Early spring, AI music, volcanoes on Mars

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March 22, 2023

Climate Change

Spring Is Starting Earlier--It's Not Your Imagination

Birds are heading north before their insect prey emerge. Bees are missing out on early blossoms. Ticks and other pests have more time to feast and spread disease

By Jude Coleman

Artificial Intelligence

Artificial Intelligence Helped Make the Coolest Song You've Heard This Week

Machine-learning algorithms are getting so good that they can translate Western instruments into Thai ones with ease.

By Allison Parshall | 13:24

Planetary Science

Volcanic Activity on Mars Upends Red Planet Assumptions

A mass of moving material on Mars called a mantle plume may be causing marsquakes and volcanism

By Phil Plait

Space Exploration

Health Research Is Needed Now before Sending Civilians to Space

Now is the time to protect the health and safety of civilians who will be traveling, living and working in the dangerous environment of space

By Michael Marge

Climate Change

Use Nature as Infrastructure

In the climate crisis, wetlands have more economic value than new development

By The Editors

Pollution

'Plasticosis' in Seabirds Could Herald New Era of Animal Disease

Ocean animals are growing sicker from ingesting too much plastic

By Matthew Savoca,The Conversation US

Astronomy

Was 'Oumuamua, the First Known Interstellar Object, Less Weird Than We Thought?

A new study suggests that ’Oumuamua, the mysterious visitor that whizzed through our solar system in 2017, may have been merely a small comet from another star

By Meghan Bartels
FROM THE STORE
FROM THE ARCHIVE

Millions of Birds Are Migrating Earlier Because of Warming

Weather radar data shows that many North American species are shifting their spring migration by two days each decade

WHAT WE'RE READING

Should Nature Endorse Political Candidates? Yes -- When the Occasion Demands It

Political endorsements might not always win hearts and minds, but when candidates threaten a retreat from reason, science must speak out.

By Editorial | Nature | Mar. 20, 2023

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