Science & Health News
A monkey ate the wrong squirrel – and started an outbreak
April 15, 2026 11:13 pm
| Jay Kakade
In January 2023, an infant monkey made a bad choice at snack time. In a rare discovery, researchers found that by eating a rodent known as a fire-footed rope squirrel, the primate unwittingly spread monkeypox to nearly a third of its troop.
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March 17, 2026 02:03 pm
A new science and health news publication.
Cheeky caterpillars trick ants into treating them as queens
April 14, 2026 05:02 pm
| Jay Kakade
Baby caterpillars have figured out how to get themselves the royal treatment in certain ant colonies – getting carried around like precious cargo, fed on demand, guarded and being rescued from danger – by posing as queen ants.
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April 14, 2026 12:02 am | Chelsea HaneyResearchers have identified a hybrid photoreceptor in the eyes of fish that carries traits of both rods and cones – a combination that doesn’t fit either category. It suggests the retina may be far more flexible than scientists have long assumed.
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April 13, 2026 09:02 am | Toluwalogo Niji-OlawepoThe explanation is weirder than you might think – in fact, the sky is probably closer to violet. Tiny air molecules and larger particles like dust and pollution scatter sunlight in different ways, painting the sky from deep violet to hazy white.
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April 12, 2026 10:02 am | Jay KakadeFascinating new analysis of fabric samples and other artifacts from a cave in Oregon reveals that humans may have stitched clothing as far back as 12,600 years ago – giving us an understanding of a critical aspect of evolution in that period.
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April 11, 2026 10:02 am | Jay KakadeSome of us get bitten far more often than others – but it seems we each also appear tasty to different species of mosquito. New research illuminates what's making a given individual attractive, and to which mosquitos.
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April 10, 2026 02:04 pm | Mike FrancoIn a triple win for green research, scientists at the University of Cambridge have developed a new sunlight-activated reactor that uses one waste stream to tackle another – all while producing clean hydrogen, and promising to be profitable at scale.
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April 10, 2026 10:11 am | Jay KakadeSometimes, the most important paleontological discoveries may come from the most disgusting materials. A fossilized vomit sample dating back nearly 300 million years revealed how an ancient mammal gorged on all manner of prey.
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