Scientists discover a simple set of rules that may explain how the body's tissues stay organized
Every day, your body replaces billions of cells—and yet, your tissues stay perfectly organized. How is that possible?
Every day, your body replaces billions of cells—and yet, your tissues stay perfectly organized. How is that possible?
Cell & Microbiology
Jul 15, 2025
0
119
From more frequent wildfires to rising sea levels, climate change is disrupting ecosystems and upending once-stable weather patterns. One particularly alarming consequence of rising global temperatures is the potential collapse ...
Researchers at La Trobe University, Australia, and the University of Utah, U.S., report that recent DNA findings challenge claims of a 65,000-year-old human arrival in Sahul—the ancient paleocontinent that existed during ...
Air pollution across the UK dropped between 2015 and 2024, but dangerous levels are still reached too often, shows new research published in Environmental Science: Atmospheres.
Environment
Jul 15, 2025
0
20
Magnetic hysteresis loss (iron loss) is an important magnetic property that determines the efficiency of electric motors and is therefore critical for electric vehicles. It occurs when the magnetic field within the motor ...
Condensed Matter
Jul 15, 2025
0
37
Scholars and schoolchildren alike have generally classified animals by the foods they eat: carnivores eat meat; browsers consume flowering plants, conifers and shrubs; and grazers focus on grasses.
Plants & Animals
Jul 15, 2025
0
130
Bubbles burst when their caps rupture. Children discover this phenomenon every summer day, but it also underpins key mechanisms for the spread of pollutants, contaminants, and even infectious disease through the generation ...
Soft Matter
Jul 15, 2025
0
46
According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, 30% to 40% of the nation's food supply ends up being wasted. That adds up to billions of pounds every year rotting in landfills and emitting greenhouse gases like methane and ...
Biotechnology
Jul 15, 2025
0
92
A new paper in Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry finds that efforts to eradicate invasive mollusks in Idaho's Snake River may kill off valuable freshwater species.
Plants & Animals
Jul 15, 2025
0
89