All Stories

  1. Using citizen science to find a new taste

    The Denver Museum of Nature & Science is collaborating with Purdue University to study the genetics of taste, and they need volunteers to help.

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  2. Health & Medicine

    Mice on steroids

    A new mouse study suggests the effects of steroids can last at least months. That’s long after most sporting authorities would be able to identify signs of doping in athletes.

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  3. Science & Society

    Many teens try alternatives to cigarettes

    Teen use of cigarettes has dropped a bit in recent years. But many kids have been turning to other tobacco and tobacco-like products. And which they choose can differ sharply by gender and ethnic group.

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  4. Comic artist brings invasive species to the funny pages

    Jan Eliot, the artist of the comic strip “Stone Soup,” heard about a study showing that teachers release invasive species into local habitats. She decided to write an educational comic about invasive species.

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  5. Plants

    Gold can grow on trees

    Australian researchers found leafy nano-evidence pointing to rich deposits of the precious metal deep below ground.

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  6. Science & Society

    Explainer: Inspirations — from Tom Swift to tomatoes

    Childhood interests may lead to a career imagining how the future could play out

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  7. Science & Society

    Explainer: Some schools already teach future studies

    Good preparation for working in this field may require more than a firm grounding in science or engineering.

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  8. Science education video series brings evolution to life

    The Howard Hughes Medical Institute has released a new video series on evolution that brings science to the classroom.

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  9. Health & Medicine

    Cancers like it cool

    Get that mouse a sweater! A chilly environment suppresses the immune system in mice. This can foster cancer growth, a new study finds.

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  10. Health & Medicine

    HIV: Reversing a death sentence

    New research suggests the infection, while serious, can be treated — and maybe cured.

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  11. Can you build the next chemistry set?

    A new competition from the Society for Science & the Public is out to reinvent one of science’s most beloved traditions.

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  12. Physics

    X-ray ‘eyes’

    Movie directors often make “short” subjects, flicks running sometimes just a few minutes or so. But scientists have begun making much quicker “shorts,” essentially nanofilms. Their goal: catching science in action.

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