Risky Business

Acetaminophen, better known as paracetamol, became the go-to drug during the early days of the coronavirus pandemic in 2020. The painkiller – used in brand names Tylenol and Panadol – helps reduce a variety of symptoms, including headaches and fever. But one study found that the common...

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One-Child Policy

The erect-crested penguins are an odd and mysterious bunch. The penguin species lives on remote islands hundreds of miles off the southern coast of New Zealand. It is considered endangered even though scientists haven’t thoroughly studied the species. “No one knows virtually anything about them,” Lloyd Davis,...

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Rewriting History

Italian archaeologists discovered a number of 2,000-year-old bronze statues in a thermal spring in Italy’s Tuscany region, a finding that could unveil new insights about the relationship between the ancient Romans and the Etruscan civilization, CBS News reported. Researchers came across the artifacts while excavating a...

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The Big Shrink

Hunters kill rhinoceros for their horns, either for trophies or as high-value commodities used in traditional Chinese and Vietnamese medicine. But rhino poaching hasn’t only threatened the mammals’ lives. It has also changed the size of their horns, Sky News reported. In a new study, scientists found...

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Thou Shalt Be Clean

Archaeologists recently discovered that the oldest sentence ever written in the earliest alphabet known to man was about personal hygiene, the Guardian reported. In 2017, an archaeological team discovered a double-sided ivory comb in the ancient Canaanite city of Lachish in south-central Israel. The team believes...

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Blindspots

Astronomers have discovered “planet killer” asteroids orbiting not too far from the Earth, raising concerns that the celestial bodies could pose a threat to humanity in the future, USA Today reported. In a new study, a research team detected three asteroids roaming around the orbits of...

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Endless Supply

Patients suffering from blood disorders won’t have to worry about finding proper donors in the future, according to the Washington Times. Last week, two British patients became the first people in the world to have laboratory-grown red blood cells successfully transfused into them. The UK’s National Health...

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Haunted Jungles

Deep within the uninhabited forests of Príncipe island off the west coast of Africa, strange and haunting sounds have been emerging at night for decades. First heard a century ago on this island belonging to Sao Tome and Príncipe, the noise can sound like the rasp...

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Storm Riders

There is a consensus among animals to run and hide when a violent storm approaches. One bird species, however, not only stands up to squalls, they dive right in and use them to stay safe, Smithsonian Magazine reported. For more than 11 years, scientists have used GPS...

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Goodbye, Freddy Krueger

Scientists, recognizing that bad dreams can have a debilitating effect on people’s general well-being, recently developed a new technique using piano chords to significantly reduce recurring nightmares almost completely, Science News reported. For years, the standard treatment for nightmare disorders has been imagery rehearsal therapy (IRT):...

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A Family Portrait

A new genetic study on Neanderthal remains at a Siberian cave is providing scientists with the first-ever glimpse of how a family of the extinct hominin species looked, Live Science reported. In 2019, excavators found a historical treasure trove at the Chagyrskaya Cave in the Altai...

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Keeping It Real

When a college professor in the Philippines challenged her students to create cheat-proof headgear for their mechanical engineering test last month, she had little idea how far they would take it, the Washington Post reported. One student at the Bicol University College of Engineering walled himself...

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Lasting Legacy

Colonialism didn’t just have an impact on communities and regions but also affected the flora and fauna of colonized territories, according to a new study. Scientists recently found that the expansion of the European empires from the 15th century onwards resulted in the spread of many...

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Welcome, Life

A new study discovered that one of Saturn’s 83 moons holds one of the key elements essential to life, according to Smithsonian Magazine. Data from NASA’s Cassini space probe – which ended in 2017 – previously found that the moon Enceladus contains many of the components...

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A Little Elbow Room

Frog numbers in Switzerland have experienced a major increase in recent years. That’s thanks to the digging of hundreds of additional ponds, the BBC reported. The project began in the Aargau canton in 1999, when conservationists and local officials decided to take action over declining amphibian populations....

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Mesopotamian Gondoliers

New remote sensing data collected via drone showed that an ancient city in modern-day southern Iraq closely resembled the famous Italian city of Venice, ART News reported. The Mesopotamian city of Lagash was founded more than 4,600 years ago between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers. First...

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A Matter of Bias

A new study found that schoolteachers exhibit some bias when it comes to grading boys and girls, Sky News reported. Italian researchers compared data from nearly 40,000 test scores from year 10 students in standardized tests of language and math with the grades they achieved in...

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