UK poverty deepens as more low-income households face severe hardship, the Joseph Rowntree Foundation says
Recent research from Harvard University suggests a woman's toots can be useful rather than just plain embarrassing -- and smelly.
Some methods being tried to counter climate change shift the ocean’s biology or chemistry. Others would deflect solar radiation. All have consequences for mar...
A group of top paleontologists have finally solved the mystery of why so many duck-billed dinosaur bones were discovered with fractures.
A new Guardian report challenged the science that showed microplastics are all over the human body. But the story isn’t finished yet.
Chewing gum history spans 8,000 years from ancient Scandinavia to modern wellness, with new research from Polish scientists explaining the biological benefits.
Circadian rhythm disruptions have been linked to double dementia risk, according to a new study by Dr. Wendy Wang and Academy of Neurology researchers.
Eating vitamin C–rich foods like kiwifruit could boost skin vitamin C levels, skin density and markers linked to collagen production, according to a study fro...
Alzheimer's disease may be reversible, according to University Hospitals research. Dr. Andrew A. Pieper found that restoring NAD+ enzyme levels reversed disease...
Adults who received at least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine have a lower risk of death regardless of the cause, a new study has found.
As online holiday shopping ramps up, package theft is on the rise and has even prompted lawmakers to mull new legislation.
A new study suggests that polar bears are undergoing rapid genetic changes, and scientists believe it's due to the impacts of climate change.
A new NASA-led study found that the increasing number of satellites in low-Earth orbit could ruin up to 96% of images from some orbiting telescopes.
The nine-person societal impacts team at Anthropic is empowered to publish unflattering research about AI. How long can it last?
Researchers used face masks and an airplane air filter to find out what microbes are floating around.
We apparently have more in common with some shorebirds than we previously thought.