
Pain lasts longer in women, and immune cells may the culprit
A newly published study suggests that the immune system may play a role in why recovery from pain differs in men and women.
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By Ivan Farkas published
A new NASA analysis concludes that it is "reasonable to hypothesize" that living things could have formed the odd organic molecules discovered on Mars.

By Ben Turner, Brandon Specktor published
A major shakeup to NASA's Artemis program will step rocket launches up to an annual basis, and discard a Boeing-designed upper stage.

By Elizabeth Howell published
The Vera C. Rubin Observatory sent scientists nearly 1 million astronomy alerts in one night, showing off changes in the sky. Eventually, the telescope is expected to reach 7 million alerts per night.

By Harry Baker published
New photos captured by NASA's Curiosity rover show that Mars' giant, spiderweb-like "boxwork" features are covered in tiny, never-before-seen nodules that bear a striking resemblance to arachnid eggs. And researchers are struggling to explain them.

By Harry Baker published
Earth from space A 2021 satellite photo shows off the recently uncovered Yilan crater in China, which is most likely the youngest impact structure on Earth. The incomplete ring is also the largest of its kind and only the second impact crater ever found in the country.

By Sara Hashemi published
Deserts are notoriously dry, so why do so many of them border oceans?

By Kenna Hughes-Castleberry published
A new study suggests that ancient microbes once cast as oxygen haters may have actually learned to use the gas, offering a clue to how the first complex cells — and, eventually, all plants and animals — evolved.

By Kenna Hughes-Castleberry published
Researchers have proposed that changes in Earth's ionosphere could trigger electrical forces that nudge fragile areas of the crust into creating an earthquake.

By Brian Owens published
The Amazon's biggest trees store disproportionately more carbon than smaller trees do, new study finds. But in the Peruvian Amazon, large trees are currently prioritized for harvest.

By Kristina Killgrove published
A statistical analysis of a series of signs carved into artifacts from around 40,000 years ago suggests humans developed proto-writing in the Stone Age.

By Owen Jarus published
An 11th-century Norse coin found in Maine raises the question of whether the Vikings landed there.

By Kristina Killgrove published
A new method of studying the contents of soil samples has revealed Stone Age people in Sweden were buried in decorated fur-and-feather clothing.

By Hannah Thomasy, Knowable Magazine published
Some creatures can dramatically alter their internal temperature — a strategy called heterothermy — and outlast storms, floods and predators.

By Patrick Pester published
Kazakhstan planted 37,000 seedlings and cuttings in South Balkhash last year to prepare for the return of its tigers, which disappeared more than 70 years ago.

By Kenna Hughes-Castleberry published
A new study suggests that the Agouti gene in the brains of male African striped mice can act as a molecular "switch," making them caring or violent toward their young.

By Kenna Hughes-Castleberry published
Researchers have identified a new Spinosaurus species with a blade-like crest in Niger, changing our understanding of dinosaur evolution and behavior.

By Patrick Pester published
The earliest recorded vertebrates had four eyes to escape predators in the ancient Cambrian ocean, according to half-a-billion-year-old fossils from China that shed light on our evolutionary origins.

By Olivia Ferrari published
A review of over 500 reports of cannibalistic behavior in snakes finds it's appeared multiple times in different evolutionary lineages, leading researchers to hypothesize it's beneficial for snakes under certain circumstances.

By Lise Barnéoud published
"At first, I kind of laughed … But they were serious. I could just see the seriousness in their faces." In this book excerpt, Lise Barnéoud explores the limitations of DNA testing.

By Gabriela Galvin published
A study of more than 6,500 mothers found that COVID-19 vaccination during pregnancy significantly lowered the risk of preeclampsia, a dangerous blood-pressure disorder.

By Mindy Weisberger published
A woman developed a persistent infection, and doctors couldn't pinpoint the cause for many months.

By Stephanie Pappas published
A new study finds that people with obesity are more likely to be hospitalized with or die from severe infections.

By Barbara Jacquelyn Sahakian, Christelle Langley published
A new study shows that that menopause was associated with worse sleep, increased mental health problems and even changes within the brain itself.

By Nicoletta Lanese published
Live Science spoke with a bioethicist and sociologist about emerging genomic technologies, including those that enable parents to "score" and "select" IVF embryos.

Science questions, answered

Extraordinary images of our sublime universe

Unusual case reports from the medical literature

A window onto extraordinary landscapes on Earth

A glimpse into how people lived in the past

Incredible images of our planet from above

By Drew Turney published
A new project allowed AI chatbots to interrupt, stay silent or speak up the way humans do in conversation, and it made them smarter and more accurate.

By Tia Ghose published
Martin Kamen and Samuel Ruben's discovery of the radioactive isotope carbon-14 in 1940 helped usher in a new era of dating artifacts from past civilizations.

By Kenna Hughes-Castleberry published
Harvard engineers think they've found the reason basketball shoes squeak, and it's due to pockets of friction between the rubber and the court.

By Kit Yates published
AI could soon spew out hundreds of mathematical proofs that look "right" but contain hidden flaws, or proofs so complex we can't verify them. How will we know if they're right?

By Alexander McNamara published
Chain word You have six chances to guess our five letter word of the day. Can you figure it out and top the leaderboard?

By Kimberley Lane published
Deals The Celestron StarSense Explorer DX 5-inch Schmidt-Cass is now down to $479 at Amazon, making it easy to enjoy the blood moon eclipse on March 3.
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