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Powerful Tonga Volcano Eruption Triggered Atmospheric Gravity Waves Reaching the Edge of Space

Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha’apai eruption in January was unique in observed science, creating waves that reverberated around Earth, reaching 100km into the ionosphere.

Why Is It So Hard for Humans to Have a Baby?

Professor Laurence Hurst from the Milner Centre for Evolution finds solution to the mystery of why most human embryos die young.

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Advocates Fighting Tobacco Epidemic in Developing Countries Face Intimidation - New Study

Intimidation of public health advocates, who are working to save people's lives by fighting the tobacco epidemic, disrupts their work and reduces its impact.

Plant-Based Meat ‘Healthier and More Sustainable Than Animal Products’ - New Study

A new review from Dr Chris Bryant focuses on the health and environmental benefits of plant-based products, as well as consumer attitudes.

Managing the Hype Around New Technology - Why Managers Should Focus on the Use Case

Industrial drone study poses question of whether emerging technologies are a solution looking for a problem to solve

Cannabis Strength Soars Over Past Half Century – New Study

Largest study on how cannabis has changed over time finds increased strength putting consumers at greater risk of harm

Plesiosaur Fossils Found in the Sahara Suggest They Weren’t Just Marine Animals

This discovery of plesiosaur fossils in an ancient riverbed suggests some species, traditionally thought to be sea creatures, may have lived in freshwater.

Bringing Ancient Animals Back to Life—as Robots

In a university swimming pool, scientists and their underwater cameras watch carefully as a coiled shell is released from a pair of metal tongs.

How Robotic Pets Can Help with Memory Care

You might think it was a typical therapy session at a long-term care facility.

Scientists Trace Earliest Cases of COVID-19 to Market in Wuhan, China

An international team of 18 researchers, including a scientist at University of Utah Health, have determined that the earliest cases of COVID-19 in humans arose at a wholesale fish market in Wuhan, China, in December 2019.

Chanchita May Have the Highest Cold Tolerance of All Non-Native Fish in Central Florida

When Florida Museum ichthyology collection manager Rob Robins brought home fish samples from central Florida in 2017, he didn’t anticipate he’d be adding a new member to the state’s list of non-native species.

New Hawk Moth Species Are Among the Smallest Ever Discovered

Hawk moths are known for being some of the largest night fliers in the insect world.

Moths Enlist Additional Troops in an Evolutionary Arms Race

Using artificial intelligence, researchers have discovered what is likely the largest animal mimicry complex on Earth, changing the way we see — or rather, hear — the night sky.

Oldest DNA from Domesticated American Horse Lends Credence to Shipwreck Folklore

An abandoned Caribbean colony unearthed centuries after it had been forgotten and a case of mistaken identity in the archaeological record have conspired to rewrite the history of a barrier island off the Virginia and Maryland coasts.

Calls for Opioid Agonist Treatments to Be Used in the Treatment of Injecting-Related Infections

Medications such as buprenorphine and methadone should be used to help treat patients with opioid use disorder who come to hospital with injecting-related infections, finds new research from UCL and UNSW, Sydney.

Novel Gene Therapy Could Reduce Bleeding Risk for Haemophilia Patients

A single gene therapy injection could dramatically reduce the bleeding risk faced by people with haemophilia B, finds a study involving UCL researchers.

Self-Reflection Linked to Improved Late-Life Cognition and Brain Health

Self-reflection is positively associated with cognition late in life as well as glucose metabolism, a marker of brain health, finds a new study led by UCL researchers.

Famine and Disease Drove the Evolution of Lactose Tolerance in Europe

Prehistoric people in Europe were consuming milk thousands of years before humans evolved the genetic trait allowing us to digest the milk sugar lactose as adults, finds a new study led by UCL and University of Bristol researchers.

Prehistoric Roots of ‘Cold Sore’ Virus Traced Through Ancient Herpes DNA

Ancient genomes from the herpes virus that commonly causes lip sores – and currently infects some 3.7 billion people globally – have been uncovered and sequenced for the first time by an international team involving UCL scientists.

Analysis: Drug Misuse and Suicidal Behaviour More Common on the Anniversary of a Parent’s Death

Writing in The Conversation, Professor Scott Montgomery (UCL Institute of Epidemiology & Health) shares his new research finding that young people who lost a parent are most likely to be admitted to hospital for drug use or self-harm around the anniversary of their death.