joel Kostka. These wetlands—formed from layers and layers of decaying plant matter—span from the Arctic to the tropics, supporting biodiversity and regulating global climate.

Warming climate—not overgrazing—is biggest threat to rangelands, study suggests

More than half of Earth’s terrestrial surface is rangeland—vast open areas of native vegetation, suitable for grazing. These areas feed 50% of the world’s livestock and support the livelihoods of more than 2 billion people. The continental U.S. is about one-third rangeland.

Europe, Mediterranean coast saw record drought in August: EU data

Europe and the Mediterranean basin saw record drought in August, with more than half of the land affected, according to AFP analysis of EU data.

Climate change linked to landslide that buried Swiss village

In May, a landslide above Blatten in the canton of Valais buried most of the village under a mass of ice, mud and rock, an event that has prompted in-depth research. At a recent conference in Innsbruck, UZH researcher Christian Huggel presented his findings on the link between the landslide and climate change.

Arctic sea ice reaches annual low

With the end of summer approaching in the Northern Hemisphere, the extent of sea ice in the Arctic shrank to its annual minimum on Sept. 10, according to NASA and the National Snow and Ice Data Center. The total sea ice coverage was tied with 2008 for the 10th-lowest on record at 1.78 million square miles (4.60 million square kilometers). In the Southern Hemisphere, where winter is ending, Antarctic ice is still accumulating but remains relatively low compared to ice levels recorded before 2016.

Cut emissions 70% by 2035? There’s only one policy that can get us there

Australia’s new emission reduction target of 62–70% by 2035 is meant to demonstrate we are doing our part to hold climate change well below 2°C.

Climate inequity in natural flood management solutions

A new study co-authored by the University of Lincoln, U.K., reveals that competitive funding schemes designed to support nature-based solutions (NbS) for flood management may be unintentionally deepening inequalities—with deprived communities at greater flood risk missing out on crucial protection.

Either too little or too much: Report finds world’s water cycles are getting more erratic

The water cycle has become increasingly erratic and extreme, swinging between deluge and drought, according to a new report from the World Meteorological Organization (WMO). It highlights the cascading impacts of too much or too little water on economies and society.

A walk across Alaska’s Arctic sea ice brings to life the losses that appear in climate data

As I walked out onto the frozen Arctic water off Utqiagvik, Alaska, for the first time, I was mesmerized by the icescape.

Quantifying the economic cost of climate change for Europe’s forests

Wildfires, storms, and bark beetles are putting increasing pressure on Europe’s forests. Beyond their ecological toll, these events also carry major economic consequences. Researchers at the Technical University of Munich (TUM) have now quantified the potential financial losses climate change could cause for European forestry. Their findings reveal significant regional differences: while Northern Europe may even benefit, Central and Southern Europe will need to adapt quickly.

New flood maps and data aim to protect Texas communities

The catastrophic floods that hit the Texas Hill Country in July left residents and officials scrambling for answers. In response, the Hydrology & Hydroinformatics Innovation (H2I) Lab at The University of Texas at Arlington, led by civil engineering assistant professor Adnan Rajib, developed real-time, time-stamped flood maps showing how quickly the Guadalupe River rose. The visual data, later featured by CBS News Texas, helped residents and local and state officials better understand how the disaster unfolded.

Australia unveils ‘anti-climactic’ new emissions cuts

Australia pledged on Thursday to slash planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions by up to 70% from 2005 levels over the next decade, a target activists warned was not ambitious enough.

Only 40% of countries have booked lodging for Amazon climate meet

Less than two months before the COP30 UN climate conference in Brazil, only 40% of nations have booked accommodation in the Amazon city of Belem, where prices have soared, organizers said Wednesday.

EU seeks ‘face-saving’ deal on UN climate target

EU countries sought Thursday to settle on an emissions-cutting plan to bring to a key UN conference in Brazil, as divisions on the bloc’s green agenda threaten its global leadership on climate.

The climate policies that EU citizens like (and those they don’t)

A new survey—implemented within the research project CAPABLE—finds that several climate change mitigation policies are supported by a majority of the respondents across the European Union. For instance, 70% of the European population would support the creation of an EU Rail Fund, while 55% would support both household insulation mandates and banning private planes.

 

Discover Magazine-The Sciences

“Bronze and Iron Age people focused on olive and grape crops, making wine and olive oil a priority.”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.  Accessed on 18 September 2025, 1423 UTC.

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

URL–https://www.discovermagazine.com/category/science/the-sciences

Please check URL or scroll down to read your selections.  Thanks for joining us today.

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

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