Martin told me she would army crawl up to the turtles on the sand and dab around their eyes with a foam swab, soaking up the ...
The new technology, developed by a team at the Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology (UNIST), identifies ...
Cells constantly shift and transform, triggering the complex choreography that shapes living organisms. Whether dividing into new cells or sculpting an embryo, these tiny movements rely on chemical ...
Life emerged on Earth some 3.8 billion years ago. The "primordial soup theory" proposes that chemicals floating in pools of water, in the presence of ...
Scientists need sharp tools to peek into the tiny world of biology, and fluorescence microscopy has been a game-changer ...
Confronting images of dead seadragons , fish and octopuses washed up on South Australian beaches - and disturbing reports of " more than 100 ...
Skin flakes are hard to digest. It’s like eating hair, or feathers. So dust mites have powerful digestive enzymes to break the skin down. Those enzymes turn up in dust mite poop. And let’s just say ...
Thanks to a loophole in the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act of 1938, some of the “drugs” you can buy at pharmacies are ...
A new era opens for paper. And starts fromhydrolyzed celluloseobtained through enzymatic hydrolysis processes, and which has ...
But while it’s tempting to line up the usual suspects, Clare Bryant’s work suggests the real threat might be coming from ... like the zoonotic pathogens she holds under the microscope. She ...