
Los Angeles Times - 1 day 11 hours ago
After devastating fires turned their forest into a moonscape, members of the Konkow Valley Band of Maidu found evidence of their vibrant tribal history everywhere.

Science Daily - 1 day 11 hours ago
An ancient sea worm may hold the secret to a whole new category of natural materials. Its jaws combine proteins and metal ions in a way that gives them metal-like strength and unusual mechanical behavior, yet they still differ from traditional metals. Researchers believe these "bio-metals" could open new directions in materials science while revealing just how sophisticated nature's designs can be.

The Independent - 1 day 13 hours ago
Up to 8,300 deaths could be prevented across Canada if ultra-processed food consumption is halved, researchers say...

Australian Geographic - 1 day 18 hours ago
Three experts explain. The post Why scavenger animals are the missing link in Australia's bird flu response appeared first on Australian Geographic .

Retraction Watch - 2 days 3 hours ago
Martin Tram r was editor-in-chief of the European Journal of Anaesthesiology during what he once called in print "The Boldt debacle." The misconduct scandal involving hundreds of papers by Joachim Boldt broke to the surface in 2010, but journals continue to retract papers by the disgraced German anesthesiologist and researchers have continued to cite the … Continue reading Now, 240: More than a decade later, journals are still retracting Joachim Boldt's papers...

IEEE Spectrum - 2 days 7 hours ago
On the nights after Hurricane Maria ravaged Puerto Rico's power grid in 2017, former Puerto Rican energy regulator Javier R a-Jovet remembers watching the sky warp along the horizon as thousands of fossil fuel-powered generators spewed emissions into the atmosphere. The "whole society" was running on this carbon-intensive backup power at the time, says R a-Jovet. Now, nearly a decade later, at least one of Puerto Rico's microgrids is getting a clean upgrade. On the small island of...

IEEE Spectrum - 2 days 8 hours ago
Shaped like dogs, stars, and the Mona Lisa, you could mistake these DNA structures for fun-shaped macaroni if they weren't only nanometers wide. South Korean scientists made the constructions using a technique called DNA origami that can bend genetic material into any form. Designing DNA strands so they'll fold into a specific shape typically requires tedious manual work, but the researchers behind the playful fabrications have developed a shortcut using generative AI. The AI model, called...

Last Word On Nothing - 2 days 13 hours ago
The best acronym, in this our golden age of acronyms, is TIL, for Today I Learned. I love it. People use #TIL as a hashtag on social media, but not to show off. It doesn't mean "I know something you don't know, nyah-nyah-nyah-nyah-nyah." It means here's something I just learned, and it's delightful, and I'd […] The post TIL, for Today I Learned, Is the Best Acronym. What Have You Learned Lately? appeared first on The Last Word On Nothing .