Issue
19 Breaks in this issue · 2018
What constitutes a human body? What is it that makes your body, your own? With our research, we begin to break down the human body to investigate the smallest...
Sliding and collapses of rock slopes may represent a potential threat for infrastructure and populations living nearby. Measuring their movements and...
Antarctica’s ice-free areas, home to nearly all the continents flora and fauna, are set to transform dramatically with climate change, which could mean big...
Plants are able to gather energy from the sun thanks to an evolutionary partnership between photosynthetic bacteria and early living organisms. It is commonly...
We are what we eat – similarly, our environment depends more and more on our choices for our daily menu. National recommended diets are intended to provide us...
Every day, we interpret the actions of other people in terms of what they want and how hard they’re willing to try.This ability appears to emerge early in...
The universal cellular process of autophagy that is highly important for young worms becomes malfunctioned in old worms and leads to a shorter life.
Taking control of another body and using it (or part of it) to produce your own energy? What might seem a zombie-like practice is actually a common plankton...
Astronomers are now beginning to study the atmospheres of exoplanets, revealing details about their chemical composition and how temperature changes with...
Yellow spotted salamanders are generous hosts to their stressed out green algal guests.
Tiny mammals lived amongst the dinosaurs for over 100 million years; probably often trying not to be stepped on or eaten by the giant beasts. What did these...
History books tell us about how ancient populations developed to be the modern world that we are living in. Ancient DNA can provide us with a broader picture...