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Rare access to hammerhead shark embryos reveals secrets of its unique head development

  • Written by Gareth J. Fraser, Associate Professor of Evolutionary Developmental Biology, University of Florida
imageThe characteristic hammer-shaped head is just becoming visible in this image of an embryonic bonnethead shark. Scale bar = 1 cm.Steven Byrum and Gareth Fraser, Department of Biology, University of Florida

Scientists very rarely get access to most sharks, the development of their young or the nursery grounds where they grow. So seeing a hammerhead...

Read more: Rare access to hammerhead shark embryos reveals secrets of its unique head development

Centuries after Christine de Pizan wrote a book railing against misogyny, Taylor Swift is building her own ‘City of Ladies’

  • Written by Jill R. Fehleison, Professor of History and Interdisciplinary Studies, Quinnipiac University

In her work, Taylor Swift has taken inspiration from women of the past, including actress Clara Bow, socialite Rebekah Harkness and her grandmother Marjorie Finlay, who was an opera singer.

But sometimes I wonder what the 34-year-old pop star would think of the life and work of Italian-born French writer Christine de Pizan.

Back in the 15th...

Read more: Centuries after Christine de Pizan wrote a book railing against misogyny, Taylor Swift is building...

Despite its big night at the Oscars, ‘Oppenheimer’ is a disappointment and a lost opportunity

  • Written by Naoko Wake, Professor of History, Michigan State University
imageThe U.S. detonates an atomic bomb at Bikini Atoll in Micronesia in the first underwater test of the device.Universal History Archive/Getty Images

With 13 Oscars nominations and seven wins – including best picture – “Oppenheimer” was the star of the 96th Academy Awards.

Christopher Nolan’s blockbuster, which told the...

Read more: Despite its big night at the Oscars, ‘Oppenheimer’ is a disappointment and a lost opportunity

Biden defends immigration policy during State of the Union, blaming Republicans in Congress for refusing to act

  • Written by Jean Lantz Reisz, Clinical Associate Professor of Law, Co-Director, USC Immigration Clinic, University of Southern California
imagePresident Joe Biden delivers his State of the Union address on March 7, 2024. Alex Brandon-Pool/Getty Images

President Joe Biden delivered the annual State of the Union address on March 7, 2024, casting a wide net on a range of major themes – the economy, abortion rights, threats to democracy, the wars in Gaza and Ukraine – that are...

Read more: Biden defends immigration policy during State of the Union, blaming Republicans in Congress for...

Detroiters more likely to support local solar power development if they think it reduces energy prices for their community

  • Written by Douglas Bessette, Associate Professor for Energy Systems, Michigan State University
imageSolar panels at the DTE O'Shea Solar Park at work in Detroit in November 2022. AP/ Paul Sancya

Michigan residents overwhelmingly want more solar power.

In the spring of 2023, nearly two-thirds of 1,000 state residents surveyed supported additional large-scale solar development.

In the Energy Values Lab at Michigan State University, we study how the...

Read more: Detroiters more likely to support local solar power development if they think it reduces energy...

Femicide in Italy: A modern phenomenon deeply rooted in country’s cultural past

  • Written by Julia Khrebtan-Hörhager, Associate Professor of Critical Cultural & International Studies, Colorado State University

“Femicide is not a crime of passion, it is a crime of power,” wrote Elena Cecchettin after her sister was killed in November 2023.

Italian student Giulia Cecchettin, 22, was killed allegedly by her controlling ex-boyfriend, Filippo Turetta, a fellow student at a university in Padua. Not being able to handle the breakup, Turetta lured...

Read more: Femicide in Italy: A modern phenomenon deeply rooted in country’s cultural past

What is a frozen embryo worth? Alabama’s IVF case reflects bigger questions over grieving and wrongful death laws

  • Written by Katherine Drabiak, Professor of Health Law, Public Health Law and Medical Ethics, University of South Florida
imageAn embryologist uses a microscope to view an embryo, visible on a monitor.AP Photo/Richard Drew, File

In the weeks since the Alabama Supreme Court held that embryos are “unborn children” under one state law, most attention has been focused on in vitro fertilization – whether the decision imperils parents’ attempts to create...

Read more: What is a frozen embryo worth? Alabama’s IVF case reflects bigger questions over grieving and...

A Barbie dollhouse and a field trip led me to become an architect − now I lead a program that teaches architecture to mostly young women in South Central Los Angeles

  • Written by Lauren Matchison, Associate Professor of Practice, University of Southern California
imageDo dollhouses possess the potential to inspire young girls to design and build?Kosamtu via Getty Images

As a kid growing up in the suburbs of St. Louis, Missouri, in the ’80s, my sister and I spent a lot of time playing with Barbie in the basement of our single-family home. I loved dressing her and imagining her life. But the best part about...

Read more: A Barbie dollhouse and a field trip led me to become an architect − now I lead a program that...

I watched Hungary’s democracy dissolve into authoritarianism as a member of parliament − and I see troubling parallels in Trumpism and its appeal to workers

  • Written by Gábor Scheiring, Fellow, Harvard University
imagePresident Donald Trump shakes hands with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán during a meeting in the Oval Office on May 13, 2019, in Washington, D.C. Mark Wilson/Getty Images

Hungarian leaderand strongman Viktor Orbán, who presided over the radical decline of democracy in his country, is scheduled to meet with former President...

Read more: I watched Hungary’s democracy dissolve into authoritarianism as a member of parliament − and I see...

Titanosaurs were the biggest land animals Earth’s ever seen − these plant-powered dinos combined reptile and mammal traits

  • Written by Kristi Curry Rogers, Professor of Biology and Geology, Macalester College
imageA replica fossil of the titanosaur _Patagotitan_, one of the largest dinosaurs ever discovered. It would have weighed about 70 tons (63.5 metric tons.)Spencer Platt/Getty Images News via Getty Images

You’re probably familiar with classic sauropod dinosaurs – the four-legged herbivores famous for their long necks and tails. Animals such...

Read more: Titanosaurs were the biggest land animals Earth’s ever seen − these plant-powered dinos combined...

More Articles ...

  1. High-energy laser weapons: A defense expert explains how they work and what they are used for
  2. Cherry blossoms – celebrated in Japan for centuries and gifted to Americans – are an appreciation of impermanence and spring
  3. How Florida’s home insurance market became so dysfunctional, so fast
  4. SEC approves first US climate disclosure rules: Why the requirements are much weaker than planned and what they mean for companies
  5. Sharks, turtles and other sea creatures face greater risk from industrial fishing than previously thought − we estimated added pressure from ‘dark’ fishing vessels
  6. Emotion-tracking AI on the job: Workers fear being watched – and misunderstood
  7. Oppenheimer feared nuclear annihilation – and only a chance pause by a Soviet submariner kept it from happening in 1962
  8. The Black history knowledge gap is widening – and GOP politicians are making it worse
  9. President Yoon is lauded in West for embracing Japan − in South Korea it fits a conservative agenda that is proving less popular
  10. Tattooing has held a long tradition in Christianity − dating back to Jesus’ crucifixion
  11. Reeling religion: From anime and sci-fi to rom-coms, films are full of faith in unexpected places
  12. How the Academy Awards became ‘the biggest international fashion show free-for-all’
  13. After Super Tuesday, exhausted Americans face 8 more months of presidential campaigning
  14. The Anthropocene is not an epoch − but the age of humans is most definitely underway
  15. Plight of migrant laborers killed, held hostage in Middle East exposes Israel’s reliance on overseas workforce
  16. Arctic rivers face big changes with a warming climate, permafrost thaw and an accelerating water cycle − the effects will have global consequences
  17. Donations by top 50 US donors fell again in 2023, sliding to $12B − Mike Bloomberg, Phil and Penny Knight, and Michael and Susan Dell led the list of biggest givers
  18. Michigan Gov. Whitmer proposes a caregiver tax credit − an idea many Americans support
  19. Hispanic health disparities in the US trace back to the Spanish Inquisition
  20. Lithium-ion batteries don’t work well in the cold − a battery researcher explains the chemistry at low temperatures
  21. How age-friendly universities can improve the second half of life
  22. Can witches fly? A historian unpacks the medieval invention − and skepticism − of the witch on a broomstick
  23. Scorsese’s gods of the streets: From ‘Killers of the Flower Moon’ to ‘Silence,’ faith is rarely far off in his films
  24. Robber flies track their beetle prey using tiny microbursts of movement
  25. Bradley Cooper, Cillian Murphy and the myths of Method acting
  26. The Constitution sets some limits on the people’s choices for president - but the Supreme Court rules it’s unconstitutional for state governments to decide on Trump’s qualifications
  27. ¿Arrepentimiento transgénero? una investigación pone en duda los relatos sobre las cirugías de reasignación de sexo
  28. Supreme Court says only Congress can bar a candidate, like Trump, from the presidency for insurrection − 3 essential reads
  29. Community-based entrepreneurs are leading the way in solving the local news crisis
  30. From ‘Jaws’ to ‘Schindler’s List,’ John Williams has infused movie scores with adventure and emotion
  31. How non-English language cinema is reshaping the Oscars landscape
  32. Commander of Iran’s elite Quds Force is expanding predecessor’s vision of chaos in the Middle East
  33. How much does a government shutdown hurt the economy? Depends how long it lasts
  34. The estimated 2.5 million people displaced by tornadoes, wildfires and other disasters in 2023 tell a story of recovery in America and who is vulnerable
  35. A far-right political group is gaining popularity in Germany – but so, too, are protests against it
  36. Estimated 2.5 million people displaced by tornadoes, wildfires and other disasters in 2023 tell a story of recovery in America and who is vulnerable
  37. Could the days of ‘springing forward’ be numbered? A neurologist and sleep expert explains the downside to that borrowed hour of daylight
  38. Israeli peace activists are more anguished than ever − in a movement that has always been diverse and divided, with differing visions of ‘peace’
  39. Why do bees have queens? 2 biologists explain this insect’s social structure – and why some bees don’t have a queen at all
  40. Nikki Haley, hanging on through Super Tuesday, says Trump is weak because he’s not getting as many votes as he should − she’s wrong
  41. Biden executive order on sensitive personal information does little for now to curb data market – but spotlights the threat the market poses
  42. The ‘average’ revolutionized scientific research, but overreliance on it has led to discrimination and injury
  43. Though CBS legend Edward R. Murrow is given credit, he wasn’t the first muckraking journalist to question Joseph McCarthy’s communist witch hunts
  44. Ben Shapiro’s hip-hop hypocrisy and white male grievance lands him on top of pop music charts for a brief moment
  45. Remembering the 1932 Ford Hunger March: Detroit park honors labor and environmental history
  46. My Malaysia ordeal shows how religion can fuse with populist nationalism to silence dissent
  47. COVID-19 rapid tests still work against new variants – researchers keep ‘testing the tests,’ and they pass
  48. Measles is one of the deadliest and most contagious infectious diseases – and one of the most easily preventable
  49. Altitude sickness is typically mild but can sometimes turn very serious − a high-altitude medicine physician explains how to safely prepare
  50. The tools in a medieval Japanese healer’s toolkit: from fortunetelling and exorcism to herbal medicines