
Strange Material Breaks a Classic Rule of Physics
An unusual semiconductor is making physicists rethink the science of extreme conditions

Rachel Nuwer is a freelance science journalist and author who regularly contributes to Scientific American, the New York Times and National Geographic, among other publications. Follow Nuwer on Twitter @RachelNuwer Credit: Nick Higgins

An unusual semiconductor is making physicists rethink the science of extreme conditions

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Animals with a backbone may have first emitted something akin to bleeps, grunts, crackles, toots and snorts more than 400 million years ago

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Climate change may be leading to strange hostilities between different animal species over limited resources

A machine-learning algorithm predicts that more than half of the thousands of species whose conservation status has yet to be assessed are probably in danger of disappearing for good

Their efforts could benefit countless others in need of an end-of-life measure

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Natural selection propels the giraffe family to absolute extremes—and it is not just about the absurdly long necks

Parasites play an outsize role in balancing ecosystems, and some species may be in danger

An assessment of chimpanzees, gorillas and bonobos reveals that our economic “footprint” is the primary driver of great apes’ fate

Fish species were found deliberately chafing on sharks around the world, though why they do so is not entirely clear

Poaching brings evolutionary pressure for tusklessness

A dig in the Nevada desert finds telltale seeds at the site of a late Paleolithic hearth

Here’s how a flower extract keeps off mosquitoes

The risk of infection increased by up to 30 percent or so among people with observances in the first 10 months of 2020

An online animal catalogue lets you decode communications and other behaviors for everyone’s favorite pachyderm

Researchers explore how an amphetamine and a psychedelic help parasitic fungi spread their spores through insects’ doomed mating attempts
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