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Home » Zenger News » Science - Zenger News

Category: Science – Zenger News

Researchers at the Medical University of Vienna in Austria have released a study showing humans are ingesting large amounts of nanoplastics in water that could be harmful to their health. (Medical University of Vienna/Zenger)
Posted inScience - Zenger News, World Matters, Zenger News

Junk Food And Tainted Water: People Ingest A Credit Card Worth Of Nanoplastics Weekly, Study Says

by zenger.news April 1, 2022April 5, 2022

Such substances are bad for people’s health over the long run, medical researchers in Austria say.
The post Junk Food And Tainted Water: People Ingest A Credit Card Worth Of Nanoplastics Weekly, Study Says appeared first on Zenger News.

For the first 10 million years after dinosaurs died out, mammals prioritized boosting their body size to adapt to radical shifts in the makeup of Earth’s animal kingdom, according to new research. (Steve Chatterley/Zenger)
Posted inScience - Zenger News, World Matters, Zenger News

Mammals ‘Put Brawn Before Brains To Survive The Post-Dinosaur World’

by zenger.news April 1, 2022April 5, 2022
HALO, one of the three research aircraft being used in the HALO-(AC)3 campaign in March 2022, in front of Arena Arctica in Kiruna, Sweden. (Marlen Bruckner-University Leipzig/Zenger News)
Posted inScience - Zenger News, World Matters, Zenger News

VIDEO: Heating Up: Scientists Race To Find Cause Of Alarming Polar Heatwave

by zenger.news April 1, 2022April 5, 2022
People walk down the street in Branson, Missouri. Researchers have discovered that people's childhood experiences of navigating their environments, whether urban or rural, determine their sense of direction in later years. (Spencer Platt/Getty Images)
Posted inScience - Zenger News, World Matters, Zenger News

Sense Of Direction Depends On Where You Grew Up

by zenger.news April 1, 2022April 5, 2022
A rodent species that lives on the steppes of Russia and northern Asia shapes its environment by trimming unpalatable bunchgrasses to watch for predatory birds in an example of natural ecosystem engineering. (Guoliang Li/University of Exeter)
Posted inScience - Zenger News, World Matters, Zenger News

Voles Cut Grass To Shape Their Environment And Fend Off Their Foes

by zenger.news March 15, 2022March 15, 2022
Aerial view of the Northern Amazon on June 11, 2007, in Peru. The pristine forest has borne the impact of roads into the forest and roadside urbanization. The Amazon is under threat from infrastructure development in Peru. (Brent Stirton/Getty Images)
Posted inScience - Zenger News, World Matters, Zenger News

Death Of A Rainforest: Amazon Near Tipping Point Of Transitioning To Savanna, Study Says

by zenger.news March 9, 2022March 10, 2022
Researchers have found that female brown ear ticks (Rhipicephalus appendiculatus) have a protein in their saliva that eliminates the sensation of pain and itching, leaving their victims unaware of their bite. Pictured is a female (left) and male (right) brown ear tick. (Alan R. Walker/CC BY-SA 3.0) 
Posted inScience - Zenger News, World Matters, Zenger News

Drug Made From Tick Saliva Could Ease Itching And Chronic Pain

by zenger.news March 9, 2022March 10, 2022
Two men chase away a swarm of desert locusts early in the morning, on May 21, 2020, in Samburu County, Kenya. Trillions of locusts swarmed across parts of Kenya, Somalia and Ethiopia, following an earlier infestation in February. (Fredrik Lerneryd/Getty Images)
Posted inScience - Zenger News, World Matters, Zenger News

Why Locusts Form Destructive Swarms

by zenger.news March 7, 2022March 8, 2022
The SS Bloody Marsh, which completed construction in 1943, was recently found when the NOAA was mapping the ocean floor off the coast of South Carolina. (NOAA Ocean Exploration)
Posted inScience - Zenger News, World Matters, Zenger News

Researchers Make Startling Find While Mapping Ocean Floor

by zenger.news March 5, 2022March 5, 2022

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