Science News: Recent scientific discoveries and expert analysis
Read the latest science news and recent scientific discoveries on Live Science, where we've been reporting on groundbreaking advances for over 20 years. Our expert editors, writers and contributors are ready to guide you through today's most important breakthroughs in science with expert analysis, in-depth explainers and interesting articles, covering everything from space, technology, health, animals, planet Earth, and much more.
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Scientists transform pee into material fit for medical implants
By Ben Turner published
A new method for chemically altering human urine could be used for producing medical implants and construction materials, scientists claim.

Oldest wooden tools unearthed in East Asia show that ancient humans made planned trips to dig up edible plants
By Sascha Pare published
The 300,000 year-old tools show that hominins in East Asia made planned foraging trips to lakeshores and designed instruments for specific purposes.

Astronaut snaps giant red 'jellyfish' sprite over North America during upward-shooting lightning event
By Harry Baker published
NASA astronaut Nichole Ayers captured an electrifying image of a giant lightning "sprite" shooting up over Mexico and southern U.S. states. The red "jellyfish" could help researchers learn more about this rare phenomenon.

Giant radio telescope in the Utah desert could reveal hidden corners of the cosmos — and brand-new physics
By Paul Sutter published
Scientists say that the construction of a vast new radio telescope array in the Utah desert — known as the Deep Synoptic Array 2000 — could uncover some of the biggest outstanding mysteries in astronomy.

Small, room-temperature quantum computers that use light on the horizon after breakthrough, scientists say
By Owen Hughes published
Scientists say they’ve cracked a key challenge in scalable quantum hardware after generating an error-correcting, light-based qubit on a chip for the first time.

Can adults make new brain cells? New study may finally settle one of neuroscience's greatest debates
By Theresa Sullivan Barger published
Scientists say they have very strong evidence that the adult human brain is capable of making new neurons, a point of ongoing controversy in neuroscience.

RFK's proposal to let bird flu spread through poultry could set us up for a pandemic, experts warn
By Ben Turner published
HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins have expressed interest in letting H5N1 outbreaks spread unchecked through U.S. poultry farms. Health experts warn it could lead to a new pandemic.

Neanderthal DNA may refute 65,000-year-old date for human occupation in Australia, but not all experts are convinced
By Kristina Killgrove published
A new DNA model suggests humans didn't reach Australia until 50,000 years ago, but archaeological data disagrees.

1,400-year-old temple ruins the size of a city block unearthed in Bolivia
By Perri Thaler published
Ruins of the Palaspata temple complex from the millennia-old Tiwanaku civilization are unraveling some mysteries about the relatively unstudied society.

Our gut bacteria can absorb and remove toxic 'forever chemicals' — at least in lab mice
By Patrick Pester published
An experiment in lab mice found that certain human gut bacteria can absorb PFAS, commonly called "forever chemicals," until they are excreted, new study finds.

Astrophotographer snaps 'once-in-a-lifetime' shot of solar flare photobombing the ISS
By Harry Baker published
An astrophotographer has captured an extremely rare and "difficult" photo of a solar flare exploding from the sun at the exact moment the International Space Station passed directly in front of our home star.

Watch newly discovered 'interstellar visitor' 3I/ATLAS shoot toward us in first livestream
By Harry Baker published
You can see the recently identified "interstellar object" 3I/ATLAS shooting towards us through the solar system in a livestream from the Virtual Telescope Project.

300-year-old pirate-plundered shipwreck that once held 'eyewatering treasure' discovered off Madagascar
By Tom Metcalfe published
Researchers think a shipwreck off Madagascar was a Portuguese treasure ship captured by pirates in 1721.

NASA confirms that mysterious object shooting through the solar system is an 'interstellar visitor' — and it has a new name
By Harry Baker published
Experts have confirmed that the mysterious object hurtling towards us, previously dubbed A11pl3Z, is an "interstellar object." The cosmic interloper, officially named 3I/ATLAS, is only the third of its kind ever seen — and will shoot past Earth later this year.

'Alien' skull of toddler is actually evidence of long-standing practice of head shaping
By Kristina Killgrove published
Workers digging a pipeline in Argentina found the flattened skull of an ancient toddler, raising questions about its asymmetrical shape.

Ozempic-style drugs treat type 1 diabetes, not only type 2, study finds
By Jennifer Zieba published
A clinical trial for semaglutide, the active ingredient in Ozempic, found that it improved blood sugar control in people with type 1 diabetes.

125,000-year-old 'fat factory' run by Neanderthals discovered in Germany
By Perri Thaler published
An analysis of ancient animal bones found in Germany suggests that Neanderthals extracted grease from them to gobble up 125,000 years ago.
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