Well done article from @us.theguardian.com on how the Trump administration's war on science and data is harming the American public.
"Experts warn that Trump’s destruction of the country’s data infrastructure will have lasting impacts on all aspects of life..."
www.theguardian.com/us-news/ng-i...
After 15 years working with North Korean researchers on Mount Paektu, geophysicist James Hammond reflects on sanctions, science diplomacy and the risks of cutting scientific ties entirely:
Proteins recovered from 400,000-year-old fossils show humans living today may have inherited genes from Homo erectus: "There’s far greater complexity in terms of hominins across Eurasia than previously recognized," says @york.ac.uk geochemist Kirsty Penkman. @science.org
I still think they should have called it Beuro
Odysseus was always welcome at Woolworths.
🧪How do you study microplastics when everything in your lab is also made of plastic?
I spoke with researchers in Germany, Norway, the US and Australia about how they try their best to create plastic-free labs, from 100% cotton lab coats to (near) 100% steel laboratories. @cenmag.bsky.social
The brightest minds in robotics have successfully engineered your uncle at a wedding.
Jogging on an empty stomach during peak barbeque time. I only have myself to blame.