This tiny octopus packs a poisonous punch, but just how deadly is it to humans? Read on to learn more about the blue-ringed ...
In most other mammals, like dogs, sheep, rabbits, and horses, mutations in a protein called Mc1r lead to red hair color, but ...
We asked New Scientist writers to pick their favourite sci-fi short story. From H.G. Wells’s The Time Machine to Octavia E.
Blondies, previously called brownies until chocolate brownies became more well-known, was renamed to distinguish them from ...
The fascinating science of microchimerism, how paternal DNA remains in mothers after childbirth, affecting health and ...
Discover the highlights of IEEE SILCON 2024, held at NIT Agartala. A global platform for innovation in science and ...
Therapy apps existed well before the pandemic, when the field pivoted to a mostly virtual world. But they marketed heavily during quarantine and the time following, for obvious reasons, and don’t seem ...
The Economist tries “slow journalism” with Paul Salopek ...
The End of Trauma. George Bonanno’s 2021 book serves up a controversial take, backed by extensive data, that horrible experiences don’t usually traumatize us—and argues that we are already experts in ...
One critical challenge for engineers is to measure distances with ever greater accuracy. In recent years, this has become possible with nanometer resolution over distances of a few meters. That means ...
How rare is it for elephants to birth twins? Find out more about this occurrence in the wild and why it's significant.
X-rays pass easily through biological materials to provide unprecedented insight into the internal structure of everything from biological structures in living cells to broken bones in damaged bodies.