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Science

Daily Telegraph
14/05/2026 03:16:33 PM
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Scientific American
14/05/2026 03:16:22 PM
HantavirusMay 13, 2026Can hantavirus spread through the air? What we do and don’t know
Almost half of the objects in Earth’s orbit are junk—and that’s only the stuff we know about
Were the first dentists Neanderthals?
This baby galaxy is a ‘missing link’ in the quest to glimpse the universe’s first stars
Americans are increasingly open to using psychedelics for medical reasons
Radar picks up on bird migration. But how do we tell birds and storms apart?
How to recover your shrinking attention span
Tiny robot drones learn to navigate the world like honeybees
The hidden cause of heart disease is inflammation
How strange new ‘altermagnets’ could rewrite physics
How birds survived the dinosaurs’ doomsday
Space hotels are coming soon
Inside the labs where chemists engineer luxury perfumes
How a lost 1812 wristwatch sparked a 200-year race in precision engineering
Can sunlight cure disease?
Can peanut allergies be cured?
How much vitamin D do you need to stay healthy?
Personalized mRNA vaccines will revolutionize cancer treatment—if funding cuts don’t doom them
New nasal vaccines offer better protection from COVID and flu—no needle needed
These cancers were beyond treatment—but might not be anymore
ReproductionMay 12, 2026‘PCOS is inaccurate’—why scientists renamed polycystic ovary syndrome
MathMay 12, 2026Math reveals the one game of chance you should always accept
Particle PhysicsMay 13, 2026Each atom in the universe might be unique
HantavirusMay 13, 2026Why hantavirus takes so long to show symptoms and what that means for containment
HantavirusMay 13, 2026Can hantavirus spread through the air? What we do and don’t know
ChemistryMay 11, 2026Strange crystals found inside wreckage from the first nuclear bomb test

BBC
08/11/2025 05:50:14 AM
Vaccine trial for killer elephant virus begins
Student-built robot on track to explore the Moon
Plants in UK now flowering a month earlier
Slide show that persuaded Boris Johnson on climate
UK cranes have most successful year since 1600s
Earth has more tree species than we thought
Video 2 minutes 13 secondsPoo on menu for Europe's first baby southern koala
Student-built robot on track to explore the Moon
Plants in UK now flowering a month earlier
Slide show that persuaded Boris Johnson on climate
UK cranes have most successful year since 1600s
Earth has more tree species than we thought
Video 2 minutes 13 secondsPoo on menu for Europe's first baby southern koala
Buried treasures threatened by climate change
Toxic 'forever chemicals' found in British otters
'Fragile win' at COP26 climate summit under threat
False banana offers hope for warming world
'Megaberg' dumped huge volume of fresh water
Musk's SpaceX rocket on collision course with moon
James Webb telescope reaches final position
Radar satellite's stunning map of UK and Ireland
Nasa fixes megarocket equipment glitch
Satellites key to understanding Pacific volcano
What is the quantum apocalypse?
US lab takes further step towards fusion goal
Should bad science be censored on social media?
How zoo vets are battling a deadly elephant virus
The illegal Brazilian gold you may be wearing
Student-built robot on track to explore the Moon
Vaccine trial for killer elephant virus begins
Power restored to all but 700 homes after storms
Insulate Britain activists jailed over M25 protest
Rats to be removed from Round Island in Scilly
EU moves to label nuclear and gas as sustainable
New Jurassic fossil find on 'Dinosaur Coast' beach
Walking and cycling face losing out in TfL cuts
Search for survivors after deadly Ecuador landslide
Climate group protests in Royal Courts of Justice
'I'm not afraid of a big pile of waste'
UK cranes have most successful year since 1600s

New Scientist

14/05/2026 03:16:22 PM
HealthRed-light therapy does have health benefits but not the ones you thinkFeatures
PhysicsThe 50-year quest to create a quantum spin liquid may finally be overFeatures
HumansA lost ancient script reveals how writing as we know it really beganFeatures
LifeWhy dinosaurs lived much more complex lives than we thoughtFeatures
PhysicsIs consciousness more fundamental to reality than quantum physics?Features
HealthWhy the keto diet could be a revolutionary way to treat mental illnessFeatures
Suzanne Simard on the wood wide web, connectedness – and Avatar
Where did the laws of physics come from? I think I've found the answer
Why autism pioneer Uta Frith wants to dismantle the spectrum
300-year-old experiment could become world's best dark matter detector
HumansWas a little-known culture in Bronze Age Turkey a major power?News
HumansPompeii’s streets show how the city adapted to Roman ruleNews
1PCOS has been officially renamed PMOS, and it’s a momentous move
2Why autism pioneer Uta Frith wants to dismantle the spectrum
3A lost ancient script reveals how writing as we know it really began
4Asteroid to miss Earth by a quarter of the length from us to the moon
5Where did the laws of physics come from? I think I've found the answer
6Ancient teeth hint at links between Denisovans and Homo erectus
7Red-light therapy does have health benefits but not the ones you think
8The exercises you need to do to reach 100 in great shape
9NHS England rushes to hide software over AI hacking fears
10New rules confirm public has a right to see how UK government uses AI
MathematicsThe monstrous number sequences that break the rules of mathematicsFeatures
HealthCan we ‘vaccinate’ ourselves against stress?Features
Discovery TourArctic expedition cruise with Dr Russell Arnott, Svalbard, NorwaySvalbard, Norway17-28 June 2026
Free Online EventUnfinished Business: How do we end HIV?Free Online EventOn Demand Event
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New Scientist's video team
Video These are the extinct humans that live on in your DNA Video
Video Mathematics keeps discovering things that shouldn't exist Video
Video Frank Close: Finding the building blocks of the universe Video
Video Why birds are the only surviving dinosaurs Video
Video The evolving science of dinosaurs Video
Video Author Kim Stanley Robinson revisits his vision of life on Mars Video
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ResearchUK-Spanish partnerships are solving pharma’s toughest challengesCoLab with UK Government
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Nature
14/05/2026 03:16:24 PM
Explore articles by subject
Sleep linked to slower ageing: huge study pinpoints the right amount Health outcomes were better in people who slept between about six and eight hours a day. news | 13 May 2026
Did Homo erectus and Denisovans mate? Tooth proteins hint at ancient trysts Genetic analysis suggests interbreeding between two groups of human relatives.
AI can design viruses, toxins and other bioweapons. How worried should we be? Scientists are debating whether to limit biological AI software to ward off threats.
Ice core reveals longest-ever continuous record of Earth’s climate news | 12 May 2026
How to vibe code in science: early adopters share their tips news feature | 12 May 2026
Hantavirus outbreak exposes uncertainty about how disease spreads news | 11 May 2026
Elsevier vs. Meta: first science publisher sues over scraped research papers news | 11 May 2026
Open data is key to genomics research — if the information can be kept safe Shuhua Xu world view | 12 May 2026
How to vibe code in science: early adopters share their tips Using AI coding tools can speed up your work, but there are plenty of pitfalls.
At last, a pill that can prevent COVID after exposure to infected people NEWS | 13 MAY 2026
Giant map reveals thousands of cities worldwide with successful green policies NEWS | 11 MAY 2026
Briefing Chat: Can’t focus? It’s not your attention span, it’s your notifications NATURE PODCAST | 08 MAY 2026
World-leading climate centre takes Trump administration to court NEWS | 08 MAY 2026
Happy 100th birthday David Attenborough! Nature salutes you The science communicator has raised awareness of the natural world and its myriad interconnections on which humans depend.
J. Craig Venter obituary: maverick biotechnologist who sequenced the human genome The entrepreneur was also a pioneer of synthetic biology.
‘Alternative COP’ must drive real, cooperative change in climate action editorial
To move beyond GDP, don’t ignore ecological economics Pushpam Kumar world view
Happy 100th birthday David Attenborough! Nature salutes you Editorial
Science can take the lead in making better measures of economic growth Editorial
AI can design viruses, toxins and other bioweapons. How worried should we be? News Feature
Obesity has risen in all countries — but at a faster pace in poorer ones News & Views
An ultra-faint, chemically primitive galaxy forming in the reionization era Article
Extreme galaxy-scale outflows are frequent among luminous early quasars Article
‘Undruggable’ cancer proteins meet their match People with a deadly form of pancreatic cancer survive longer on a drug that blocks the activity of a family of mutant proteins.
Fast and furious: the gaseous outflows of quasars in the early Universe were extreme research briefings
Growth charts reveal how the brain’s ‘communication highways’ change throughout life research briefings
State media control shapes LLM behaviour by influencing training data research briefings
Relics of the first stars spotted in a distant, ultra-faint galaxy news and views
Can AI tools assess coding assignments? Yulu Hou and her partner experimented with using ChatGPT to automate marking of undergraduate assignments. Here’s what they learnt. career column
I’m burnt out and leaving academia. How do I finish my PhD? Burnout is a systemic problem, but individuals can take steps to cope with it and pave a path forward.
Meet the academics refusing to use generative AI Researchers say they have their reasons for avoiding AI tools — and they’re sick of arguing about it.
Best. Day. Ever. What does a good day in science look like? career feature
A life in pictures: celebrating David Attenborough at 100 career feature
Radioactive rain and proving relativity: Books in brief Andrew Robinson reviews five of the best science picks. book review
Why cosmology is more than a theory A philosophical take on the history of the Universe that is inspiring but incomplete.
The futile beauty of flightless birds futures
Matter of taste futures