Republicans unveil their quadrennial list of policy positions, and it toes the party line on some science issues while upping support for others.
Republicans unveil their quadrennial list of policy positions, and it toes the party line on some science issues while upping support for others.
The sea ice in the Arctic is expected to hit a record low by the end of the month.
At age 16, Alexandra Sourakov has her first scientific publication, on the foraging behavior of butterflies.
On the 10th anniversary of The Scientist’s survey of life science academics, institutions are contending with tighter budgets and larger administrative staffs, while working to sustain and inspire their researchers.
Restrictions on motor vehicles before the 2008 Games improved the city’s air quality, suggesting similar sustained measures could greatly reduce global emissions.
The first full computer model of a single-celled organism mimics the bacterium’s behaviors and paves the way to more complete disease models.
Rather than rely on plant-derived products, biotech companies are engineering bacteria and yeast to produce ingredients for fragrances.
Police in the UK declare their investigation of the infamous email hacking scandal over, but fail to finger the perpetrators of the attack.
Spawning algal blooms by fertilizing the Southern Ocean with iron could help sink atmospheric carbon to the deep ocean—and maybe slow the course of climate change.
Peptides extracted from scorpion venom fights off drug-resistant bacterial infections in mice.