A study warns about nitrate and uranium interacting in U.S. drinking water, and the chemistry turns one contamination problem into a harder one to detect
What does fertilizer have to do with uranium in a glass of water? More than many people might expect, according to research from the…..
Germany covers an artificial lake with solar panels without harming the ecosystem, and the experiment hints at a future where water becomes a rooftop for power
Germany has turned part of an artificial lake in Bavaria into a new kind of solar power plant, using upright panels that float instead…..
A volunteer finds a tiny 1,600-year-old gold bead in Jerusalem’s ancient City of David, and that speck of metal revives a daily-life moment from another era
An Australian spider spins webbing with properties never seen in any material, and the finding puts biology ahead of engineering again
Brazil could jump its oil reserves from 17 billion to 23.5 billion barrels with $30 billion a year in investment, and exploration along the Equatorial Margin is being pitched out to 2042
In Britain’s Bronze Age 3,000 years ago, communities held massive meat feasts, and the gatherings may have functioned like a social network that kept groups together
Snipers and GPS-tagged goats are being used to save Galápagos tortoises, and the extreme strategy shows how far conservation goes when a species needs protection by force
Chinese vessels are accelerating the collapse of fishing in Senegal, driving $300 million in annual losses and impacting 13 million people, a quiet crisis already hitting dinner tables
Science
A volunteer finds a tiny 1,600-year-old gold bead in Jerusalem’s ancient City of David, and that speck of metal revives a daily-life moment from another era
A tiny gold bead uncovered in soil from Jerusalem’s City of David is giving archaeologists…..
An Australian spider spins webbing with properties never seen in any material, and the finding puts biology ahead of engineering again
A small Australian spider is giving materials scientists a big problem to think about. The…..
In Britain’s Bronze Age 3,000 years ago, communities held massive meat feasts, and the gatherings may have functioned like a social network that kept groups together
Have you ever looked at the leftovers after a family barbecue and thought about what…..
A metal detector uncovers a 1,400-year-old Byzantine treasure, and the coins reappear as if they were hidden yesterday
A signal from a metal detector on a hillside above the Sea of Galilee led…..
Researchers find thousands of new microbial species in herbivore poop, and the discovery suggests the biggest biodiversity may live where nobody wants to look
Researchers studying animal droppings from the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau have uncovered a vast hidden world of…..
IceCube releases its first report using a new neutrino analysis method, and the upgrade could sharpen how we “listen” to particles that cross Earth without leaving a trace
Far below the surface of Antarctica, IceCube is listening for some of the quietest messengers…..
Archaeologists entered a hidden rock-cut chamber beneath Luxor and found 22 painted coffins stacked in 10 rows plus 8 sealed papyri left untouched inside a pottery vessel, a cache tied to the “Singers of Amun” that reads like a sacred archive buried on purpose
Archaeologists in Luxor have entered a rock-cut funerary chamber and found a tightly packed cache…..
Scientists discover a new deep-ocean coral nicknamed “Chewbacca,” and Iridogorgia thrives where sunlight never reaches and life seems impossible
Scientists have formally described a new deep-sea coral with a name that sounds like it…..
Archaeologists find a 164-foot underground tunnel in Jerusalem, and the massive build has no clear answer, putting the city under its own history once again
A routine construction check on the southern edge of Jerusalem has turned into a stone-cut…..
Inside a pressure cooker, a simple experiment shows how steam raises temperature and speeds up beans, and it also explains why that whistle is pure physics
Have you ever watched beans bubble away for what feels like forever and wondered why…..
Mobility
At about 39,700 pounds with six wheels, a V-shaped hull, and amphibious capability, Brazil’s Guaraní armored vehicle carries 11 troops across water and rough terrain, and its design shows how mobility is being modernized
A Brazilian armored vehicle is drawing attention not just for its size, but for the terrain it…..
While the world fights over oil, China just flew a 7.5-ton unmanned cargo plane powered by a megawatt-class hydrogen turboprop, climbing to 984 feet, covering 22.4 miles at 137 mph, and landing 16 minutes later with the engine running smoothly the whole way
The idea sounds like something pulled from science fiction. While countries argue over oil, China has tested…..
Energy
Economy
A marine scientist in Southern California has turned restaurant waste into coastal restoration by collecting more than 24,000 pounds of discarded oyster shells, curing them in the sun, and using them to rebuild reefs that protect shorelines and filter water
A pile of oyster shells might not look like the start of an environmental comeback…..
Del Monte’s Chapter 11 collapse left a California peach farmer staring at ripping out 20 acres of 9-year-old Ross cling trees tied to $12,500-an-acre contracts, after a shuttered Modesto canning hub and only 24,000 of 74,000 tons finding processing capacity turned the rest into fruit that may rot or be destroyed
A healthy peach tree can still become a crop with nowhere to go. That is…..
The rarest mineral recognized by science weighs about 0.011 ounces, exists as a single known natural specimen, and its discovery exposes how fragile Earth’s catalog still is
A tiny reddish-orange gem from Myanmar has become one of the strangest trophies in modern…..
The Port of Recife will spend about $19.7 million on dredging to handle ships up to 689 feet, and that quiet project decides which cities win or lose trade
Brazil’s Port of Recife is preparing for a major dredging project worth about $20 million,…..
Plans are underway in Cincinnati to build a new “Veterans Village” featuring 14 tiny homes on church-owned land. Each unit, measuring 276 square feet, will include a porch, kitchen, dining area, and full bathroom, and will cost $70,000, allowing veterans to move out of their temporary housing
A new tiny home village planned for Cincinnati’s Madisonville neighborhood could give 14 veterans something…..
São Paulo stuns with a roughly $1.35 billion megaproject – Brazil’s first immersed tunnel will span 0.93 miles and force the city to reinvent underwater construction logistics
Brazil is getting ready for a piece of infrastructure it has talked about for more…..
Prince William will sell one-fifth of the Duchy of Cornwall, and he says the profits will be funneled into housing and nature projects chosen for the biggest social and environmental impact
Prince William is preparing to sell parts of the Duchy of Cornwall over the next…..
A mother and daughter near Maysville turned down $26 million to sell farmland for a data center, and their blunt reason is that feeding the country matters more than a tech buyer paying roughly 10 times the land’s farm value
A Kentucky mother and daughter are refusing to sell family farmland for a proposed data…..
China receives the first shipment of 200,000 tons from Africa’s largest “hidden iron” deposit: the move smells like a geopolitical shift
A single bulk carrier does not usually make environmental news. But when the RTM Cartier…..
Argentina and the “Thread of the Sun”: scientists follow a copper trail and discover something that sounds like treasure… but the ending isn’t what you’d expect
A mineral deposit under the high Andes is forcing a hard question. How far should…..
Technology
A 29-year-old man has created magnetic cement, and his invention promises to revolutionize a construction sector that has not undergone a true transformation in decades
Italian architects 3D-print a house from local clay— without using traditional bricks — by sourcing soil from the site itself. The question is no longer if it works but how much it can cut costs?
A crew of around 100 workers and two cranes turned what looked like oversized shipping containers into a 26-story tower in five days. The real takeaway is that the slowest parts of construction – wiring, ductwork, and finishes – were done before anything arrived on site
China built Asia’s largest rail station in just two years, with about 5.1 million square feet, solar power, and welding robots, and the scale shows who’s setting the infrastructure pace
Berlin opens a 269,000-square-foot pit in the city center and exposes its medieval roots, with archaeologists racing construction crews to save coins, walls, and clues before it is covered again
China built a 984-foot “horizontal skyscraper” linking four towers 820 feet up, and the about 13,200-ton structure turns architecture into a balance test
Environment
A study warns about nitrate and uranium interacting in U.S. drinking water, and the chemistry turns one contamination problem into a harder one to detect
What does fertilizer have to do with uranium in a glass of water? More than…..
Snipers and GPS-tagged goats are being used to save Galápagos tortoises, and the extreme strategy shows how far conservation goes when a species needs protection by force
Most people connect Galápagos tortoises with Charles Darwin, slow footsteps, and the big idea of…..
Chinese vessels are accelerating the collapse of fishing in Senegal, driving $300 million in annual losses and impacting 13 million people, a quiet crisis already hitting dinner tables
The crisis unfolding along Senegal’s coast is no longer just a story about fish. It…..
In Brazil’s Paraíba backcountry, the “Pedra da Maravilha” looks like it defies gravity on a tiny base, and the geological oddity has turned one rock into a tourism magnet
A strange-looking rock formation in Brazil’s northeast is getting fresh attention after a May 9,…..
Japan continues releasing treated Fukushima water, and each new discharge reopens the fight between science, public trust, and fear of the invisible in the ocean
Japan is still releasing treated water from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster site, and the…..
An autonomous submarine named Ran mapped 54 square miles under Antarctica’s Dotson Ice Shelf and found plateaus, terraced “steps,” and teardrop pits carved by basal melt, then lost contact and disappeared, leaving behind data that shows why melt can concentrate in hidden fractures models often miss
Ran, a robot submarine sent beneath West Antarctica’s Dotson Ice Shelf, returned a set of…..
Mosquitoes appear in Iceland for the first time, and zoologists are watching climate and standing water because a small change like this can ripple through entire ecosystems
For centuries, Iceland seemed to hold on to one very unusual privilege. While much of…..
Fishers in Galicia and Asturias push back against an eel-fishing proposal, and the clash blends tradition, science, and a species on the edge
Spain’s long-running dispute over the European eel has moved from cold river mouths to the…..
Trending
In São Paulo, a building that looks like an upside-down ship became an icon: the Hotel Unique, about 276 feet tall with round windows and exposed concrete, turned a weird shape into a city symbol
Albert Einstein, a scientist, speaking to his son in 1900: “Life is like riding a bicycle: to keep your balance, you have to keep moving”
Psychology asserts that children of the 1960s and 1970s did not become emotionally strong thanks to better parenting, but because they grew up with enough daily neglect to learn to self-regulate, solve problems on their own, and develop a resilience that modern comforts make difficult to build
They bought a chalet for $164,000 on a 32,300-square feet plot above sea level: Jozef and Jenny’s story seems idyllic… until the fine print about the location emerges
Two hikers spot a “strange” wall and end up finding gold coins dating from 1808 to 1915… and the hiding place looks like an “emergency plan”





































