ScienceDaily: Latest Science News


New study paves way to better understand and treat those suffering from long COVID

Posted: 09 Jun 2022 10:20 AM PDT

A new study links SARS-CoV-2 specific T cells to lung function and those who suffer from long-term COVID symptoms (PASC).

Heavy drinkers four times more likely to smoke in England, study finds

Posted: 09 Jun 2022 10:19 AM PDT

Those who are among the heaviest drinkers in England are four times more likely to smoke than the general population and should be prioritized by the government in its plans to achieve 'smoke-free' status by 2030, experts say.

Scientists craft living human skin for robots

Posted: 09 Jun 2022 10:19 AM PDT

From action heroes to villainous assassins, biohybrid robots made of both living and artificial materials have been at the center of many sci-fi fantasies, inspiring today's robotic innovations. It's still a long way until human-like robots walk among us in our daily lives, but scientists are bringing us one step closer by crafting living human skin on robots. The new method not only gave a robotic finger skin-like texture, but also water-repellent and self-healing functions.

'Fantastic giant tortoise,' believed extinct, confirmed alive in the Galápagos

Posted: 09 Jun 2022 10:19 AM PDT

A tortoise from a Galápagos species long believed extinct has been found alive. Fernanda, named after her Fernandina Island home, is the first of her species identified in more than a century. Geneticist successfully extracted DNA from a specimen collected from the same island more than a century ago and confirmed that Fernanda and the museum specimen are members of the same species and genetically distinct from all other Galápagos tortoises.

Antarctic glaciers losing ice at fastest rate for 5,500 years

Posted: 09 Jun 2022 10:18 AM PDT

New evidence suggests that two major glaciers in the West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) are losing ice at the fastest rate for at least 5,500 years.

Extreme, severe drought impacting the upper Colorado River basin in the second century, new study finds

Posted: 09 Jun 2022 07:01 AM PDT

The Colorado River is in an extremely severe drought and has been for the last 22 years. To better understand this drought, researchers looked at the drought history within the Colorado River Basin. Previous studies have gone back 1,200 years, but this paper goes back 2,000 years. The findings, using paleo hydrology, show that there was an even more severe drought in the Colorado River Basin in the second century.

New species of alga named for poet Amanda Gorman

Posted: 09 Jun 2022 05:45 AM PDT

Researchers discovered a new species of alga in central New York and named it Gormaniella terricola, with the genus named after poet Amanda Gorman. The new species is quite interesting in that its chloroplast genome is highly repetitive and contains quite a bit of DNA from fungi and bacteria, meaning it was likely invaded multiple times from other species through a process called horizontal transfer.