Researchers at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai have developed a first-of-its-kind mRNA system that switches on therapeutic genes preferentially inside targeted cells—an advance demonstrated in studies in mice that could lay the…
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Scientists develop a smarter mRNA therapy that knows which cells to target
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“Bones Almost on Top of Each Other” – Extraordinary Dinosaur Fossil Site Discovered in the Hațeg Basin
Researchers at the newly discovered site reported finding more than one hundred vertebrate fossils per square meter, making it one of the densest fossil deposits known. The Hațeg Basin in Transylvania has long attracted global attention for its…
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Order from chaos: The emergence of photon 'swirling' in disordered nanometric systems
An international research team reports the discovery of “hidden order” in systems that are disordered in space and time. The paper is published in the journal Nature Materials.
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How Christianity Redrew Ancient Nubian Tattoos
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Over the past 5,000 years, tattoos have served as symbols of identity and life…
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Virtual Synchronous Machines: A Grid Stability Solution
Spain’s grid operator, Red Eléctrica, proudly declared that electricity demand across the country’s peninsular system was met entirely by renewable energy sources for the first time on a weekday, on 16 April 2025.
Just 12 days later, at 12.33…
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Modulating key interaction prevents virus from entering cells
Washington State University researchers have found a way to modulate a common virus protein to prevent viruses from entering cells where it can cause illness, a discovery that could someday lead to new antiviral treatments.
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Most peer reviewers now use AI, and publishing policy must keep pace
A new whitepaper from Frontiers shows that AI has rapidly become part of everyday peer review, with 53% of reviewers now using AI tools. The findings in “Unlocking AI’s untapped potential: responsible innovation in research and publishing ” point…
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How we unlocked the secrets of Denmark's oldest plank boat—with the help of an ancient fingerprint
About 2,400 years ago, before the emergence of the Roman empire, a small armada of boats approached the island of Als off the coast of southern Jutland in modern-day Denmark. The armada carried around 80 warriors armed with spears and shields….
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Nanoscale magnetic mazes could transform data center communications
A collaborative team has developed a new way to create magnetic optical materials, one that removes a long-standing design bottleneck and could boost the speed and efficiency of data-center communications. Using an ion beam sputtering technique,…
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Bayeux Tapestry could have been originally designed as mealtime reading for medieval monks
New research by a historian from the University of Bristol offers an intriguing suggestion about one of history’s biggest mysteries—the original purpose of the world-famous Bayeux Tapestry.
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