A new study led by the Institute for Bioengineering of Catalonia (IBEC) has unveiled the first biomaterial that is not only ...
In 1999, Heather Preen contracted E coli on a Devon beach. Two weeks later she died. Now, as a new Channel 4 show dramatises the scandal, her mother, Julie Maughan, explains why she is still looking f ...
About 56 million years ago, Europe and North America began pulling apart to form what became the ever-expanding North Atlantic Ocean. Vast amounts of molten rock from Earth's mantle reached the ocean ...
Bengaluru zonal office, has provisionally attached movable properties -- balance in foreign bank accounts, in US ...
The tiny shell protecting the HIV virus resembles a slightly rounded ice cream cone, but there is nothing sweet about it.
For a long time, people imagined the moon as a quiet, frozen world where nothing much happens anymore. But new research shows ...
In a commonwealth blessed with natural splendor from mountains to coastline, Leesylvania stands as living proof that sometimes the most restorative destinations aren’t found at the end of long ...
How do sea molluscs create the consistent patterns on their shells? How do they know when and how to change the pigment?
In the oceans and on land, scientists are discovering rare, transitional organisms that bridge the gap between Earth’s simplest cells and today’s complex ones.
For most of deep time, spreading ridges released more carbon than volcano chains, changing how we interpret Earth’s climate history.
Experiments reveal that unsaturated lipid membranes promote vesicle fusion and DNA retention during freeze–thaw cycles, highlighting icy environments as potential drivers of protocell evolution. Today ...