Extreme heat in 2023 linked to drastic slump in growth of marine life
New Scientist Magazine
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2h ago
Last year’s marine heatwaves saw an unprecedented decline in the growth of phytoplankton and algae, which many animals in the oceans depend on for food ..read more
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May Contain Lies review: How to cut to the truth and think smarter
New Scientist Magazine
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2h ago
Can you see through deceiving data and beguiling stories? Read Alex Edmans's new book and take his card test to find out ..read more
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Dietary changes relieve irritable bowel syndrome better than medicine
New Scientist Magazine
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7h ago
Both a special diet that excludes “FODMAP” compounds and a low-carb high-fibre diet were effective ..read more
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Cocaine seems to hijack brain pathways that prioritise food and water
New Scientist Magazine
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9h ago
Cocaine and morphine hijacked neural responses in the brains of mice, which resulted in them consuming less food and water ..read more
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Fossil snake discovered in India may have been the largest ever
New Scientist Magazine
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11h ago
The vertebrae of Vasuki indicus, a snake that lived 47 million years ago, suggest it could have been as long as 15 metres ..read more
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Jupiter's moon Io has been a volcanic inferno for billions of years
New Scientist Magazine
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17h ago
Measurements of sulphur isotopes in Io’s atmosphere show that the moon may have been volcanically active for its entire lifetime ..read more
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Quantum-proof encryption may not actually stop quantum hackers
New Scientist Magazine
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22h ago
Cryptographers are scrambling to understand an algorithm that could undermine the mathematics behind next-generation encryption methods, which are intended to protect against quantum computers ..read more
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Particles move in beautiful patterns when they have ‘spatial memory’
New Scientist Magazine
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22h ago
A mathematical model of a particle that remembers its past so that it never travels the same path twice produces stunningly complex patterns ..read more
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A Body Made of Glass review: A very personal history of hypochondria
New Scientist Magazine
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22h ago
Millions of people experience symptoms many doctors dismiss as imaginary, but why? Caroline Crampton's moving first-person account is very revealing ..read more
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Why we need to change the way we think about exhaustion
New Scientist Magazine
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22h ago
One in five adults worldwide is living with fatigue. The general advice is to “do more” - but this isn’t the only solution to our exhaustion epidemic, says Amy Arthur ..read more
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