Senior Technical Specialist at Kumamoto University, presents his 2026 MEXT Commendation to President Hisao Ogawa (far right).
The glass walls of this jar allow us to see what's happening to the sediment as a shrimp burrows. Disclaimer: AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to ...
A new type of long-necked plant-eating dinosaur – the largest ever found in Southeast Asia – has been revealed in a study led by researchers at University College London (UCL), Mahasarakham University ...
In an earlier experiment, the team tried using the concrete vibrator while standing in the water. This method was successful in killing shrimp, but also not practical for scaling up.
Research led by the UW has generated a non-chemical, proof-of-principle method that uses a custom-built floating platform (shown here) to apply vibration and pressure to a specific region of sediment.
EU regulations risk leading to inefficient use of biomass for production of sustainable aviation fuel, according to a study from Chalmers University of Technology. The effects of the Iran war on the ...
A new review published in the journal Addiction confirms drinking causes substantial harm to health. Some of those harms may be reversible if the person reduces or stops drinking. cancer (mouth, ...
Our Solar System is currently passing through the Local Interstellar Cloud, a region of highly diluted gas and dust between ...
How do fish survive relentless sunlight in the open waters without getting burned? They make their own natural sunscreen—and now, humans could be one step closer to using it too. Reporting in the Cell ...
MIT engineers developed a new way to amplify the T cell response to mRNA vaccines, using an mRNA adjuvant. This approach could lead to much more powerful cancer vaccines and stronger protection ...
In ten years, levels of this type of pollution in São Paulo, Brazil, reached more than four times the limit recommended by the World Health Organization.
As the fifth anniversary of Hurricane Ida approaches later this summer, researchers across Penn show that flooding was not a statistical anomaly but the result of compounding forces—climate change, ...
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