Are Wind Turbines a Danger to Wildlife? Ask the Dogs.
Humans are terrible at finding bats and birds killed by wind turbines. Dogs are great at it.
Humans are terrible at finding bats and birds killed by wind turbines. Dogs are great at it.
There’s no good way of measuring whether your vaccine worked—yet.
A grisly census hints at a few reasons some of our closest kin might take each other’s lives.
It reshaped how the world thought about climate change. But its prized trait—bloodless economic efficiency—won it few friends on the right or left.
The world’s richest man commissioned the rocket, but his Amazon empire—the customers and the workers—covered the bill.
COVID-19 vaccination rates have fallen off a cliff. Will it take a deadly summer surge to change things?
The billionaire is preparing to fly to space—but where does space actually begin?
Scientists are still trying to figure out what could be brewing on the planet next door.
Researchers are stepping up their efforts to understand why—and when—bluffs come crashing down.
No group like this one has ever gone to space before.
Doctors have found a concerning link between the rare pediatric complication known as MIS-C and a syndrome related to tampon use.
Why did so many Americans receive strange packages they didn’t think they’d ordered?
Little crustaceans called tongue biters drain the blood from the tongues of fish. Then things get weird.
When flames erupt on the Iberian Peninsula, reptiles don’t sweat a thing. The mites that suck their blood are far less thrilled.
The idea has reshaped global climate policy, but is far less concrete than its supporters have been led to believe.
For decades, scientists have been crying out for action. Will they finally be heard?
Lumping all breakthroughs together, regardless of symptoms, miscasts what our COVID-19 vaccines can do.
One space billionaire has now made it to space and back. Jeff Bezos is next.
And we have snails to thank for that.
Researchers are toying with a new option to prevent great-white-shark attacks: predicting when they might strike.