Everything You Should Know About Lunar Eclipses

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A lunar eclipse is one of the universe’s many captivating light shows. During this particular cosmic alignment, the Moon slips into our planet’s shadow, often transforming Luna’s familiar gray face into a stunning red orb. But what exactly causes a lunar eclipse, and why doesn’t it happen every month? Let's dive into everything you need to know about lunar eclipses, from their causes and frequency, to what makes them so captivating to stargazers worldwide.What Is a Lunar Eclipse?Total lu ...read more

The Bubonic Plague and These 4 Other Diseases Surprisingly Still Exist Today

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Medical diseases have existed since ancient times. We’ve read about the horrors of the bubonic plague in history lessons, but did you know that even the plague technically still exists today? Over time, modern medicine has eradicated some of the most devastating diseases in the U.S., like smallpox, polio, rubella, malaria, and diphtheria. However, diseases like tuberculosis (TB) and the mumps do continue to exist. While it may surprise you that the following five diseases still exist today, we ...read more

Lupus Discovery Brings Scientists One-Step Closer to Treatment

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Lupus is an autoimmune disease that can affect women nine times more often than men, often turning up in women in their 20s and 30s. It can cause joint pain, rashes, fatigue, and damage to organs — especially the kidneys. The root cause is still unclear, but it may have to do with genetics.“[Lupus] can cause injury to a number of different organs, all mediated by this particular autoimmune process,” says Deepak Rao, a rheumatologist at Harvard Medical School.New research is improving docto ...read more

Swimming Cupcake and Flying Spaghetti-Like Deep-Sea Creatures Were Discovered

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Deep beneath the waves of the sea, hidden ecosystems have thrived for millennia. Scientists continue to discover more of them, including the recent find of a whole new underwater mountain and 20 potentially new deep-sea species about 900 miles off the coast of Chile. Discovering so many rare and likely new species is exciting, but far more unknown species lurk in the abyss just waiting to be discovered. While their ecosystems have long escaped human notice, there’s no guarantee they’ll escap ...read more

Inspired by Natural Camouflage Techniques, Humans Adapted Patterns for Warfare

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For anyone living in the 21st century, it’s hard to imagine a battle scene that isn’t plastered with camouflage: soldiers in muted green-brown fatigues, marching beside tanks painted the same colors. These days the pattern is even a perennial fixture of mainstream fashion. But in fact, it’s a relatively recent military tactic, albeit one with roots in some of the most ancient survival strategies. More than 2,000 years ago, in The Art of War, the Chinese strategist Sun Tzu wrote that, “Al ...read more

The Dawn of a New Frontier: Why Did the Commercialization of Space Happen?

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When humans first set their sights on the stars, space exploration was dominated by superpowers, national pride, and the race to outdo rival nations. After all, the Apollo Moon landings were carried out as more of a statement of Cold War superiority than a business venture. But in recent decades, a shift has occurred — a shift that has slowly seen the reins of space exploration handed from government agencies to commercial enterprises. The commercialization of space is no longer a futuristic d ...read more

Tiny, Compact Galaxies are Masters of Disguise in the Distant Universe

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Astronomers exploring the faraway universe with the James Webb Space Telescope, NASA’s most powerful telescope, have found a class of galaxies that challenges even the most skillful creatures in mimicry – like the mimic octopus. This creature can impersonate other marine animals to avoid predators. Need to be a flatfish? No problem. A sea snake? Easy.When astronomers analyzed the first Webb images of the remote parts of the universe, they spotted a never-before-seen group of galaxies. These ...read more

Preparing for a Pandemic That Never Came Ended up Setting off Another

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Nineteen-year-old U.S. Army Pvt. David Lewis set out from Fort Dix on a 50-mile hike with his unit on Feb. 5, 1976. On that bitter cold day, he collapsed and died. Autopsy specimens unexpectedly tested positive for an H1N1 swine influenza virus.Virus disease surveillance at Fort Dix found another 13 cases among recruits who had been hospitalized for respiratory illness. Additional serum antibody testing revealed that over 200 recruits had been infected but not hospitalized with the novel swine H ...read more

Two Different Pterosaur Fossils Reveal That the Creatures Likely Used Flying Methods

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Paleontologists have long debated whether pterosaurs could fly. An analysis of fossils from two separate species of the ancient, winged dinosaur relatives suggest that not only did they fly, but also at least one species likely glided on air currents while another probably flapped its wings, according to a report in the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. Researchers determined these different abilities by using CT scans to analyze the fossilized bones. Scanning the humerus of Arambourgiania phi ...read more

Healthy People/Healthy Planet

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Keeping people healthy also means keeping our environment free of pollutants and limiting our exposure to disease-causing microbes. Here we highlight projects that need your help researching and improving human and environmental health. Try one or all of them this month, as we commemorate Alzheimer’s Awareness Month, Pollution Prevention Week (Sept. 15th-21st), World Water Monitoring Day (September 18th) and National Eye Health Week (September 23rd-29th).The eyes have itHelp neuroscientists fi ...read more

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