How a Hormuz Blockade Could Backfire: The Strategic Risks Outweighing the Rewards
Butterfly numbers are dropping but here are five species you may see more of
A warming climate has helped some to flourish, researchers say, but the outlook is troubling.
Atomic Nuclei Timekeeping: How Nuclear Clock Research Could Redefine Precision Measurement
Atomic clocks have long set the gold standard for precision timekeeping, but nuclear clocks represent the next frontier—promising accuracy that could surpass even today's most advanced atomic systems.
How Florida's New Mapping Technology Is Helping Planners Preserve Wildlife Corridors Amid Rapid Growth
A new mapping tool enables local governments, conservation groups, and landowners to visualize and assess the impact of land-use decisions on wildlife habitats and natural resources.
Why Resilience Isn't About Bouncing Back — It's About Weaving Hard Experiences Into Your Life Story
Resilience is commonly mischaracterized as sheer toughness or grit, but emerging research reframes the concept entirely — true resilience lies not in suppressing hardship, but in recognizing and carrying it while continuing to move forward.
How the Artemis II Crew Captured Space Like Never Before — With Human Eyes Behind the Lens
Human vision and creative intuition remain irreplaceable in photography, as a seasoned expert breaks down the nuanced artistic choices—composition, timing, light interpretation, and emotional intent—that lie beyond the reach of AI algorithms and automated systems.
Gray Whale Deaths Spike in San Francisco Bay: What the Data Reveals About a Troubling Trend
How Ancient Christian Portrayals of Islam Continue to Shape Modern Political Narratives
Why Community Colleges Must Rethink Student Completion — Before More Learners Fall Behind
The doomsday seed collectors fighting to save Wales' native species
Should the apocalypse arrive, Wales as we know it may depend on these two conservationists.
From blast off to splashdown: My days following Nasa's historic mission to the Moon
BBC Science Editor Rebecca Morelle reflects on how it felt to watch history being made.
'Every drop of water counts': Fear for the future of Argentina's glaciers
A controversial law to ease protections for the glaciers has passed, opening the doors for mining.
How NASA's Artemis II Mission Echoes the Prophetic Spacefaring Vision of Jules Verne
Jules Verne's visionary fiction did more than dream up lunar travel—it anticipated the cultural and societal ripple effects that today's renewed Moon missions are now generating in reality.