On this week's episode: ancient human ancestors didn't eat meat, carbon caught in a cosmic conveyer belt, robotic bees pollinating crops, and the incredibly rare marsupial mole gets a checkup.
“The editors who have stewarded the journal over the past 38 years have invested immense time and energy in making JHE the leading journal in paleoanthropological research and have remained ...
In that spirit, here are the 11 of the most exciting animal stories that Popular Science covered this year ... described in a study published in the journal Environmental Biology of Fishes ...
The Blue Book, the eighth in an annual series, offers a detailed analysis of the current state of Chinese science and technology journals. It reports that the total number of scientific journals ...
In the universe of science, however, innovators are finding that A.I. hallucinations can be remarkably useful. The smart machines, it turns out, are dreaming up riots of unrealities that help ...
1 Laboratory of Applied Ecology, University of Abomey-Calavi, Faculty of Agronomic Sciences, University of Abomey-Calavi ... of local trade in wildlife using the three most targeted animal groups by ...
Published in the Journal of Ethology ... Yet here's this never-before-encountered-in-science behavior that sheds light on the fact that there's so much more to learn about the natural history ...
The School of Animal, Rural and Environmental Sciences at Nottingham Trent University offers opportunities to study for a PhD by research. In addition the School is developing research that will ...
In our most popular video, Science News Explores assistant managing editor Maria Temming explains that a high dose of the drug can temporarily scramble a person’s unique default brain activity.