If you’ve ever thought you may be running a temperature yet couldn’t find a thermometer, you aren’t alone.
articles
NASA Wants to Identify Phytoplankton Species from Space. Here’s Why.
They’re small, but they’re mighty. From producing oxygen we breathe to soaking up carbon we emit to feeding fish we eat, tiny phytoplankton are a crucial part of ocean ecosystems and essential to life as we know it on Earth.
Freezing, Spawning, Saving Coral Through Uh, Minnesota Partnership
Student scientists successfully collected coral egg and sperm bundles to test on a redesigned cryo freezing device at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa’s Hawaiʻi Institute of Marine Biology (HIMB) on Moku o Loʻe (Coconut Island) in the evening of June 19, marking a crucial step in saving the species threatened by climate change and pollution.
Pacific Cod Are Moving North—Will They Be Able to Spawn There?
New research predicts how spawning habitat in the Bering Sea may shift over the coming century of climate change.
Surprise! Weaker Bonds Can Make Polymers Stronger
A team of chemists from MIT and Duke University has discovered a counterintuitive way to make polymers stronger: introduce a few weaker bonds into the material.
Sustainability in the Mix
Paving the way for sustainable construction with self-healing, self-sensing, and hydrophobic concrete.