How COVID Vaccines for Young Kids Could Change the Pandemic

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October 29, 2021

Vaccines

How COVID Vaccines for Young Kids Could Change the Pandemic

As U.S. Food and Drug Administration advisers recommend authorizing shots for children aged five to 11, researchers predict what this might mean for populations

By Max Kozlov,Nature magazine

Climate Change

Four Key Issues to Watch at the Upcoming Climate Summit

World leaders will soon be arriving in Glasgow to hammer out details on limiting the worst impacts of climate change

By Rachel Kyte,The Conversation US

Climate Change

Oil Companies Will Be Subpoenaed After Historic Congressional Hearing

A House committee has been investigating the role fossil fuel companies have played in disseminating climate misinformation

By Nick Sobczyk,E&E News

Robotics

Firefighting Robots Go Autonomous

Both independent and remote-controlled machines can save lives

By Jane Braxton Little

Biochemistry

How We Detect Caramel Candy Scent

Pinpointing the receptor responsible for the tasty treat's aroma underscores the importance of smell

By Annie Melchor

Climate Change

Climate Change Drives Escalating Drought

The past two decades have seen some of the most extreme dry periods in U.S. history

By Clara Moskowitz,CĂ©dric Scherer,Georgios Karamanis

Paleontology

Fossilized Poop Shows How Ancient Dogs Adapted to People

Microbe DNA trapped in 3,500-year-old fossils shows canine adaptation to agricultural diets

By Tess Joosse

Reproduction

Hundreds of Scientists Weigh In on a High-Stakes U.S. Abortion Case

Studies suggest that a reversal of the landmark Roe v. Wade decision would be detrimental for many

By Amy Maxmen,Nature magazine

Animals

For Some Parents, Hiding a Dead Body Shows How Much You Care

Over millions of years of evolution, some beetles have learned to dampen the stench of decay to help their young thrive.

By Emily Schwing | 06:44

Climate Change

Will America Act to Address the Climate Crisis?

The eyes of the world will be on the U.S. at the Glasgow climate summit

By Sweta Chakraborty

Artificial Intelligence

AI Generates Hypotheses Human Scientists Have Not Thought Of

Machine-learning algorithms can guide humans toward new experiments and theories

By Robin Blades

Planetary Science

Jupiter's Great Red Spot Is Surprisingly Deep

NASA's Juno spacecraft peered underneath the gas giant's dense clouds to determine the structure of its iconic spinning storm

By Katrina Miller

Climate Change

The Infrastructure Bill Is Desperately Needed, Engineers Say

One of the experts who grades U.S. utilities every four years explains what needs to be fixed

By Sophie Bushwick

Dark Energy

Could Gravity's Quantum Origins Explain Dark Energy?

A potentially transformative theoretical study links a new model of quantum gravity with the universe's bizarrely accelerating rate of expansion

By Conor Purcell

Water

Muddier Rivers Are Jeopardizing Dams and Water Quality for Millions

Climate change is flushing more sediment into the rivers that pour out of Asia's high mountains

By Nikk Ogasa

Climate Change

IPCC, You've Made Your Point: Humans Are a Primary Cause of Climate Change

It's time to redirect your major focus to how we deal with the problem

By Naomi Oreskes
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