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Weekly Headlines (excerpts)
Genomes of diverse microbes point to early evolution of a rudimentary immune system
BY ROBERT F. SERVICE 12 JUL 2024
2. Brain imaging study in children shows sex and gender operate in different networks of the brain
Experts say the study reinforces the need to consider sex and gender separately in biomedical research
BY PHIE JACOBS 12 JUL 2024
Call to study glacial geoengineering stirs up “civil war” among polar scientists
BY HANNAH RICHTER 12 JUL 2024
4. Medieval wine tasting fills in gaps about Europe’s climate
Sweetness records help chart temperatures back to the 1400s
BY PAUL VOOSEN 11 JUL 2024
5. Stunning 3D chromosomes in frozen mammoths may help resurrect the beasts
“New type of fossil” found in 52,000-year-old carcass
BY RICHARD STONE 11 JUL 2024
6. Vulnerable transistors threaten to upend Europa Clipper mission
NASA investigates flaws in radiation-hardened electronics ahead of probe’s October launch
BY PAUL VOOSEN 11 JUL 2024
7. The most ancient human genome yet has been sequenced—and it’s a Denisovan’s
200,000-year-old DNA from Siberian cave shows our elusive, extinct cousins mated repeatedly with Neanderthals
BY ANN GIBBONS 11 JUL 2024
8. High bar for famine declaration can delay aid, scientists say
Lack of humanitarian action during early stages of acute food insecurity takes a heavy toll
BY LESLIE ROBERTS 11 JUL 2024
9. Giant Australian lizards may help protect sheep from deadly fly-borne diseases
Scavenging by heath goannas plays an underappreciated role in reducing carcasses—and their maggots
BY GENNARO TOMMA 11 JUL 2024
10. Neanderthals and modern humans mingled early and often
Ancient DNA study gives a Neanderthal-eye view of prehistory, offers clues to how our cousins vanished
BY ANN GIBBONS 11 JUL 2024
11. Fast-moving stars are ‘smoking gun’ for long-sought midsize black hole
Middleweight object fills puzzling gap between stellar black holes and supermassive ones in galactic centers
BY DANIEL CLERY 10 JUL 2024
12. ‘It’s really scary’: How rat poisons are wreaking havoc on raptors and other wildlife
Supertoxic rodenticides can accumulate in birds, mammals, and insects, even killing some. Scientists want to understand the damage—and limit it
BY DINA FINE MARON 10 JUL 2024
13. Weight loss drugs without the nausea? Mouse study suggests it may be possible
GLP-1 inhibitors act on different types of neurons to drive satiety and side effects, study suggests
BY MITCH LESLIE 10 JUL 2024
14. Plague felled European families long before the Black Death
Plague felled European families long before the Black Death 5000 years ago, generations of people buried in tombs in Sweden were infected by Yersinia pestis, the plague bacterium
BY ANDREW CURRY 10 JUL 2024
15. Hormone found in lactating mice points to possible osteoporosis treatment
Study suggests a little-studied molecule helps prevent bone loss during breastfeeding
BY CATHERINE OFFORD 10 JUL 2024
16. ‘Happy evolutionary accident’: How crayfish living underground may have gotten their bright colors
A new study suggests the trait may have happened randomly and not as a survival tactic
BY HUMBERTO BASILIO 10 JUL 2024
17. Are invasive spotted lanternflies hitching rides across state lines?
First-of-its-kind study shows these invasive pests can cling to cars even in high winds
BY HANNAH RICHTER 9 JUL 2024
18. Ancient crystals point to a surprisingly early start for plate tectonics
Hardy zircons suggest subduction of ocean crust began 4 billion years ago
BY PAUL VOOSEN 8 JUL 2024
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