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Today's post is Science Today's last. Thanks for joining us these past eight years!
Ecologically- and economically-rich coral reefs occur in very specific places on our planet.
New species finds include a succulent plant, worms and crustaceans near a hydrothermal vent and desert bees.
How can we effectively communicate the urgency around plastic pollution in the ocean to effect change?
Auroras, Energy and Climate, oh my: here are a few headlines that follow up on previous stories or touch on news that we missed this week.
The Academy’s Zeray Alemseged reveals his latest discovery—human tool use dating back to...
New research shows that salps aren't only efficient eaters, they also are important in the ocean carbon cycle.
Results are starting to be released about the Census of Marine Life-- and the findings may surprise you!
New research shows that the symbiotic relationship between a salamander and some algae goes beyond the egg.
318 million-year-old footprints confirm that reptiles were the first inland vertebrates.
The creatures at the bottom of the marine food chain are disappearing at an alarming rate.
Using a high-speed camera, scientists have found how some mosses release their spores.