RSV Can Be a Killer. New Tools Are Identifying the Most At-Risk Kids

RSV Can Be a Killer. New Tools Are Identifying the Most At-Risk Kids

After 25 years as a pediatric infectious diseases specialist, Asunción Mejías is too familiar with the deadly unpredictability of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), an infection that hospitalizes up to 80,000 children under the age of 5 every year in the US. “It’s a disease which can change very quickly,” says Mejías, who works at St. … Read more

Intuitive Machines stock soars 50% after NASA moon satellite contract

Intuitive Machines stock soars 50% after NASA moon satellite contract

The company’s IM-1 mission lander shortly after launching on Feb. 15, 2024. Intuitive Machines Intuitive Machines‘ stock jumped in early trading Wednesday after NASA awarded the lunar-focused company a major contract to build moon data satellites. “This contract marks an inflection point in Intuitive Machines’ leadership in space communications and navigation,” Intuitive Machines CEO Steve … Read more

New research reveals that America’s oldest tombstone came from Belgium and belonged to an English knight

New research reveals that America’s oldest tombstone came from Belgium and belonged to an English knight

Jamestown Knight’s tombstone. Credit: Jamestown Rediscovery (Preservation Virginia) in International Journal of Historical Archaeology (2024). DOI: 10.1007/s10761-024-00756-4 Jamestown, Virginia, was founded in 1607 and was the first English permanent settlement in America. It has been the subject of many archaeological and historical analyses, including a recent study by Prof. Markus M. Key and Rebecca K. … Read more

Project 2025 Would Drastically Cut Support for Carbon Removal

Project 2025 Would Drastically Cut Support for Carbon Removal

That’s why government support like the DOE Regional DAC Hubs program is so important, says Jack Andreasen at Breakthrough Energy, the Bill Gates–founded initiative to accelerate technology to reach net zero. “This gets projects built,” he says. The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law signed in 2021 set aside $3.5 billion in federal funds to help the construction … Read more

Hidden craters reveal Earth may once have had a ring—like Saturn

Hidden craters reveal Earth may once have had a ring—like Saturn

Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain The rings of Saturn are among the most famous and spectacular features in the solar system. Earth may once have had something similar. In a paper published in Earth & Planetary Science Letters, my colleagues and I present evidence that Earth may have had a ring. The existence of such a … Read more

Public attention on the invasive lionfish helps monitor its ecological impact in real time

Public attention on the invasive lionfish helps monitor its ecological impact in real time

Lionfish are severely altering local ecosystems and have caused multiple damage to the Mediterranean’s native fauna. Credit: Pixabay. A new study from the Institut de Ciències del Mar (ICM-CSIC) has demonstrated that public interest in the lionfish (Pterois miles), an invasive species native to the Indo-Pacific, is aiding in monitoring its spread nearly in real … Read more

Surface water sampling reveals large numbers of juvenile krill undetected by conventional monitoring methods

Surface water sampling reveals large numbers of juvenile krill undetected by conventional monitoring methods

Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain In 2018–2019, researchers of Wageningen Marine Research joined the Japanese research vessel Kaiyo-maru (Fisheries Agency Japan; FAJ) on an Antarctic expedition to sample the upper surface waters with the Surface and Under Ice Trawl. Results showed that a large part of the Antarctic krill population resided in the upper two meters … Read more

Authors discuss addressing the crisis of species loss

Authors discuss addressing the crisis of species loss

Edith’s checkerspot butterfly, whose three populations on Stanford land Ehrlich studied for decades. All three are now extinct due to climate disruption and pollution. The species still exists as other populations. Credit: Paul Ehrlich No oncologist would wait for a patient’s cancer to spread before treating it. Similarly, waiting to detect the potential loss of … Read more

‘Scuba-diving’ lizards use bubble to breathe underwater and avoid predators

‘Scuba-diving’ lizards use bubble to breathe underwater and avoid predators

A species of semi-aquatic lizard produces a special bubble over its nostrils to breathe underwater. Credit: Lindsey Swierk Presenting the world’s smallest (and scrappiest) scuba diver: A species of semi-aquatic lizard produces a special bubble over its nostrils to breathe underwater and avoid predators, according to new research from Binghamton University, State University of New … Read more

Le Labo has released a new coriander-scented fragrance. Here’s why you might hate it

Le Labo has released a new coriander-scented fragrance. Here’s why you might hate it

New York-based perfume house Le Labo has released its latest hand-made perfume, Coriandre 39. And just like the coriander herb itself, some are expected to love it and some are expected to hate it. That divisiveness is likely because of the OR6A2 gene receptor found in the olfactory system where our body processes smell, studies … Read more