sciencedaily.com
These dogs are trained to sniff out an invasive insect—and they're shockingly good at it
Imagine if your dog's favorite game -- sniffing out treats or toys -- could help protect America's v ...View More
Cognitive collapse and the nuclear codes: When leaders lose control
Many former leaders of the world's nine nuclear-armed nations were impaired by health conditions whi ...View More
Butchery clues reveal Neanderthals may have had “family recipes”
A new study from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem reveals that Neanderthals living in two nearby c ...View More
1,000-year-old health hacks are trending—and backed by science
It turns out the Dark Ages weren't all that dark! According to new research, medieval medicine was w ...View More
Big-Bang echoes unmask a billion-light-year hole around Earth—and it’s stretching space faster
Earth and our entire Milky Way galaxy may sit inside a mysterious giant hole which makes the cosmos ...View More
Fiji ant plant builds tiny condos that stop ant wars
Odd plants from a remote Pacific island reveal new insights into an important ecological question: h ...View More
Not just diabetes: How slightly high blood sugar wrecks men’s sexual health
Metabolic health factors, including small increases in blood sugar, are the main drivers of change i ...View More
Tiny fossil with razor teeth found by student — rewrites mammal history
A University of Portsmouth student has discovered a new species of prehistoric mammal dating back 14 ...View More
Brighter, bolder, hotter: Why female guppies can't resist orange
It turns out color isn't just fashionable for guppies: According to a new UBC study, the more orange ...View More
Forget 3D printing—DNA and water now build tiny machines that assemble themselves
When the Empire State Building was constructed, its 102 stories rose above midtown one piece at a ti ...View More













