STORY
Study: Father-Daughter Bonds Extend Female Baboon Lifespans

Last updated 4 weeks ago

STORY
Yale Study Links COVID Vaccines to Rare Syndrome

Last updated 5 months ago

STORY
Wildlife: Orca Mother Observed Grieving Over Second Dead Calf

Last updated 6 months ago

STORY
World's Oldest Wild Bird Lays Egg at 74

Last updated 6 months ago

STORY
23andMe to Slash 40% of Staff

Last updated 6 months ago

STORY
Study: Marmosets Call Each Other by Names

Last updated 6 months ago

STORY
Report: Temperatures May Have Exceeded +1.5°C a Decade Ago

Last updated 6 months ago

STORY
Scientists Turn Fly Carcasses Into Biodegradable Plastic

Last updated 6 months ago


Biotech firm aims to create ‘ChatGPT of biology’ – will it work?
New Scientist #3 - 4 weeks ago

Mysterious Blobs Found in Cells Are Rewriting How Life Works
Scientific American #1 - 3 weeks ago

MicroRNA − a new Nobel laureate describes the scientific process of discovering these tiny molecules that turn genes on and off
The Conversation #1 - 3 weeks ago

New approach to rewriting bacteria’s genetic code could lead to novel medicines
Science #1 - 6 weeks ago

French biotech Generare speeds up hunt for new drugs by cloning natural molecules
TechCrunch #6 - 5 weeks ago

Mysterious ‘Dark Fungi’ Are Lurking Everywhere
Scientific American #1 - 3 weeks ago

Tenacious curiosity in the lab can lead to a Nobel Prize – mRNA research exemplifies the unpredictable value of basic scientific research
The Conversation #1 - 2 months ago

State-of-the-Art AI Predicts Gene Activity in Human Cells
Psychology Today #2 - 2 weeks ago

A Virtual Cell Is a ‘Holy Grail’ of Science. It’s Getting Closer.
Atlantic #3 - 6 months ago

The First Ever Fossilized Chromosomes Came from a Freeze-Dried Mammoth
Scientific American #1 - 4 weeks ago

Extraterrestrial life may look nothing like life on Earth − so astrobiologists are coming up with a framework to study how complex systems evolve
The Conversation #2 - 6 days ago

The Xenobot Future Is Coming—Start Planning Now
Wired #2 - 8 months ago

A cell pulls off one of the 'Holy Grails' of biotechnology
NPR Online News #3 - 4 weeks ago

Revolutionary Genetics Research Shows RNA May Rule Our Genome
Scientific American #1 - 3 weeks ago

‘Jurassic World’ scientists still haven’t learned that just because you can doesn’t mean you should – real-world genetic engineers can learn from the cautionary tale
The Conversation #2 - 5 weeks ago

How the Human Genome Project revolutionised biology
Economist #1 - 4 months ago

A scientist working to create 'mirror life' discovered it could be 'a perfect bioweapon.' She's asking other researchers to stop.
Business Insider #19 - 3 weeks ago

These Bizarre Fish Walk on Six Legs and Taste the Location of Buried Prey
Scientific American #2 - 3 weeks ago

AI plus gene editing promises to shift biotech into high gear
The Conversation #7 - 5 weeks ago

Cells and how to run them
Economist #1 - 3 years ago

Does ocean acidification alter fish behavior? Fraud allegations create a sea of doubt
Science #3 - 2 months ago

Bacterial ‘Nanosyringe’ Could Deliver Gene Therapy to Human Cells
Scientific American #2 - 6 weeks ago

Quantum physics proposes a new way to study biology – and the results could revolutionize our understanding of how life works
The Conversation #7 - 2 months ago

The Animal Kingdom Is Full of Genetic Screwballs
Atlantic #3 - 3 years ago

The viral universe - Viruses have big impacts on ecology and evolution as well as human health
Economist #1 - 11 months ago

Hope for New Drugs Arises from the Sea
Scientific American #2 - 2 months ago

Cells have more mini ‘organs’ than researchers thought − unbound by membranes, these rogue organelles challenge biology’s fundamentals
The Conversation #10 - 6 weeks ago

Could We Store Our Data in DNA?
New Yorker #1 - 1 day ago

‘Unprecedented risk’ to life on Earth: Scientists call for halt on ‘mirror life’ microbe research
Guardian #8 - 4 weeks ago

To Find Life in the Universe, Find the Computation
Scientific American #2 - 2 weeks ago

Starting a Revolution Isn’t Enough
Atlantic #5 - 2 months ago

The 17th-century cloth merchant who discovered the vast realm of tiny microbes – an appreciation of Antonie van Leeuwenhoek
The Conversation #5 - 7 months ago
More Biology & biochemistry News


Political Stance
Split
Left
Right
Establishment Stance
Split
Critical
Pro
Writing Style
Provocative
Nuanced
Depth
Breezy
Detailed
Shelf-Life
Short
Long
Recency
Evergreen
Latest