
Microplastics Linked to Heart Attack, Stroke and Death
People who had tiny plastic particles lodged in a key blood vessel were more likely to experience serious health problems or die during a three-year study
First published in 1869, Nature is the world's leading multidisciplinary science journal. Nature publishes the finest peer-reviewed research that drives ground-breaking discovery, and is read by thought-leaders and decision-makers around the world.

Microplastics Linked to Heart Attack, Stroke and Death
People who had tiny plastic particles lodged in a key blood vessel were more likely to experience serious health problems or die during a three-year study

Meet the Real-Life Versions of Dune’s Epic Sandworms
A Dune-loving worm paleontologist makes the case that worms have been just as important on Earth as they are in the blockbuster film

How Heavy Is a Neutrino? Physicists Are Still Racing to Find Answers
A new generation of lab experiments is aiming to weigh neutrinos with astonishing accuracy

Two Giant U.S. Telescopes Are Threatened by Federal Funding Cap
The Thirty Meter Telescope and Giant Magellan Telescope might need to compete for survival in the face of federal spending limits

Rare Brown Panda Mystery Solved after 40 Years
Chinese researchers have found the gene responsible for the brown-and-white fur of a handful of giant pandas

Dwarf Galaxies Set the Universe Alight after the Big Bang
Some of the faintest objects ever observed suggest that small galaxies were responsible for clearing the “fog” pervading the early cosmos

The Life and Gruesome Death of a Bog Man Revealed after 5,000 Years
Vittrup Man, who was bludgeoned to death in a Danish bog, was a Scandinavian wanderer, according to new research

The Decimal Point Is 150 Years Older than Historians Thought
The origin of the decimal point, a powerful calculation tool, has been traced back to a mathematician who lived during the Italian Renaissance

This Genetically Engineered Petunia Glows in the Dark and Could Be Yours for $29
The engineered “firefly petunia” emits a continuous green glow thanks to genes from a light-up mushroom

What a Climatologist’s Defamation Case Victory Means for Scientists
A jury awarded Mann more than $1 million—raising hopes for scientists who are attacked politically because of their work

Large Hadron Collider’s $17-Billion Successor Moves Forward
A feasibility study on CERN’s Future Circular Collider identifies where and how the machine could be built—but its construction is far from assured

AI Unravels Ancient Roman Scroll Charred By Volcano
AI helps decipher the text of a 2,000-year-old scroll burned at Pompeii

As Israel Floods Gaza’s Tunnels with Seawater, Scientists Worry about Aquifer Contamination
The Israel Defense Forces has confirmed it is dumping seawater into the web of tunnels beneath Gaza, which scientists say may contaminate the aquifer that supplies most of Gaza’s water

An Alarming Rise in Measles Cases Is Being Driven By Low Vaccination Rates
Measles cases have ticked up in the U.K. following lower rates of MMR vaccination, and the U.S. could see similar outbreaks

Growth Hormone Injections May Have ‘Seeded’ Alzheimer’s in Some People, Study Suggests
Injections of no-longer-used growth hormone derived from cadavers may have “seeded” Alzheimer’s in some people, small study suggests

Japan’s SLIM Mission Is Revived on the Moon
After a nine-day shutdown, the upside-down lunar lander received enough sunlight to power up again

First Space-Based Gravitational Wave Detector Gets Go-Ahead
The Laser Interferometer Space Antenna could discover gigantic ripples in spacetime from merging supermassive black holes and more

Syphilislike Diseases Have Plagued Humans for 14,000 Years
Ancient DNA recovered from Brazilian remains shows that syphilis and other treponemal diseases originated some 10,000 years earlier than previously thought

China’s New Dark Matter Lab Is Biggest and Deepest Yet
The world’s deepest and largest underground laboratory is scaling up its search for dark matter

AI Program Finds Thousands of Possible Psychedelics. Will They Lead to New Drugs?
Researchers have doubted how useful AI protein-structure tool AlphaFold will be in discovering medicines—now they are learning how to deploy it effectively

Long COVID Signatures Found in Huge Analysis of Blood Proteins
Proteins involved in immunity, clotting and inflammation could help to unravel the complexity of long COVID

Meet ReTro, the First Cloned Rhesus Monkey to Reach Adulthood
A method that provides cloned embryos with a healthy placenta has led to the first cloned rhesus monkey that has survived to adulthood and could pave the way for more research involving the primates

The Oldest Fossilized Reptile Skin Ever Found Predates the Dinosaurs
Permian period petroleum helped to preserve minute scraps of pebbly hide that probably belonged to a lizardlike creature

Ancient DNA Reveals Origins of Multiple Sclerosis in Europe
A huge cache of ancient genomes spanning tens of thousands of years reveals the roots of traits in modern Europeans