Auburn University researchers have published a new hypothesis that could provide the foundation for new scientific studies looking into the association of habitat loss and the global emergence of infectious diseases.
Researchers from the New York Institute of Technology (NYIT) have discovered bacteriophages, viruses that infect bacteria, living in their kitchen sponges.
There are many mysteries in the Amazon.
During the Height of the Cold War, a telescope-shaped American spy satellite code-named Hexagon circled the globe snapping high-resolution photographs of forests, mountains, and perhaps a few Russian military bases.
Increased solar radiation penetrating through the damaged ozone layer is interacting with the changing climate, and the consequences are rippling through the Earth’s natural systems, effecting everything from weather to the health and abundance of sea mammals like seals and penguins.
New research has identified a type of bacteria found in the microbiomes of elite athletes that contributes to improved capacity for exercise.
Before designing the next generation of soft materials, researchers must first understand how they behave during rapidly changing deformation.
Scientists from the University of Nottingham have discovered that drinking a cup of coffee can stimulate ‘brown fat’, the body’s own fat-fighting defenses, which could be the key to tackling obesity and diabetes.
Scientists are usually pictured on screen as sober and humorless types, pre-occupied with numbers and empty facts
With the number of children diagnosed with autism on the rise, the need to find what causes the disorder becomes more urgent every day.
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