Microchip can save millions of liters of milk from going down the drain

Microchip can save millions of liters of milk from going down the drain

Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain Large amounts of the food we produce do not end up in our stomachs, but in landfills, sewers, or elsewhere. According to the UN, in 2022, this was the fate of 1.05 billion tons of food, which ended up as food waste—corresponding to approximately 132 kg per capita in the world. … Read more

Bottled water has a huge and growing toll on human and planetary health, experts warn

Bottled water has a huge and growing toll on human and planetary health, experts warn

Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain The huge and growing toll bottled water is taking on human and planetary health warrants an urgent rethink of its use as 1 million bottles are bought every minute around the globe, with that figure set to rise further still amid escalating demand, warn population health experts in a commentary published … Read more

Paramotorists soar across remote Peru desert to collect threatened plants

Paramotorists soar across remote Peru desert to collect threatened plants

The paramotorist team in the Peruvian desert. Left to Right: Márcio Aita Júnior, Mike Campbell-Jones and Senderson Laurido. Credit: Mike Campbell-Jones In an innovative paper published today in the journal Plants, People, Planet, scientists from the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Huarango Nature and paramotorists from Forest Air, highlight the exciting potential of paramotoring as a … Read more

‘Writing’ with atoms could transform materials fabrication for quantum devices

‘Writing’ with atoms could transform materials fabrication for quantum devices

An artistic rendering depicts direct writing using ORNL’s synthescope, a novel microscopy technique, to continuously insert tin atoms into graphene, opening possibilities for materials fabrication atom-by-atom. Credit: Ondrej Dyck/ORNL, U.S. Dept. of Energy A new technology to continuously place individual atoms exactly where they are needed could lead to new materials for devices that address … Read more

Records show that churches monitored multilingual gossip in Elizabethan London

Records show that churches monitored multilingual gossip in Elizabethan London

Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain “Stranger churches”—Protestant congregations that welcomed speakers of certain languages other than English—in early modern London had “eyes everywhere” to hear, spread and dispel gossip in multiple languages, according to new research. The Elizabethan era saw large numbers of migrants coming to England, many of whom were Protestants fleeing religious persecution and … Read more

Obama’s 2012 reelection tied to better mental health in educated Black men, study suggests

Obama’s 2012 reelection tied to better mental health in educated Black men, study suggests

Former President Barack Obama. Credit: White House/Pete Souza Following Barack Obama’s reelection as U.S. president in 2012, the mental health of college-educated Black men improved significantly, while those who didn’t attend college reported worse mental health, according to new research from Rice University sociologists. “Four More Years! Or So What? The Mental Health Significance of … Read more

How microorganisms communicate food shortages

How microorganisms communicate food shortages

Yeast cells diffuse compounds to promote the growth of other cells in the vicinity. Credits: Shin Ohsawa/FMI To grow and survive, tiny organisms such as yeast must sometimes adapt their nutrient sources in response to changes in the environment. FMI researchers have now found that yeast cells communicate with each other to use less favorable … Read more

New shark species named for late Microsoft co-founder

New shark species named for late Microsoft co-founder

FIU Ph.D. student Cindy Gonzalez prepares to release a tagged bonnethead off the coast of Belize. Credit: Florida International University A hammerhead shark species discovered by FIU scientists finally has a name and its namesake is the late Paul G. Allen, philanthropist and cofounder of Microsoft. The existence of the new species, Sphyrna alleni, was … Read more

Imperiled Delta smelt gain 3,400 acres of habitat in largest ever tidal restoration project in California

Imperiled Delta smelt gain 3,400 acres of habitat in largest ever tidal restoration project in California

Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain With a dramatic scoop of an excavator, water from the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta surged onto a 3,400-acre stretch of land this week for the the first time in a century. This ceremonial levee breach at Lookout Slough, north of Rio Vista, on Wednesday was attended by nearly 200 spectators who … Read more

First observation of ultra-rare particle decay could uncover new physics

First observation of ultra-rare particle decay could uncover new physics

Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain Scientists at CERN have discovered an ultra-rare particle decay process, opening a new path to find physics beyond our understanding of how the building blocks of matter interact. The NA62 collaboration presented at a CERN EP seminar the first experimental observation of the ultra-rare decay of the charged kaon into a … Read more