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- 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
- 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
- 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
- A young Ethiopian turns trash into fashion using tires, cardboard, and electrical wire, and his viral videos look like luxury editorials while teaching recycling without speeches
- 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