Chemistry August 23, 2016 Creeping slime is coating hallowed monuments It sounds like the stuff of horror films: a creeping black slime that can't be killed.
PLANET EARTH August 22, 2016 Bill Nye: Why tech plays an important role in America's national parks future As the National Park Service prepares to celebrate its 100th anniversary this week, Centennial Ambassador Bill Nye says that technology can help inspire more and more people to visit the great outdoors.
NATURAL SCIENCE August 18, 2016 Are tall people more conservative? What can a tape measure tell you about how someone will vote? Perhaps everything, at least statistically.
Physics August 16, 2016 Scientists may have found 'fifth force of nature' Scientists at the University of California, Irvine (UCI), believe they have identified a “fifth force of nature.”
Olympics August 14, 2016 Water changes from green back to blue at troubled Olympic pool Goodbye green.
Genetics August 11, 2016 Almost all lice are now resistant to over-the-counter treatment The vast majority of head lice in the United States are now resistant to most over-the-counter treatments, meaning that it's now especially difficult to vanquish the tiny blood-sucking parasites, a new study finds
Digging History August 10, 2016 Time to rethink how humans populated America, experts say A new study challenges the theory that humans populated the Americas using a corridor between ice sheets more than 12,600 years ago.
Chemistry August 10, 2016 Green Olympics: Algae turns Rio pool a strange color A diving pool at the Rio Olympics turned green Tuesday when algae entered the water, stunning athletes and spectators.
NATURAL SCIENCE August 10, 2016 Do the robot: 1,000-plus dancing droids break record A troupe of more than 1,000 dancing robots showed off some Beyoncé-like moves at a recent festival in China, boogying and shaking its way to a new Guinness World Record
NATURAL SCIENCE August 9, 2016 Nature documentaries may help ease aggression in prisons A new small study suggests that showing nature documentaries to inmates may help to ease aggression in prisons.
NATURAL SCIENCE August 4, 2016 Hungry beetles may end season for baseball's ash bats Popular baseball bats may soon disappear from fields as ravenous Asian beetles rapidly consume the wood used to make them, according to reports.