‘Fruit from the Sands’ explores the Silk Road origins of apples, tea and more
A new book explains how many of today’s popular foods got started on Central Asia’s ancient Silk Road trade networks.
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Scientists investigate superslippery materials and other unusual friction feats.
A new book explains how many of today’s popular foods got started on Central Asia’s ancient Silk Road trade networks.
Newfound nerve cells in praying mantises help detect different views that each of the insects’ eyes sees, a mismatch that creates depth perception.
Telescopes show two distant blobs of stars and gas swirling around each other in the young universe.
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Research into the mind-body connection shows that attitude is everything when it comes to healthy aging.
Vaccination against rotavirus is associated with a reduced incidence of type 1 diabetes in children, according to an analysis of U.S. insurance data.
An experiment in Tibet spotted photons with over 100 trillion electron volts of energy.
A Brazilian archaeological site reveals capuchins’ long history of practical alterations to pounding implements, researchers say.
Massospora fungi use a compound found in magic mushrooms or an amphetamine to drive infected cicadas to mate and mate and mate.
Pre-Inca people depicted winged fliers from far away in landscape art.
Bare feet that develop thick calluses are just as sensitive as shoe-clad feet, a study in Kenya finds.
A fatty diet changes the behavior of key appetite-regulating cells in a mouse brain.
First-time observations suggest that the cause of one-time fast radio bursts is different from what triggers repeatedly flashing radio bursts.
If true, the study would complete a decades-long quest to find the elusive material. But such claims have been made prematurely many times before.
Current and planned infrastructure will exceed the level of emissions that would keep global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius, a new analysis finds.
Analyzing a new database of insect eggs’ sizes and shapes suggests that where eggs are laid helps explain some of their diversity of forms.
Scientists may have traced the source of the “uncanny valley” sensation in the brain.
A mysterious Biblical-era population may have fled Bronze Age calamities.
Killer T cells get into older brains where they may make mischief, a study in mice and postmortem human brain tissue finds.
Scientists are racing to learn what’s behind a disease that’s “annihilating” whole coral species in hopes of stopping it.
Humans possibly reached southeastern Europe by 210,000 years ago.
Sleeping zebrafish have brain and body activity similar to snoozing mammals, suggesting that sleep evolved at least 450 million years ago.
In 1969, a drug that crippled a generation found new life as a treatment for leprosy.
Nutrient-rich water from the Amazon River may be helping massive seaweed mats to flourish each summer in the Atlantic Ocean.
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