Science
Scientists halt Alzheimerโs in mice with groundbreaking nanotech
A nimble class of nanoparticles just did something long thought impossible: they helped the brain fix its own gatekeeper and turned memory loss around. In mouse models of Alzheimerโs, researchers built bioactive โsupramolecularโ particles that didnโt carry drugs; they acted as drugs. By restoring the blood-brain barrierโs clearing pathway, toxic proteins dropped, brain balance returned, ... Read more
Scientists Turned Ordinary Shiitake Mushrooms into Living Processors
A palm-sized disk can learn. It shifts its electrical state, holds a trace of what just happened, and does it on almost no power. That is the promise behind shiitake mushrooms wired like tiny brain cells, hinting at computers that grow, heal, and even fade away when their job is done. From mycelium to memristor: ... Read more
34 meters long and alive since napoleon divers capture the largest underwater creature ever reported
From the depths of the South Pacific rises one of natureโs most extraordinary treasures โ a massive coral formation that has astonished scientists and reignited hope for marine conservation. Recently identified off the coast of the Solomon Islands, this giant coral, estimated to be around 300 years old, is now recognized as the largest known ... Read more
Scientists detect gold growing in spruce tree needles
There may be something awesome occurring in the heart of the forest! Scientists have investigated something in the thin green needles of the giant spruces that is challenging our understanding of the natural world. A quiet process may be occurring beneath their green surfaces creating a perfect melding of biology, chemistry, and astonishing wonder. The ... Read more
Why you feel the cold more as you age โ and how to stay warm in winter
The air now possesses a new sharpness that sticks to your skin differently than it used to. Even in layers or with warmth nearby, the cold creeps in. It is not just winter’s bite; it feels a little more nuanced, a little more domestic and it builds over time. You can feel it in the ... Read more
Itโs official โ the Great Atlantic Sargassum Belt has become an unprecedented ocean crisis, fueled by nutrients from the Amazon, fertilizers, and sewage.
A floating band of brown algae now stretches across the Atlantic, and the stakes feel immediate. Coastal towns brace for foul odors and clogged shores while scientists track changes from space. The scale keeps growing, and so do the costs. Within this surge, the ocean faces a test of resilience, because natural cycles now mix ... Read more
Scientists say they cruised the ocean in a deep-sea submersible and came across an unknown ecosystem
The discovery points to a hidden ecosystem thriving far below the reach of light. The team reports clams, tube worms, and methane-rich sediments along a vast trench line. Pressure crushes steel at those depths, yet biology endures. Instruments traced gas seeps, while cameras caught pale shells and waving plumes. The finding raises urgent questions about ... Read more
the largest project in the history of humanity is about to enter a key phase the final assembly of the reactor core led by an american giant
The worldโs largest and most ambitious fusion energy project has reached a turning point as Westinghouse Electric Company begins assembling the heart of ITERโs fusion reactor in Cadarache, southern France. The international effort, designed to replicate the energy of the sun, could one day provide humanity with an endless supply of clean, sustainable power. Westinghouse ... Read more
One of the Worldโs Largest Continents Is Tearing Apart, and a New Ocean Emerges Faster Than Scientists Predicted
A slow rupture is reshaping Africa in plain sight, yet its deepest forces stay out of view. Faults lengthen, valleys sink, and heat rises from below as magma pries rock apart. The process may take ages, but the direction is clear. A new ocean will one day fill the gap. For now, satellites track each ... Read more
Scientists have been studying remote work for four years and have reached a very clear conclusion: โWorking from home keeps us happier.โ
The signs were visible for years, but their scale is new. Remote work is changing the rhythm of daily life โ and the evidence now shows just how deeply. With greater flexibility, routines breathe, time stretches, and energy returns. Long-term research confirms what many workers already feel: well-being improves, stress declines, and productivity remains strong ... Read more
Geologists discover a deposit of more than 1,000 tons of gold
China has announced that the Wangu gold field in Hunan Province may conceal more than 1,000 metric tons of gold, with around 300 tons already suggested in shallower zones. If confirmed, the discovery could be worth nearly 600 billion yuan. While such figures stir excitement, experts emphasize that these numbers remain preliminary. Resource evaluations evolve ... Read more










