All Stories

  1. Health & Medicine

    A new implant tested in animals reverses drug overdoses

    In pigs, the device detected overdoses and administered naloxone. It could also alert emergency services to respond.

    By
  2. Animals

    Polar bears are being exposed to more pathogens as the climate warms

    Polar bears have been exposed to more viruses, bacteria and parasites in recent decades, a new study shows, possibly acquiring the germs in their diet.

    By
  3. Archaeology

    Silk Road cities reached surprising heights in Central Asia’s mountains

    Drones with lasers revealed hidden urban centers that may have aided trade and travel through mountainous regions during medieval times.

    By
  4. Tech

    Tech companies want small nuclear reactors. Here’s how they’d work 

    To fuel AI’s insatiable energy appetite, tech companies are going big on small nuclear reactors.

    By
  5. Space

    JWST spots the first known ‘steam world’

    Astronomers have found a world shrouded in an atmosphere of water vapor, orbiting a star 100 light-years away.

    By
  6. Health & Medicine

    Once-weekly insulin might mean fewer shots for some with diabetes

    Recent clinical trials of weekly insulin highlight how this formulation may be useful in managing diabetes, but the drug has limitations.

    By
  7. Health & Medicine

    Doula care may lead to fewer C-sections or preterm births

    A new study comparing the health outcomes of Medicaid patients with and without a doula suggests the extra support during pregnancy may be beneficial.

    By
  8. Animals

    Science has finally cracked male riflebirds’ flirty secrets

    New video upsets the old notion that these birds of paradise use wing clapping to make percussive sounds while courting.

    By
  9. Megafire smoke may dampen California’s nut harvests

    The summer after wildfire smoke blocked sunlight for long stretches, harvests at some almond tree orchards in California’s Central Valley dropped.

    By
  10. Readers are curious about dark matter, plastics’ effects on pollination and Percy’s selfies

    By
  11. Taking the temperature of democracy

    Editor in chief Nancy Shute discusses the science of studying democracies.

    By
  12. Science & Society

    The ‘Does It Fly?’ podcast separates fact from science fiction

    The podcast ‘Does It Fly?’ asks whether the technology of Star Trek, Doctor Who and other popular sci-fi shows could really work.

    By