Sign In
to Vote &
Create Storyboards.
 

Science News

Location American Science News for 8 February 2026
What a mother eats during pregnancy may quietly shape her childs liver health years down the road-but new research suggests there may be a way to tip the odds back in a healthier direction. Scientists found that a natura...
Read More
2
0
Bakers yeast isnt just useful in the kitchen - it may also be built for space. Researchers found that yeast cells can survive intense shock waves and toxic chemicals similar to those on Mars. The cells protect themselves...
Read More
0
0
A new international study points to a specific brain network as the core driver of Parkinsons disease. Scientists found that this network becomes overly connected, disrupting not just movement but also thinking and other...
Read More
0
0

'Night owls' may have worse heart health - but why?

Live Science - 8 Feb 2026 17:00
'Night owls' may have worse heart health - but why? Emerging evidence suggests that "night owls" are more likely to have poor heart health and a higher risk of heart attack or stroke than "morning larks." Why is that?
Read More
0
0
Your gut is home to trillions of bacteria that constantly sense their surroundings to survive and thrive. New research shows that beneficial gut microbes, especially common Clostridia bacteria, can detect a surprisingly ...
Read More
0
0
Researchers have found a surprising way to turn sunflower oil waste into a powerful bread upgrade. By replacing part of wheat flour with partially defatted sunflower seed flour, breads became dramatically richer in prote...
Read More
0
0
Microbes in Iceland are hoarding nitrogen, and that's mucking up the nutrient cycle A study in Iceland found that microbes are hoarding more nitrogen for themselves, altering nutrient cycling and leaving less for plants.
Read More
0
0
Using ideas borrowed from topological photonics, researchers in Singapore, France and the US have designed a compact antenna capable of handling information-rich terahertz (THz) signals. Reporting their results in Nature...
Read More
0
0
Scientists at the University of Warwick have cracked a long-standing problem in air pollution science: how to predict the movement of irregularly shaped nanoparticles as they drift through the air we breathe. These tiny ...
Read More
0
0
Dramatic death of Comet C/2025 K1 (ATLAS) caught on camera - Space photo of the week The Gemini North telescope snapped a spectacular view of Comet C/2025 K1 (ATLAS) breaking apart as it emerged from the other side of the sun in October.
Read More
0
0
Did ancient Greeks let women compete in the Olympics? The ancient Olympic games were crowded with male athletes, but were there opportunities for females to compete in sports?
Read More
0
0
'Maybe they're waiting for something that only happens thousands of years later': The hidden life 'sleeping' deep beneath Earth for millions of years Deep inside Earth lies a hidden world of "intraterrestrials" that have been dormant for hundreds of thousands of years - what are they waiting to "wake up" for?
Read More
0
0

A hidden Aloe vera compound takes aim at Alzheimers

Science Daily - 8 Feb 2026 07:57
Scientists have uncovered promising clues that compounds found in Aloe vera could play a role in fighting Alzheimers disease. Using advanced computer modeling, researchers discovered that beta-sitosterol-a natural plant ...
Read More
0
0
A colossal ancient impact may have reshaped the Moon far more deeply than scientists once realized. By analyzing rare lunar rocks brought back by Chinas Change-6 mission from the Moons largest crater, researchers found u...
Read More
0
0
Science history: 'Father of modern genetics' describes his experiments with pea plants - and proves that heredity is transmitted in discrete units - Feb. 8, 1865 Gregor Mendel described his experiments with pea plants and proved that genes are transmitted in discrete units, with certain fundamental laws of inheritance.
Read More
0
0
Physicists at Heidelberg University have developed a new theory that finally unites two long-standing and seemingly incompatible views of how exotic particles behave inside quantum matter. In some cases, an impurity move...
Read More
0
0
New evidence from Neolithic mass graves in northeastern France suggests that some of Europes earliest violent encounters were not random acts of brutality, but carefully staged displays of power. By analyzing chemical cl...
Read More
0
0
Tiny marine plankton that build calcium carbonate shells play an outsized role in regulating Earths climate, quietly pulling carbon from the atmosphere and helping lock it away in the deep ocean. New research shows these...
Read More
0
0
Pumas returning to Patagonia have begun hunting mainland penguins that evolved without land predators. Scientists estimate that more than 7,000 adult penguins were killed in just four years, many of them left uneaten. Wh...
Read More
0
0

{TITLE}

{PUBLISHER} - {PUBLISHED_DATE}
{TITLE} {CONTENT}
Read More
{VIEWS}
0


Storyboard
Print
{VIEWS}
0
0




Share this Article

Location



Create Storyboard