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Search Result for “scientists”

Showing 1 - 10 of 28

WORLD

Cuttlefish dazzle mates with light patterns invisible to humans

New York Times, Published on 27/01/2026

» NEW YORK - Many of the snazziest decorations in the animal kingdom are charm offensives, put on by creatures trying to mate. While some of these adornments, like a peacock’s tail feathers or a moose’s antlers, are obvious even to humans, others can be perceived only with sensory capabilities that we do not have.

WORLD

Seal milk is the cream of the molecular crop

New York Times, Published on 26/11/2025

» NEW YORK — Collecting milk from a nursing seal is no easy task.

WORLD

This bird's beautiful, but he has a huge blind spot

New York Times, Published on 26/11/2025

» NEW YORK - To woo mates, male golden pheasants are dressed to impress. They strut around with cinnamon-colored tail quills and a striped hood of orange and black feathers. Then there is its forehead crest of yellow plumage that is slightly reminiscent of a certain politician’s slicked-back coiffure.

LIFE

Can a photograph reveal your biological age?

New York Times, Published on 09/05/2025

» It is no secret that some people appear to age faster than others, especially after enduring stressful periods. But some scientists think a person's physical appearance could reveal more about them than meets the eye — down to the health of their tissues and cells, a concept known as "biological age."

WORLD

New photos from Titanic show long-lost statue and damaged bow

New York Times, Published on 04/09/2024

» NEW YORK - In its first expedition to the Titanic in 14 years, the company with exclusive salvage rights to the wreckage site said it had located a bronze statue thought to have been lost forever, and it also discovered some deterioration of the ship.

WORLD

26,000 evacuate as US wildfire spreads

New York Times, Published on 04/07/2024

» CALIFORNIA - When a fast-moving wildfire began marching across thousands of acres of Butte County on Tuesday, David Pittman did not panic. He packed up his family, including their 90-pound (40-kilogramme) African sulcata tortoise, and drove to his sister’s house across town in Oroville, California.

WORLD

Subterranean ‘baby dragons’ found to sneak up to the surface

New York Times, Published on 13/03/2024

» NEW YORK - Scientists have discovered that blind cave salamanders in northern Italy leave their underground homes to go on expeditions to the surface. Eyeless and ghostly pale from millions of years spent below ground, the salamanders appear to commute back and forth to the sunny surface using springs where water bubbles up from hundreds of feet deep.

WORLD

What to know about dengue fever as cases spread

New York Times, Published on 25/10/2023

» NEW YORK - Cases of dengue fever, a mosquito-borne viral illness that can be fatal, are surging around the world. The increase is occurring both in places that have long struggled with the disease and in areas where its spread was unheard-of until the last year or two, including France, Italy and Chad, in central Africa. Last week, health officials in Pasadena, California, reported a first case of locally transmitted dengue.

WORLD

Cockroach sex takes strange turn, more mutations emerge

New York Times, Published on 29/03/2023

» NEW YORK: Cockroaches are changing up their sex lives, and it is all our fault. Faced with sweet poisoned bait, roaches first ended up with a mutation that made them hate sweets, hindering their mating strategies. Now, more roach mutations are emerging, showing you cannot keep a good pest down.

LIFE

Chinese hackers targeted Russian defence data, report says

New York Times, Published on 06/06/2022

» TEL AVIV: The emails landed March 23 in the inboxes of scientists and engineers at several of Russia’s military research and development institutes, purportedly sent by Russia’s Ministry of Health. They carried a subject line that offered seemingly tantalizing information about a “list of persons under U.S. sanctions for invading Ukraine".