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Weekly Headlines (excerpts)
1. Melted snow uncovers early evidence of horse riding in Mongolia
3400-year-old trimmed hoof suggests world’s most renowned equestrian culture began using horses 2 centuries earlier than thought
BY CHRISTA LESTÉ-LASSERRE 28 JUN 2024
2. Dogs may be a threat to sea turtles worldwide
Raft of studies finds the canines are killing the reptiles and destroying their nests
BY RICHARD PALLARDY 28 JUN 2024
3. A ceremony aims to rebury the earliest Berliners—and restore their dignity
Archaeologist Claudia Melisch reflects on what it means to regard excavated human remains as individuals
BY ANDREW CURRY 28 JUN 2024
4. Rebuilt U.S. x-ray source begins its bright new second life
The new Advanced Photon Source at Argonne National Laboratory provides first beam for users
BY ADRIAN CHO 27 JUN 2024
5. Pompeii-like explosion preserved trilobites in ‘unprecedented’ detail
Stunning fossils reveal 3D anatomy of arthropods that lived a half-billion years ago
BY RODRIGO PÉREZ ORTEGA 27 JUN 2024
6. How jellyfish survive pressures that would crush you into oblivion
Specialized cell membranes protect the gossamer creatures but may leave them vulnerable to warming waters
BY SEAN CUMMINGS 27 JUN 2024
7. The perfect pesticide? RNA kills crop-destroying beetles with unprecedented accuracy
New approach leaves other creatures unharmed. “You cannot get anything better than this”
BY ERIK STOKSTAD 27 JUN 2024
8, Bones reveal first evidence of Down syndrome in Neanderthals
Individual’s survival into early childhood suggests a high level of community care
BY ANDREW CURRY 26 JUN 2024
9. Frog ‘saunas’ could help endangered species beat a deadly fungus
Encouraging experiment shows how small, cheap shelters can help sick individuals cure themselves
BY ERIK STOKSTAD 26 JUN 2024
10. Colorado bat facility that will support virus studies sparks outbreak fears
Critics slam vivarium as reckless, but scientists call it vital for preventing pandemics
BY MEREDITH WADMAN 26 JUN 2024
11. First synthetic gene drive for plants could help eradicate weeds
Quick spread of “selfish” genetic sequences may one day knock back crop-destroying plants that have evolved to resist many herbicides
BY ERIK STOKSTAD 26 JUN 2024
12. China retrieves first-ever samples from Moon’s far side
Soil and rock grabbed by Chang’e-6 probe promise insights into lunar origins and evolution
BY DENNIS NORMILE 26 JUN 2024
13. One-third of fruit flies go through life injured, CSI-type study reveals
First-ever systematic count of fly wounds suggests wound healing may have shaped the immune systems of these and other insects
BY DARREN INCORVAIA 25 JUN 2024
14. Small, nimble weather satellites could track the atmosphere moment by moment, boosting forecasts
Cheaper, more varied probes will also warn of droughts, harmful algal blooms, and sea level rise
BY PAUL VOOSEN 25 JUN 2024
15. Decades after mass deforestation, scientists encounter ‘miraculous’ new plant species
Recent findings on famed Ecuador ridge give hope that unique plants weren’t entirely lost
BY ASHLEY STIMPSON 25 JUN 2024
16. Landmark gene-edited rice crop destroyed in Italy
Vandals uprooted the fungus-resistant Arborio rice, which was being tested in the country’s first ever field trial of a CRISPR-edited crop
BY GENNARO TOMMA 25 JUN 2024
17. Scarred by COVID-19 experience, Spain launches new office for scientific advice
The body will coordinate a network of science advisers throughout the Spanish government and oversee expert advice in times of crisis
BY ELISABETH PAIN 25 JUN 2024
18. Google Street View helps scientists track stray dogs in Peru
Approach could be a cheaper, faster way to protect the public from rabies
BY HUMBERTO BASILIO 24 JUN 2024
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