Life Sciences

HEADLINES ARCHIVE

  • Watch: Platypus Protein Could Combat Antimicrobial Resistance

    Platypus milk contains unique antibacterial properties that could be used to fight superbugs.

  • Adidas Sold 1 Million Pairs of Ocean Plastic Sneakers in 2017

    Since introducing a shoe line that includes parts made from recycled plastic, Adidas is announcing that it sold 1 million pairs of the eco-friendly sneakers in 2017.

  • Amazon Purchases Could Soon Be Dropping from the Sky

    The sky will soon be raining online purchases if Amazon has its way. The online retail giant is considering a delivery scheme where drones would drop off delivery packages from as high as 25 feet above instead of flying down and dropping packages at ground level.

  • Some Brand-Name Bottled Waters Contaminated With Plastic Particles, According to Report

    Some of the world’s most popular bottled water brands, according to a recently published report, contain an unwanted ingredient: plastic.

  • Researchers Determine Differences Between "Male" and "Female" Smiles

    The differences between how men and women smile are so vast that artificial intelligence (AI) is able to automatically assign gender based on those differences alone, so says research from the University of Bradford.

  • Researchers Bling It On with Diamond-coated 3D-printed Implants

    Researchers have for the first time successfully coated 3D-printed titanium implants with diamond.

  • Body on a Chip Designed to Improve Drug Testing

    A microfluidic platform that connects engineered tissues from up to 10 organs could be used to evaluate new drugs.

  • Suburban Bee Populations Could Be Supported by "Lazy Lawn Mowers"

    One way to help prevent the decline in bee, butterfly and other pollinating insect populations is to have homeowners alter their lawn-mowing habits, according to new research from ecologist Susannah Lerman at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and the USDA Forest Service.

  • Scientists Develop Graphene-based Filter to Improve Drinking Water

    Scientists at UNSW have developed a graphene-based, laboratory-scale filter that is capable of removing over 99 percent of the natural organic matter that lingers after the traditional treatment of drinking water.

  • 10 Inspiring Stephen Hawking Quotes

    Remembering Stephen Hawking by looking at some of the brilliant insights he shared during his time on Earth.

  • NASA Spurs Tech Research and Development with Small Business Awards

    Projects awarded include an active flow control system, neuromorphic computer chips, a radioisotope power conversion system and a pulsed plasma spacecraft thruster.

  • Watch: Artificial Heart Could Prove Permanent

    The new device is intended to be applicable to patients as young as 10 years old and should also fit most adults.

  • Researchers Discover that Flash Floods Carry Significiant Amount of Microplastics from Rivers to the Sea

    While looking at the impact of microplastics on U.K. waterways over the course of several years, researchers from the University of Manchester discovered that flash floods had carried a significant amount of microplastics from rivers and streams to the ocean.

  • Norway Using Underwater Drones to Help Clean Its Fjords

    On the surface, the Oslo Fjord in Norway seems beautiful and picturesque, yet look below the surface and you’ll see that the water is teeming with garbage thanks to a government -- one of the few in the world -- that allows for the offshore dumping of waste into its fjords.

  • Software Designed to Prevent Both Food Waste and Hunger

    Hoping to both reduce the amount of food that goes wasted each year in the United States and to combat the issue of hunger, a computer science expert and systems analyst from Iowa State University’s Center for Survey Statistics and Methodology has developed software that could help.

  • Engineers Develop More Efficient and Durable Material for Insulation

    Engineers from the University of Maryland have developed a material to compete with Styrofoam™ and other insulation materials that is lighter, more durable and environmentally friendly.

  • These Scientists Have Engineered a Plant That Needs Less Water

    For the first time, scientists have improved how a crop uses water by 25 percent without compromising its yield. They did so by altering the expression of one gene found in all plants.

  • Scientists Develop Inexpensive Device to Test Drinking Water for Arsenic

    With World Health Organization estimates of around 140 million people having to drink water containing unsafe levels of arsenic, scientists from UCL and Imperial College London have created an affordable and easy-to-use arsenic sensor.

  • Krill: A Potential Weapon in Ocean Plastics Battle

    With an estimated eight million tons of plastic finding its way into our oceans each year — threatening marine ecosystems and killing marine life — one researcher may have inadvertently discovered a potential weapon to combat the threat of ocean plastic pollution.

  • Strides in Regenerative Medicine: Bone Engineering

    Researchers have designed a novel bone regeneration system that takes its cues from the body's process for "long bone" formation.

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