Researchers can now collect and sequence DNA from the air0
- From Around the Web, Science & Technology
- April 8, 2021
We shed DNA everywhere. That includes the air, according to a new study.
We shed DNA everywhere. That includes the air, according to a new study.
We’ve all seen those majestic anvil storm clouds that form on a hot summer’s day, but what do you think is the temperature right at the very top?
ESA’s spherical rover hopes to lower, roll, and hop its way through lunar caves.
A Southaven, Miss. father and son believe they may have seen something from out this world above their neighborhood late Sunday night.
The class of marine animals known as cephalopoda – which today includes squids, octopuses, and cuttlefishes – could have been around on Earth 30 million years earlier than previously thought, according to new research.
Just as Earth has spectacular auroras, so too do other Solar System planets have their own versions of the atmospheric light show.
Researchers discover a new state of active matter.
The extinct human lineage nicknamed “the hobbit” may not be a distant relative of modern humans as previously thought. Instead, hobbits may be members of the mysterious close relatives of modern humans known as Denisovans, and may have interbred with ancestors of modern humans on the islands of Southeast Asia, researchers say.
A comet impact in the 1990s is now providing insights into the incredibly powerful winds blowing above Jupiter’s cloud tops.
There are ethical and methodological pitfalls to avoid.