All Stories

  1. Animals

    High-speed camera reveals the secrets of a legless larva’s leap

    Research reveals how a blob of an insect can leap more efficiently than it crawls. Its body acts like a spring.

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  2. Health & Medicine

    Tiny vest could help sick babies breathe easier

    A new invention helps sick babies breathe easier. It looks like a tiny lifejacket and it avoids the mask and tubes that get in the way of breastfeeding.

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  3. Genetics

    CRISPR enters its first human trials

    A host of new human trials are using a gene-editing tool known as CRISPR to treat genetic diseases — from sickle cell and cancers to a blinding eye disorder.

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  4. Life

    Scientists Say: Zooxanthellae

    Algae called zooxanthellae live in the tissue of coral and provide the coral with food and its color.

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  5. Brain

    Routine hits in a single football season may harm players’ brains

    A group of college football players underwent brain scans after a season of play. The results suggest playing the sport could harm neural signaling.

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  6. Tech

    AI can learn real-world skills by playing video games

    Video games are helping AI systems work together and adapt to real-world situations.

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  7. Climate

    Catch up with Climate Change Chronicles

    Science News for Students spent a year documenting climate change around the globe. Here’s a roundup of the main stories from the series.

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  8. Climate

    Record heat is burning the Arctic and melting Greenland’s ice

    High temperatures are melting Greenland’s ice. They’re also fueling Arctic wildfires that are pumping record amounts of carbon dioxide into the air.

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  9. Health & Medicine

    Outbreak of lung disease, including 5 deaths, tied to e-cigarettes

    Some 450 e-cig users have been hospitalized for severe lung disease across 33 states and U.S. territories. Five of them have died.

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  10. Chemistry

    Chemists have created a ring-shaped form of carbon

    A ring-shaped carbon molecule takes its place among buckyballs, carbon nanotubes and other odd forms of the element.

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  11. Space

    Scientists Say: Galaxy

    A galaxy is a group of millions to billions of stars, plus a lot of dust and gas.

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  12. Climate

    Today’s global warming is unlike the last 2,000 years of climate shifts

    Temperatures at the end of the 20th century were hotter almost everywhere on the planet than in the previous two millennia. And it’s only gotten hotter.

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