A new study published in Nature Communications finds that worldwide, people with higher levels of education are more culturally similar to those in Canada, the U.S., U.K., and other Anglo, industrialized countries and countries in Western Europe.
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Rocket Report: Russia reopens gateway to ISS; Cape Canaveral hosts missile test
More to come?… Lt. Gen. Doug Schiess, the Space Force’s deputy chief of operations, told a House subcommittee Wednesday that the military was looking at moving more missions off of ULA’s Vulcan rocket to other…
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First US uranium conversion plant in 70 years to fuel nuclear reactors
Texas-based startup FluxPoint Energy has officially announced plans to build the first new US uranium conversion facility in more than seven decades.
The company introduced the initiative this week at the CERAWeek conference in Houston to…
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The Download: the internet’s best weather app, and why people freeze their brains
This article is from The Checkup, our weekly biotech newsletter. Sign up to receive it in your inbox every Thursday.
What’s next for space exploration?
Whether it’s the race to find life on Mars, the campaign to outsmart killer…
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Scientists discover why cancer drugs don’t work for everyone
One of the biggest challenges in cancer care is that the same therapy can be highly effective for some patients yet fail entirely for others. A new study published in Nature Communications, led by Dr. Louise Fets at the MRC Laboratory of Medical…
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Something Is Killing This Black Hole at Impossible Speed, And Nobody Knows What
A galaxy roughly 10 billion light-years from Earth has dimmed to one-twentieth of its former brightness in only two decades, an astronomical eyeblink. The culprit, researchers say, is a supermassive black hole that appears to be running out…
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Birutė Galdikas: The last of ‘Leakey’s Angels’ in primatology’s most extraordinary chapter
Birute Galdikas carries an orangutan named Isabel in Borneo, Indonesia. The 2011 film 'Born To Be Wild 3D' followed her work. AP Photo/Irwin Fedriansyah Primatologist Birutė Galdikas died on March 24, 2026, and an era of science that began in the…
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Birutė Galdikas: The last of the ‘angels’ in primatology’s most extraordinary chapter
Birute Galdikas carries an orangutan named Isabel in Borneo, Indonesia. The 2011 film 'Born To Be Wild 3D' followed her work. AP Photo/Irwin Fedriansyah Primatologist Birutė Galdikas died on March 24, 2026, and an era of science that began in the…
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War in the Middle East made the case for renewables – what’s happening in each country tells a harder story
Saudi Arabia has built large solar power plants while continuing to invest heavily in fossil fuels. Giuseppe Cacace/AFP via Getty Images The oil-dependent world is in crisis. Ship traffic in the Strait of Hormuz – through which more than a…
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‘There’s a huge new shift coming along’: Coca-Cola and Walmart CEOs both say increasing AI usage behind them stepping down
- James Quincey is stepping down as Coca-Cola CEO as the landscape changes
- Quincey says AI is having a larger effect on business than expected
- Walmart’s CEO has also stepped down to make way for AI-literate successor
Coca-Cola CEO James Quincey has…
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