Do Cows Use Tools? This One Does.
A pet cow named Veronika can scratch her own back with a broom — the first scientifically documented case of tool use in cows, researchers say.
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A pet cow named Veronika can scratch her own back with a broom — the first scientifically documented case of tool use in cows, researchers say.
By Emily Anthes

The Space Launch System and Orion capsule were transported to the launchpad before an astronaut mission that could launch as soon as Feb. 6.
By Kenneth Chang

Studying tree rings helped scientists pinpoint when Mount Rainier last sent a lahar down its steep slopes, which could help planners anticipate future mudflows.
By Katherine Kornei

A professor at the University of California, Santa Cruz, he was a key contributor to a landmark paper that laid out how the universe came to look like it does today.
By Kenneth Chang

Astronauts Are Safe After NASA Medical Evacuation From Space Station
The members of Crew-11 — two American, one Russian and one Japanese — splashed down after one became ill, prompting an early return.
By Kenneth Chang

For the World’s Food Supply, Federal Funding Cuts Have Long-Term Impacts
The U.S. Agency for International Development has been a major supporter of global agriculture research. Now many studies are being scuttled or scaled back.
By Ted Alcorn

Toby Kiers, World Champion of Fungus
This year’s recipient of the Tyler Prize for Environmental Achievement talks about “punk science,” microbial economics and thinking like a mycorrhizal fungus.
By Alan Burdick

What a Wolf Pup’s Stomach Revealed About the Woolly Rhino’s Extinction
Scientists prepared a high-quality sequence of the giant mammal’s genome based on a specimen preserved in Siberian permafrost.
By Ari Daniel

The Sea Lions of the Galápagos Are Not Ready to Give Up Mother’s Milk
Animals that researchers call “supersucklers” come back to nurse even after they can hunt, mate and fend for themselves.
By Elie Dolgin

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Has Your Scientific Work Been Cut? We Want to Hear.
For a new series, Times journalists are speaking with scientists whose research has ended as a result of policy changes by the Trump administration.
By Alan Burdick

She Tracked the Health of Fish That Coastal Communities Depend On
Ana Vaz monitored crucial fish stocks in the Southeast and the Gulf of Mexico until she lost her job at NOAA.
By Austyn Gaffney

She Studied Mosquitoes to Prevent Malaria
Jenny Carlson Donnelly traveled to malaria-affected countries to test mosquitoes and save lives. Then she lost her job at U.S.A.I.D.
By Alexa Robles-Gil

His Group Made World-Class Measurements of Atomic Elements
Yuri Ralchenko led one of the oldest teams at the National Institute of Standards and Technology. The fate of some experiments hangs in the air.
By Katrina Miller

She Studied How to Protect Children From Pollution and Heat
“There was no warning, no conversation,” said Jane Clougherty, an environmental health scientist, who had a federal grant canceled earlier this year.
By Sachi Kitajima Mulkey

What the Golden Ratio Says About Your Belly Button
The secret beauty in apples, stars and the center of you.
By Steven Strogatz and Jens Mortensen

How a Puzzle About Fractions Got Brain Scans Rolling
A story of bowling pins, patterns and medical miracles.
By Steven Strogatz and Jens Mortensen

Where Pi Equals 4 and Circles Aren’t Round
In the world of taxicab geometry, even the Pythagorean theorem takes a back seat.
By Steven Strogatz and Jens Mortensen

How Bees, Beer Cans and Data Solve the Same Packing Problem
Trying to fit it all in? There’s a trick to it, even in 24 dimensions.
By Steven Strogatz and Jens Mortensen

Teach Triangular Numbers With Steven Strogatz and The New York Times
Invite students to uncover how a centuries-old math puzzle helped us see inside the human brain.
By Patrick Honner

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For Real, a Natural History of Misinformation
It’s not just humans who suffer from leading one another astray. So do fish, flies and even bacteria.
By Carl Zimmer

Life Lessons From (Very Old) Bowhead Whales
A gene that helped bowheads adapt to frigid Arctic waters also granted them extraordinary longevity. Could it help aging humans become more resilient?
By Carl Zimmer

Save the Whales. But Save the Microbes, Too.
Conservation biologists propose a daunting task: protecting Earth’s diversity of bacteria and other microbes.
By Carl Zimmer

How Did Hands Evolve? The Answer Is Behind You.
The evolutionary blueprint for hands was borrowed in part from a much older genetic plan for our nether regions, a new study suggests.
By Carl Zimmer

Uncovering the Genes That Let Our Ancestors Walk Upright
A new study reveals some of the crucial molecular steps on the path to bipedalism.
By Carl Zimmer

This Dinosaur Really Knew How to Get a Grip
A fossil of Manipulonyx reshetovi, found in a Mongolian desert, shows how the dinosaur used its specialized claw to snatch eggs.
By Jack Tamisiea

Why This Fish Actually Needs a Hole in the Head
A cavity in the middle of the rockhead poacher’s skull might be used like a maraca to produce sound, new research suggests.
By Alexa Robles-Gil

Scientists Discover Oldest Poison, on 60,000-Year-Old Arrows
Residues on arrow tips found in South Africa hint at how far back in history humans have been using poison for survival.
By Becky Ferreira

Who’s the Parasite Now? This Newly Discovered ‘Fairy Lantern’ Flower.
Found in a forest outside Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, the plant steals nutrients from subterranean fungi.
By Douglas Main

The Meek Really Did Inherit the Earth, at Least Among Ants
How did ants take over the world? The answer may be skin deep.
By Cara Giaimo

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From Seal Meat to Ice Sheets: A Century of Reporting From Antarctica
Generations of Times journalists have journeyed there with scientists. Their coverage traces humankind’s changing relationship with the most mysterious continent.
By Raymond Zhong

How Wall Street Turned Its Back on Climate Change
Six years after the financial industry pledged to use trillions to fight climate change and reshape finance, its efforts have largely collapsed.
By David Gelles

World’s First Treaty to Protect the High Seas Becomes Law
Over two decades after negotiations began, the High Seas Treaty is designed to protect biodiversity in international waters by enabling conservation zones.
By Sachi Kitajima Mulkey

Trump Wants to Halt Almost All Coal Plant Shutdowns. It Could Get Messy.
Even as administration officials vowed this week to head off scheduled retirements, some aging plants are now breaking, and costs could run to the billions.
By Claire Brown and Brad Plumer

We Asked for Environmental Fixes in Your State. You Sent In Thousands.
Readers submitted more than 3,200 ideas for our 50 States, 50 Fixes series. Before the year ends, we wanted to share just a few more of them.
By Cara Buckley and Catrin Einhorn


Two regulatory rollbacks, along with a new A.I. experiment in Medicare, raise some worrisome questions.
By Paula Span

The review looked at more than three dozen studies and found no evidence that acetaminophen increased the risk of neurodevelopmental disorders in children.
By Azeen Ghorayshi

The case could affect thousands of claims that the widely used weedkiller causes cancer.
By Karen Zraick and Hiroko Tabuchi

Construction can continue on an $11.2 billion project off the coast of Virginia, said to be 70 percent complete.
By Brad Plumer

Federal officials working on the new dietary guidelines had considered limiting men to one drink daily. The final advice was only that everyone should drink less.
By Roni Caryn Rabin

A federal judge said the Empire Wind project off Long Island would suffer “irreparable harm” if the Trump administration continued to hold up work.
By Lisa Friedman

The Trump administration has signed $11 billion in agreements with African nations, in deals tied to foreign policy goals.
By Stephanie Nolen

Two American astronauts and others from Japan and Russia landed in the Pacific Ocean after an early journey home from the International Space Station because one of them was ill.
By Axel Boada

This was featured in live coverage.
By Kenneth Chang

This was featured in live coverage.
By Kenneth Chang
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