Tuesday, October 18, 2022

The U.S. Just Lost 26 Years' Worth of Progress on Life Expectancy

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October 17, 2022

Public Health

The U.S. Just Lost 26 Years' Worth of Progress on Life Expectancy

COVID and overdose deaths have sharply cut U.S. life expectancy, with Indigenous peoples experiencing the biggest decline

By Tanya Lewis

Climate Change

Mountain Goats Battle Bighorn Sheep over Climate-Limited Resources

Climate change may be leading to strange hostilities between different animal species over limited resources

By Rachel Nuwer

Renewable Energy

An Alaska Air Base Wants to Build a Micro Nuclear Plant for Backup Power

A proposed 1.5-megawatt nuclear facility will supplement power from a decades-old coal plant that powers one of the nation's most strategic air bases

By Daniel Cusick,E&E News

Psychology

Uncertainty Can Speed Up Climate Action, New Book Explains

New books reviewed on the power of doubt, 1970s science-fiction icons, consciousness, interstellar travel, and more

By Amy Brady

Agriculture

This Shrub Could Supply Rubber, Insect Repellent and Glue

Researchers and tire companies hope drought-tolerant guayule can provide a sustainable economic boost to the water-stressed Southwest

By Ula Chrobak

Pollution

People Exposed to Harmful Wildfire Smoke Often Live Far from Lung Specialists

Climate change is increasing the frequency and severity of wildfires, and those most affected by their pollution must drive miles to access care

By Julie Appleby,Jazmin Orozco Rodriguez,Kaiser Health News

Memory

Naps Not Needed to Make New Memories

Rats kept awake after exploring novel objects remembered the original items, but not where they'd seen them, raising interesting questions about human sleep.

By Karen Hopkin | 05:27

Dinosaurs

Remarkable Dinosaur Mummy Has 'Glittering' Skin Gouged by Ancient Crocs

An exquisite dinosaur mummy called Dakota shows evidence it was feasted on by ancient predators

By Nicoletta Lanese,LiveScience

Intelligence

Neurons in a Dish Learn to Play Pong

A cellular version of the computer game challenges assumptions about intelligence

By Heidi Ledford,Nature magazine
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Today in Science: Humans think unbelievably slowly

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