Wastewater surveillance, brightest gamma ray burst, Northern lights

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March 30, 2023

Public Health

A Valuable Early-warning System for Disease Outbreaks Could Be Shut Down

Uncertain funding means wastewater surveillance programs could close in the future

By Betsy Ladyzhets

Astrophysics

Recent Gamma-Ray Burst May Be the Brightest Ever Seen

The “absolutely monstrous” cosmic blast is estimated to be a 1-in-10,000-year event

By Mike Wall,SPACE.com

Reproduction

Nationwide Effort to Track Abortions Found Thousands Fewer People Got Them after Dobbs

The end of Roe reshaped abortion access across the U.S. What does it take to track those changes?

By Rebecca Grant,Undark

Weather

Northern Lights Dance across U.S. because of 'Stealthy' Sun Eruptions

A severe geomagnetic storm created auroras that were visible as far south as Arizona in the U.S.

By Allison Parshall

Climate Change

Hunters and Anglers Are Critical to Climate Change Action

Tens of millions of people who hunt and fish are witnesses to climate change, and they are a critical constituency in efforts to reduce global warming

By Tiffany Turner

Climate Change

The U.S. Can Hit Its 2030 Climate Goals, but a Lot Has to Go Right

The U.S. is in a better place to reach its climate goals after the passage of the Inflation Reduction Act and the bipartisan infrastructure bill, but the implementation of pollution rules and the outcome of the 2024 election could pose major hurdles

By Benjamin Storrow,E&E News

Drug Use

What Is Xylazine? A Medical Toxicologist Explains How It Increases Overdose Risk and Why Narcan Can Still Save a Life

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has warned about the dangers of xylazine, but Narcan (naloxone) can still save people’s life during an overdose

By Kavita Babu,The Conversation US

Planetary Science

NASA's Uranus Mission Is Running Out of Time

Multiple obstacles might make it hard for NASA to turn its dream of ice giant exploration into a reality any time soon

By Shannon Hall

Drug Use

Marie Nyswander Changed the Landscape of Addiction. Here's How Her Story Begins.

In the first episode of season five of the Lost Women of Science podcast, we meet a young doctor who, in 1946, was posted to Kentucky’s "Narcotic Farm."

By Katie Hafner,Carol Sutton Lewis,The Lost Women of Science Initiative

Electronics

Could Grinding Up Lithium Batteries Help Recycle Them?

Researchers recovered lithium from batteries on a small scale by using mechanical force

By Katharine Sanderson,Nature magazine
FROM THE STORE
FROM THE ARCHIVE

Why Anti-Trans Laws Are Anti-Science

Bills that restrict access to gender-affirming health care ignore research

WHAT WE'RE READING

Why Camel Cloning is Big Business in Dubai

 

By Nadia Leigh-Hewitson | CNN | Mar. 1, 2023

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