Skip to content
ScienceBlog.com
  • Topics
    • Brain & Behavior
    • Earth, Energy & Environment
    • Health
    • Technology
    • Life & Non-humans
    • Physics & Mathematics
    • Space
  • Our Bloggers
  • Our Substack
  • Follow Us!
    • Bluesky
    • Threads
    • FaceBook
    • Google News
    • Twitter/X
  • Contribute/Contact

UC Berkeley

Monkeys routinely consume fruit containing alcohol, shedding light on our own taste for booze

Categories Life & Non-humans

Word gap: When money’s tight, parents talk less to kids

Categories Brain & Behavior

A machine learning breakthrough: using satellite images to improve human lives

Categories Earth, Energy & Environment, Technology
A new model by UC Berkeley seismologists proposes that Earth’s inner core grows faster on its east side (left) than on its west. Gravity equalizes the asymmetric growth by pushing iron crystals toward the north and south poles (arrows). This tends to align the long axis of iron crystals along the planet’s rotation axis (dashed line), explaining the different travel times for seismic waves through the inner core. (Graphic by Marine Lasbleis)

Is Earth’s core lopsided? Strange goings-on in our planet’s interior.

Categories Earth, Energy & Environment

Young T. rexes had a powerful bite, capable of exerting one-sixth the force of an adult

Categories Life & Non-humans
UC Berkeley psychologists have joined forces with People Power, a home healthcare tech company, to install networks of sensors that hook up to AI and smartphone technology in the homes of some 350 dementia patients nationwide.

‘Eye in the sky’ sensors reduce stress of in-home dementia care

Categories Brain & Behavior, Technology
Cows rest near a cave in Yunnan, China, where horseshoe bats were found carrying a virus that closely resembles SAR-CoV-2. A new analysis finds that the expansion of concentrated livestock production in China may be creating favorable conditions for coronaviruses to jump from horseshoe bats to domesticated animals before infecting humans. (AP photo by The Yomiuri Shimbun)

Analysis reveals global ‘hot spots’ where new coronaviruses may emerge

Categories Health, Life & Non-humans

How many T. rexes were there? Billions.

Categories Life & Non-humans

Light unbound: Data limits could vanish with new optical antennas

Categories Technology

Binary stars are all around us, new map of solar neighborhood shows

Categories Space

Massive experiment shows why ticket sellers hit you with last-second fees

Categories Brain & Behavior

How can local governments achieve equity in their communities?

Categories Social Sciences

How Robinhood trading app drove the GameStop ‘supernova’

Categories Brain & Behavior, Social Sciences, Technology
Older posts
Newer posts
← Previous Page1 … Page3 Page4 Page5 … Page9 Next →

Bloggers

  • Cities of tomorrow: young Poles share vision for smarter, greener living
  • On the City of Fresno’s laudable waste-handling programs
  • Serving California’s PG&E, world’s first ultra-long duration hybrid green hydrogen energy storage microgrid moves forward
  • Truing the Sun
  • Hidden hunger in Europe: well fed yet undernourished
  • Where curiosity meets innovation: EU science fair in Belgium dazzles young minds
  • Spiralling weather and climate impacts documented in WMO report
Substack subscription form sign up

© 2026 ScienceBlog.com | Follow our RSS / XML feed