The science images and videos that captured our attention in 2012
The science images and videos that captured our attention in 2012
Breeding plants that can convert more carbon dioxide to food could help feed a growing population.
The World Meteorological Organization finds that the atmospheric gases behind climate change reached a new record high in 2011.
New noninvasive methods of selecting the most viable embryo could revolutionize in vitro fertilization.
| November 1, 2012
Meet some of the people featured in the November 2012 issue of The Scientist.
Successive awakening of soil microbes drives a huge pulse of CO2 following the first rain after a dry summer.
Large RNA-protein packets use a novel mechanism to escape the cell nucleus.
Swapping chromosomes from one human egg to another could eliminate mitochondrial DNA mutations that cause disease.
Keith Campbell, a biologist who was part of the effort to clone Dolly the sheep, has passed away at the age of 58.