How Chimps' Captivation With Crystals May Have Jump-started The Human Mind
Read: How Chimps’ Captivation With Crystals May Have Jump-started The Human Mind
Injectable Backup Livers Could Help Thousands Too Sick For Transplant Surgery
Mushroom Supplement Reduced COVID Vaccine Side Effects And Boosted Antibodies
3D Map Of Ancient Hydrogen Light Reveals Hidden Universe 10 Billion Years Ago
Baby Teeth Stem Cells Reverse Motor Deficits In Cerebral Palsy Model
Black Soldier Fly Larvae Destroy Most Human Viruses In Waste Within Eight Days
Print, Pump, Practice: A 3D-Printed Heart That Bleeds Ink
Digital Reconstruction Of 3.67-Million-Year-Old Fossil Face Finds Unexpected Link To East Africa
Fuel Cells That Clean Themselves Could Finally Run On Dirty Gas
Ultraprocessed Food At Age 3 Linked To Emotional And Behavioural Problems At Age 5
Tolerant Macaques Are Born With Larger Amygdalae, And Shrink Them Over Time
Electron Ptychography Reveals Atomic ‘Mouse Bite’ Defects Inside Computer Chips














Lately within seconds of going to an article of interest from the email notification I see a blank space bottom of the screen, and the article behind it is grayed out. I see no way to change this (Mac, ARC browser) so am locked out of Science Blog newsletter articles. Please help, I'm betting I am not the only one in this state of FAIL.
The idea that our earliest ancestors might have been drawn to shiny, structurally interesting objects before they had any practical use for them is quietly profound. It suggests curiosity came before utility, that we were fascinated before we were clever. Which, if you think about it, is still how most good science works.