Children have fared better with the virus than adults. Immunologists are still trying to figure out why Credit: SA Health & Medicine, December 2021Advertisement Beginning in about January of this year, when the first COVID-19 vaccines started becoming available to essential workers and then, within the next few months, to most all adults, friends of… Continue reading Essential Links in the Immunity Web
Tag: Quantum Stuff
Lost Women of Science, Episode 2: The Matilda Effect
From the COVID vaccine to pulsars to computer programming, women are at the source of many scientific discoveries, inventions and innovations that shape our lives. But in the stories we’ve come to accept about those breakthroughs, women are too often left out. Each season at Lost Women of Science, we’ll look at one woman and… Continue reading Lost Women of Science, Episode 2: The Matilda Effect
Ian and the Limits of Rationality – Issue 107: The Edge
Setting: Chesterfield High, an unusual school in the suburbs of Ohio. The teacher writes on the board: 2, 3, 5, 7, … How, he asks, do we complete this pattern? Now a student might say that the next term is 12. When the teacher asks him why, he says, “I looked out the window and… Continue reading Ian and the Limits of Rationality – Issue 107: The Edge
The Hidden Link Between “Genetic Nurture” and Educational Achievement – Facts So Romantic
The genes that shape how educated you eventually become don’t necessarily have to be passed on to you.Photo Illustration by Peshkova / Shutterstock The phrase “Look down your nose” comes from a time when aristocrats were taller than commoners due to their superior nutrition. European elites would literally look down on their inferiors. So it… Continue reading The Hidden Link Between “Genetic Nurture” and Educational Achievement – Facts So Romantic
COP Architects Furious at Lack of Climate Justice at Pivotal Summit
Researchers who helped to draft parts of the first United Nations environmental agreements nearly 30 years ago say that that low income countries are being massively let down in the current COP26 climate talks. The 1992 UN Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, was attended by scientists and policymakers from rich and poor countries.… Continue reading COP Architects Furious at Lack of Climate Justice at Pivotal Summit
David Attenborough’s Life in Color – Issue 107: The Edge
The natural world is a feast of color and pattern, but what is it all for? An orange tiger seems awfully conspicuous stalking its prey. Why not hide in the foliage with green or brown fur? Multiple species of tiny yellow damselfish swim over and around coral reefs. How do they mate with the right… Continue reading David Attenborough’s Life in Color – Issue 107: The Edge
Global Emissions Rebound to Pre-COVID Levels
When COVID-19 disrupted the world’s economies last year, global carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from fossil fuel use fell by two billion metric tons. As some of the lead scientists of the Global Carbon Project (an international group that tracks greenhouse gas emissions), we wrote about how to keep this emissions drop going, including how COVID… Continue reading Global Emissions Rebound to Pre-COVID Levels
How to Build a Society for All to Enjoy – Issue 107: The Edge
Structuresstructure (noun): the arrangement of or relation between the parts of something complex; the organization of interrelated elements. 1. My partner trained as an architect, and now he is cursed. His curse is not just working like an architect works, with grueling hours and implacable clients, although that’s true. His curse is seeing like an… Continue reading How to Build a Society for All to Enjoy – Issue 107: The Edge
U.S.-China Deal Boosts Climate Talks in Final Stretch
GLASGOW, Scotland—The U.S. and China announced a wide-ranging plan for climate cooperation yesterday to inject momentum into global efforts to contain warming. The joint declaration comes as climate talks speed toward a conclusion here, and officials hope that cooperation between the world’s two largest emitters could pave the way for progress at this year’s summit.… Continue reading U.S.-China Deal Boosts Climate Talks in Final Stretch
Genes Reveal How Some Rockfish Live up to 200 Years
Few groups of animals encapsulate the extremes of longevity more than fish. While coral reef pygmy govies survive for less than ten weeks, Greenland sharks can endure more than 500 years. So when a team of biologists at the University of California, Berkeley, wanted to explore the genetics of aging, they grabbed their fishing gear.… Continue reading Genes Reveal How Some Rockfish Live up to 200 Years