
Today's biggest science news: Soyuz launch pad seriously damaged | 'Holy Grail' of shipwrecks | Interstellar object dangers
Live blog Friday, Nov. 28, 2025: Your daily feed of the biggest discoveries and breakthroughs making headlines.

By Harry Baker published
An eerie new photo shows a giant red ring shining above Possagno, near the Italian Alps. The eye-catching image is almost identical to one taken in the same town in early 2023.
By Skyler Ware published
Hayli Gubbi, a shield volcano in northern Ethiopia, erupted for several hours on the morning of Sunday, Nov. 23 — the first eruption since the start of the Holocene.

By Kristina Killgrove published
Break out your best magnifying glass to solve these visual archaeology puzzles.

By Aristos Georgiou published
Researchers have uncovered evidence of an Indigenous artistic tradition that was painted along the U.S.-Mexico border for roughly 175 generations.

Discover the research changing our understanding of the world

Extraordinary images of our sublime universe

Science questions, answered

Test your knowledge on all things science with our weekly, free crossword puzzle!

Test your knowledge of everything from space to nature

A look at the weird and wonderful species that live on our planet

Unusual case reports from the medical literature

A window onto extraordinary landscapes on Earth

A glimpse into how people lived in the past

Incredible images of our planet from above

By Anna Gora published
Deals Runners and triathletes, do not miss this tasty Black Friday deal: the newly-released Garmin Forerunner 970 is now $100 off and at its lowest-ever price.

By Chris Simms published
Leopard cats were living alongside people in ancient China for more than 3,500 years before domestic cats arrived from Europe via the Silk Road.

By Patrick Pester published
Researchers have found footprints of large, bone-crushing dogs in the 12 million-year-old Ashfall Fossil Beds in northeastern Nebraska, suggesting these large carnivores may have survived a cataclysmic Yellowstone eruption that covered parts of North America in ash.

By Harry Baker last updated
Science crossword Test your knowledge on all things science with our weekly, free crossword puzzle!

By Kit Yates published
Opinion How bad-faith arguments sow doubt by weaponizing scientific humility.

By Kit Yates published
Opinion Thousands of scientific papers are retracted every year because of fraudulent activity, with both authors and journals gaming a system to gain academic acclaim through deceit, dishonesty and false representation.

By Rory Harris last updated
Deep underground in southern China, there is a 20,000-ton tank of liquid that can detect neutrinos. Named JUNO, the detector's first results are in — and they're very promising.

By Paul Sutter published
The two stars in the nearby system ZTF J2130 are spiraling toward a catastrophic supernova. In the meantime, scientists are using the pair's slow orbital decay to put Einstein's theory of gravity to the test.

By Mason Wakley published
Scientists have used a novel method to create sustainable, rainbow-colored fibers using bacteria in the lab.
By Tia Ghose published
Over a feverish 10-day period, scientists synthesized and described a new class of carbon molecules, called buckminster fullerenes, after the iconic 20th-century inventor.

By Kimberley Lane published
Deals The Nikon 12x25 S image-stabilized binoculars may be small and compact, but they provide shake-free views of wildlife and the night sky that fit in your pocket.
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