
Tardigrade Fossils Reveal When ‘Water Bears’ Became Indestructible
252 million years ago, tardigrades may have escaped extinction using this one weird trick
Tardigrade Fossils Reveal When ‘Water Bears’ Became Indestructible
252 million years ago, tardigrades may have escaped extinction using this one weird trick
Mystery Droplets Inside Cells May Play Vital Roles in Life
The novel physics of biomolecular condensates could explain how these droplets help cells do their jobs
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Regenerating Deep-Sea Worms Harness Live-In Algae as They Split into Three
Gutless, solar-powered worms genetically control their resident algae
Invasive Joro Spiders Keep Their Cool Even when Stressed
Compared with other arachnids, invasive Joro spiders are calm, cool and collected under stress, a new study shows
Colds Bring Lots of Snot—But Just How Much? Science Is Strangely Silent
Snot is one of the immune system’s efforts to ditch a virus, but how much we produce when sick is a slippery subject
Slime Mold Helps to Map the Universe’s Tendrils of Dark Matter
A single-celled organism’s pathfinding reveals connections in the universe’s vast “cosmic web”
Giant, Sparkly Clams Hide the Most Efficient Solar Panels Ever Found
Inside giant, iridescent clams are algal farms that could inspire highly efficient bioreactors
Dungeons & Dragons Is Shedding ‘Race’ in Gaming. Here’s Why It Matters
The nerd culture powerhouse is rebranding its elves, dwarfs and orcs, previously referred to as races, and moving towards use of the term species
Honeybees Wing-Slap Ants That Try to Invade Their Hive
Japanese honeybees use their wings to slap back ants trying to invade their hive
Is Technology in the Olympics a Form of Doping or a Reality of Modern Sport?
Technological doping refers to the use of equipment—from swimsuits to super shoes—that provides an unfair athletic advantage. But the boundaries of what is allowed are somewhat arbitrary
Komodo Dragons’ Nightmare Iron-Tipped Teeth Are a Reptilian First
Reptile teeth have long been considered simple and cheap because the animals replace them regularly. That isn't so, Komodo dragons show
When Dogs Smell Your Stress, They Act Sad
Dogs can smell when people are stressed, and it seems to make them feel downhearted