ZME Science on MSN
This brainless blob folds itself like living origami using a trick we’ve never seen before
We usually assume that tissue folding (the process that creates organs, embryos, and the deep ridges of the human brain) ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
NASA finds super-tough bacteria that beat sterilization, could survive Mars trip
Scientists have discovered 26 new bacterial species that survived the extreme sterilization protocols of NASA cleanrooms ...
Scientists studying thousands of rats discovered that gut bacteria are shaped by both personal genetics and the genetics of ...
Living cells may generate electricity through the natural motion of their membranes. These fast electrical signals could play ...
Scientists have uncovered a surprising viral shortcut that turns moving cells into delivery vehicles for infection. Instead of spreading one virus at a time, infected cells bundle viral material into ...
16hon MSN
Worms as particle sweepers: How simple movement, not intelligence, drives environmental order
When observing small worms under a microscope, one might observe something very surprising: the worms appear to make a ...
Scientists trace an ancient microbe, Asgard archaea, that gave rise to humans, animals, and plants more than 2 billion years ...
The Nature Index 2025 Research Leaders — previously known as Annual Tables — reveal the leading institutions and countries/territories in the natural and health sciences, according to their output in ...
EatingWell on MSN
What Happens to Your Brain When You Eat Too Much Sugar
Your brain is so hungry for glucose that it uses between 20% to 25% of your body’s glucose to keep functioning. That might ...
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