Friday, July 19, 2024

ScienceBlog.com Newsletter

"Common blood thinner emerges as snake bite life saver."

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.  Accessed on 19 July 2024, 2028 UTC.

Content and Source:  https://scienceblog.com/Newsletter.

Please check link or scroll down to read your selections.  Thanks for joining us today.

Russ Roberts (https://hawaiisciencejournal.blogspot.com).

 

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Read: Common Blood Thinner Emerges as Snake Bite Lifesaver

mudskipper

To Walk, You Just Need Fins And A Sense Of Adventure

A pond with fish

At The Edge Of The Lakes: Science Poetry Friday!

A computer-generated image (3D rendering) shows what the scene of a possible butchering event might have looked like in the past. This image is based on the work of a paleoartist who studied real fossils. The artist used the size and shape of the fossils to create 3D models of the animals and their environment. Then, they used special computer techniques (3D digital scanning and texturing by projection) to add details and textures to the models, making the scene look realistic.

Giant Armadillos Butchered In Argentina 21,000 Years Ago

Woman looking at her phone and sipping a cold drink through a straw

The Dark Side Of Social Media: How Doomscrolling Impacts Our Worldview

UCLA Health's Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior living lab will be home to psychedelic and Ecological Medicine research.

UCLA Transforms Rooftop Into Groundbreaking Psychedelic Space

Misty mountain top

Humidity-Powered Membrane Removes CO2 From Air

Joanna Bettman Schaefer

Your Therapist Wants You To Go Outside

Brain and clock hybrid illustration

Study Unravels How Our Brains Track Time

Jonah Sacha, Ph.D., senior co-author of a study published today in the journal Nature Communications, says the research could lead to a universal influenza vaccine within five years.

Universal Flu Vaccine Shows Promise

UC Riverside associate professor Yujie Men at an incubator filled with bacteria cultures bottles.

Bacteria Could Hold Key To Breaking Down Stubborn ‘Forever Chemicals’

Dimensions and indicators of the Gender Inequality Index.

New Gender Inequality Index Reveals Stark Disparities Across US States

Scientists discovered two skeletons in the ruins of a Pompeii building and concluded that their deaths must have been caused by wall collapses triggered by earthquakes. Image: Pompeii Archaeological Park.

Earthquakes May Have Amplified Vesuvius Eruption’s Deadly Toll On Pompeii

This rotifer has just survived a life-threatening infection. When a fungal disease attacked, she switched on hundreds of genes that her ancestors copied from microbes, including antibiotic recipes stolen from bacteria. Notes: This animal is about a quarter of a millimetre long and belongs to the species Adineta ricciae. It has two red eyes on its head.

Tiny Wheel Animals Steal Bacterial Genes To Make Their Own Antibiotics

Black and white image of man's big stomach

PEPITEM: The Peptide That Could Combat Age-Related Inflammation

 
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