PODCAST · science
🎙️ Science News Daily | Peer Review'd
by Peer Review'd
Explore the Universe - One Day at a Time🔬 From space missions and biology breakthroughs to physics, tech, and the wonders of our world—Science News Daily delivers fast, fascinating science updates to keep your brain buzzing. Whether you're a student, a science lover, or just curious, we've got your daily fix.https://peerreviewd.com
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🔬 Earth Is Drifting Through a Dead Star's Remains — Plus 10 More Science Stories You Need to Hear
Antarctic ice cores have revealed that Earth is currently passing through the radioactive debris of an ancient supernova, and that's just the beginning of this episode. Scientists are also proposing a radical new way to detect alien life that has nothing to do with specific molecules — and it could change the search forever. A decades-old assumption about childhood obesity is being challenged, a 60-year mystery about how your body burns fat has finally been cracked, and a newly discovered 27-tonne dinosaur in Southeast Asia may have been the last of its kind. Peer Review'd breaks it all down so the science actually makes sense.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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352
🔬 Africa Is Splitting Apart, Zombie Cells Targeted & A Volcano That Cooled the Planet
Scientists have detected alarming signs that Africa may be in the early stages of tearing apart, with hidden mantle activity forcing its way through a deep fracture beneath Zambia. Meanwhile, a major Atlantic Ocean circulation system has been quietly weakening for two decades, with potentially catastrophic consequences for global weather and sea levels. In a stunning twist, the 2022 Tonga volcanic eruption — already one of the most powerful ever recorded — has been found to have done something no one predicted to our atmosphere. A grad student's offhand conversation at Mayo Clinic helped crack open a major breakthrough in aging research, revealing a precise new way to hunt down and target the so-called zombie cells linked to cancer and neurodegeneration. And if that's not enough, a blood pressure pill already sitting in medicine cabinets worldwide may have just found a surprising second life in the fight against cancer.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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351
🔬 Ancient Solar Storms, Supernova Debris & the Drug Combo Quietly Failing Roadside Tests
Scientists have uncovered hidden pockets of warm water melting Antarctic ice shelves from below, suggesting sea levels could rise far faster than current models predict. A Johns Hopkins study confirms that mixing cannabis edibles with alcohol dramatically impairs drivers — and standard roadside sobriety tests largely can't detect it. Researchers found that a single dose of psilocybin causes measurable physical changes in the brain lasting up to a month, while a stem cell breakthrough in stroke recovery is rewriting what scientists thought possible. Ancient Antarctic ice has revealed traces of a rare radioactive isotope that can only come from supernova explosions, suggesting our Solar System is drifting through the remnants of a long-dead star. From a newly discovered snake species to a 100-year tire mystery finally solved, today's episode is packed with discoveries that are quietly reshaping what we know about life, the universe, and everything in between.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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350
🔬 NASA's Daring Mars Flyby, Zombie Cancer Cells Destroyed & The Cosmic Map That Changes Everything
NASA's Psyche spacecraft is making a dramatic close pass of Mars in a high-stakes gravitational slingshot toward one of the solar system's most mysterious objects, while Curiosity rover had an unexpected run-in with a stubborn Martian rock. The James Webb Space Telescope has produced the most detailed map ever of the cosmic web, stretching back to the earliest moments of galaxy formation, and astronomers are baffled by an ancient galaxy that defies a rule nearly every galaxy follows. Scientists have found a way to destroy chemotherapy-surviving 'zombie cells' that fuel cancer growth, and Princeton researchers have unveiled a working hybrid device that merges living brain cells with electronics. There's also a hidden heart risk that standard cholesterol tests completely miss, and a surprising finding about blood pressure readings that could affect millions of people.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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349
🔬 Your Immune System Is Aging You Faster Than You Think — Plus 15 More Science Stories You Need to Hear
Scientists have just upended decades of thinking on aging, revealing that an overactive immune system — not just DNA damage — may be driving rapid-aging diseases, and that dialing it back could restore tissue function. Meanwhile, researchers at WEHI have uncovered a hidden mechanism controlling how the body stores sugar, potentially reshaping how we treat diabetes worldwide. A stunning reexamination of 540-million-year-old fossils from Brazil has flipped what scientists thought they knew about early animal life, while a newly discovered chemical fingerprint could give us an entirely new way to detect life on other planets. Closer to home, a heart risk factor affecting one in five people is going largely undetected, a new therapy is rewiring brain circuits to restore the ability to feel joy, and quantum mechanics just got a whole lot stranger.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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348
🔬 An Alien Comet Just Arrived From Another Star System — And That's Only the Beginning
An interstellar comet from a completely foreign star system is giving astronomers a rare glimpse into alien planetary chemistry, while the James Webb Space Telescope has spotted a planetary duo 190 light-years away that defies everything we know about how solar systems form. Back on Earth, a nearly 100-year-old unsolved mystery left behind by Erwin Schrödinger about how humans perceive color has finally been cracked using modern geometry. Researchers have also identified key proteins that help Parkinson's disease spread through the brain, opening promising new doors for treatment. Plus, the eerie science behind why some buildings feel haunted, why beavers might be secret climate heroes, and whether parrots are actually calling each other by name.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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347
🔬 Humans Could Regrow Limbs? Plus the Vaccine Quietly Saving Heart Patients & a Quantum First
Scientists studying axolotls, zebrafish, and mice have identified a shared set of genes that may hold the key to human limb regeneration — and a gene therapy approach has already partially restored regrowth in mice. A new shingles vaccine study is turning heads in cardiology after patients with heart disease showed dramatically fewer heart attacks, strokes, and deaths within a year of getting the shot. Researchers have also discovered that THC doesn't just cloud memories — it can fabricate entirely false ones, with major implications for eyewitness testimony and beyond. On the quantum frontier, Oxford physicists have achieved a world-first demonstration of 'quadsqueezing,' unlocking a powerful new tool for the next generation of quantum computers. We also cover a fat cell protein with a secret second job, a bacteria-hijacking cancer therapy, NASA's plasma thruster breakthrough, and a common supplement that may be doing something surprising for your brain.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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346
🔬 An Interstellar Comet Just Arrived — And Its Water Shouldn't Exist
A rogue comet from outside our solar system is carrying water unlike anything scientists have ever seen, raising urgent questions about what's out there beyond our cosmic neighborhood. Researchers have also uncovered a startling link between a common constipation drug and kidney protection, thanks to a gut bacteria connection nobody saw coming. A massive galaxy spotted by the James Webb Space Telescope has defied all models by showing zero rotation just two billion years after the Big Bang. New gravitational wave data is reshaping how scientists think the universe's largest black holes grow — and the answer involves a violent chain of cosmic collisions. Plus, a Brazilian rainforest tree, eggs and Alzheimer's risk, and a planetary system that should be impossible.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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345
🔬 Scientists Just Broke the Code of Life — Plus Brain Secrets, Cancer Breakthroughs & More
Researchers have stumbled upon a microscopic organism that defies the near-universal genetic code shared by virtually all life on Earth — rewriting what we thought we knew about the fundamental rules of biology. On the human health front, scientists have identified a chemical difference in the brains of people with anxiety that may be linked to a common nutrient, while two major cancer discoveries — including a molecule that could make drug-resistant cancers treatable again — are turning heads in oncology. MIT neuroscientists have uncovered millions of 'silent synapses' in the adult brain, a hidden reserve of learning capacity that makes up roughly 30% of connections in the adult cortex. Meanwhile, new DNA analysis of a massive Stone Age burial site near Paris reveals a dramatic and mysterious population collapse — and space exploration just got a serious boost with a record-breaking thruster test that could make Mars missions far more viable.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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344
🔬 NASA Just Changed Everything, Voyager 1 Is Running Out of Time & The Mezcal Worm Secret Is Finally Out
NASA's Artemis II mission has wrapped with stunning results, bringing humanity closer to returning to the Moon than we've been in over 50 years — while at the other end of the universe, Voyager 1 is making desperate moves to survive. Physicists are now proposing an experiment that could prove time itself exists in multiple states at once, which would shatter our fundamental understanding of reality. Ancient fossils, 4,000-year-old clay tablets, and a tyrannosaur with bite marks from one of its own kind are rewriting the story of life on Earth. And after decades of mystery, DNA science has finally revealed the true identity of the so-called worm at the bottom of mezcal bottles — and the answer changes everything you thought you knew.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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343
🔬 Ancient Ocean Overlords, The Milky Way's Hidden Edge & A Neurodevelopmental Disorder You've Never Heard Of
Scientists have just identified what may be the most common recessive neurodevelopmental disorder ever discovered — and it's been hiding in plain sight until now. Astronomers have finally mapped the true boundary of the Milky Way, while NASA's Curiosity rover turns up organic molecules on Mars that hint at a chemically rich ancient past. A new study reveals that 100 million years ago, giant intelligent octopuses may have dominated the world's oceans in ways we never imagined. Plus: quantum breakthroughs, a rare 150-million-year-old dinosaur skull, Leonardo da Vinci's DNA, and surprising new findings on omega-3 supplements and Alzheimer's research.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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342
🔬 Homer Found Inside a Mummy, Quantum Batteries Charge Instantly & Evolution Is Rewriting Its Own Rules
Scientists have discovered a fragment of Homer's Iliad embedded inside a 1,600-year-old Egyptian mummy — the first known case of a literary papyrus used in the ancient embalming process. In the Galápagos, new research confirms that evolution is actively unfolding right now, with giant daisy plants independently arriving at the same solutions across different lineages. Australian physicists have built the world's first proof-of-concept quantum battery, one that charges nearly instantaneously by exploiting the strange rules of quantum mechanics. A surprising link between cancer-like mutations in brain immune cells and Alzheimer's disease progression has also emerged, alongside a separate discovery of a protein that activates the brain's natural cleanup system. From a Sudanese king once dismissed as legend to a Mars rover that thinks for itself, this week's science news is rewriting what we thought we knew.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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341
🔬 Human Hearts Can Regenerate & Scientists Just Found a Way to Kill Zombie Cells
In a world-first discovery, researchers have found that human heart muscle cells can actually regrow after a cardiac event — a finding that could reshape how we treat heart disease forever. Scientists have also identified a critical vulnerability in so-called 'zombie cells,' opening the door to powerful new cancer and anti-aging therapies. Meanwhile, Johns Hopkins researchers are challenging over a century of neuroscience by revealing that neurons may be structured in a way nobody expected. On the prehistoric front, new research is upending the long-held explanation for why insects once grew to monstrous sizes, and the real answer is stranger than you'd think. Plus: two of America's most dangerous fault lines may be more dangerously linked than we ever realized.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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340
🔬 Just Discovered: A Hidden Property of Light, Heart-Protecting Weight Loss Drugs & A 275-Million-Year-Old Creature With a Twisted Jaw
Scientists have uncovered a previously unknown property of light — finding that it can twist and self-organize entirely on its own, challenging long-held assumptions about how light behaves. A massive new analysis of over 90,000 patients suggests GLP-1 weight-loss drugs like Ozempic may offer powerful, lasting protection against heart attacks, strokes, and early death. A 37-year soil warming experiment has delivered an alarming climate wake-up call, suggesting ancient carbon once thought permanently locked underground is now breaking down and releasing into the atmosphere. Paleontologists unearthed a 275-million-year-old creature with a jaw unlike anything alive today, belonging to a lineage that should have already been extinct. Rounding out the episode: NASA captures a Pacific tsunami from space in unprecedented detail, a natural molecule may block Alzheimer's protein clumps, and a newly named spider called Pikelinia floydmuraria hunts prey six times its own size.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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339
🔬 Laser Light Does Something It Shouldn't Be Able To — And It Could Change Brain Science Forever
MIT researchers have uncovered a stunning optical phenomenon that could allow scientists to watch drugs cross into the brain in real time — at speeds and resolutions never before possible. A sweeping new study is forcing doctors to rethink one of their most common kidney stone prevention strategies, while a discovery inside cannabis leaves has turned up compounds no one knew existed. Artificial neurons that can physically communicate with real brain cells have been successfully 3D-printed for the first time, opening a new frontier in both brain implants and AI. And deep beneath cities that went dark during the 2024 solar eclipse, seismometers picked up something eerily quiet — a signal imprinted in the ground itself.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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338
🔬 The Universe Just Got Mapped, Quantum Teleportation Happened, & Alzheimer's Drugs Are Under Fire
Scientists have just unveiled the largest 3D map of the universe ever constructed, offering stunning new clues about dark energy that could upend our understanding of the cosmos. Meanwhile, quantum teleportation across open air has been achieved for the very first time, marking a pivotal milestone toward a future quantum internet. A landmark Cochrane review is now challenging the leading theory behind a major class of Alzheimer's drugs, raising urgent questions about whether the field has been targeting the right culprit all along. Killer T cells have been filmed destroying cancer in unprecedented 3D detail, revealing a precise molecular strike mechanism that could reshape immunotherapy. Plus: a tectonic plate is tearing apart beneath the Pacific Northwest, ancient mines may rewrite Bronze Age trade history, and the origins of life on Earth just got a chilling new twist.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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337
🔬 A New Ocean Is Forming, Antimatter Just Broke Physics, & The Ozone Layer Has a Secret Problem
Africa is literally tearing apart — and scientists now know the crust is thinning far more than previously thought, setting the stage for a brand new ocean over millions of years. Meanwhile, physicists have observed wave-like interference in antimatter for the very first time, cracking open a new frontier in quantum physics and gravity research. On the medical front, a surprising clinical trial is rewriting how we treat a common cancer, and the hormone behind Ozempic has just been discovered somewhere no one expected to find it. Ancient DNA from nearly 16,000 people is revealing that human evolution has been happening far more recently — and more actively — than science previously recognized. And a hidden chemical leak may be quietly undermining one of the greatest environmental victories in history.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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336
🔬 From Deep Ocean Mysteries to Quantum Breakthroughs — What Scientists Just Discovered Changes Everything
A two-mile-deep golden orb has finally been identified after stumping scientists for over two years, and the answer is stranger than most expected. Researchers have also pinpointed a molecular switch driving Alzheimer's inflammation and a hidden brain region that may hold the key to erasing chronic pain entirely. A 50-year-old mystery in blood science has been solved, with major implications for transfusion safety and immune system research. Meanwhile, new findings suggest that planets in the so-called habitable zone may be far less life-friendly than we once hoped, reshaping the search for life beyond Earth.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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335
🔬 Your Blood Test Knows More Than You Think — Plus Screaming Plants, AI Chemists & A Cyclops Ancestor
Researchers have discovered that a compound produced by gut bacteria when breaking down pomegranate nutrients may reduce arterial plaque buildup and lower heart attack risk — reshaping what we know about diet and cardiovascular health. A new study reveals that a routine blood test you may already be getting could detect Alzheimer's risk decades before symptoms appear, using immune cell ratios already present in standard lab work. Scientists have developed an AI system capable of reasoning through complex chemical synthesis problems the way expert chemists do, potentially accelerating drug discovery on a massive scale. A 289-million-year-old reptile mummy has revealed the ancient origins of the very breathing system humans use today, while fossil evidence traces the origin of vertebrate eyes — including yours — back to a single cyclopean worm-like creature from 600 million years ago. Rounding out today's episode: stressed plants emit ultrasonic sounds that vary by the type of stress they're experiencing, a new meteor shower has been linked to an actively disintegrating asteroid, and a surprising study challenges everything scientists thought they knew about the teenage brain.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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334
🔬 T. Rex Blood Vessels Just Revealed Something Scientists Never Expected
Researchers have discovered preserved blood vessels inside a T. rex rib bone that was healing 66 million years ago, uncovering new details about ancient soft tissue preservation in fossils. A major genetic study has upended the long-held theory of human origins, revealing that modern humans evolved from multiple intermingling populations across Africa rather than a single ancestral group. Scientists are now reporting evidence of a hidden structure deep within Earth's inner core, suggesting our models of planetary formation may need a serious rethink. On the medical front, a blood test has shown it can detect Alzheimer's disease years before brain scans catch any changes, aspirin is showing promise in preventing colorectal cancer recurrence, and a gut bacterium has been linked to depression through a surprising molecular pathway. Rounding out the week, nanorobots smaller than a human hair can now hunt and capture individual bacteria, and a plant thought extinct for 60 years has just been rediscovered thanks to a citizen scientist with a smartphone.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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333
🔬 Diabetes Drug Fights HIV, A New Kind of Cosmic Explosion & More Science News Just Dropped
Scientists are reporting a surprising new lead in the fight against HIV, with a common diabetes medication showing potential to help replicate what happens in rare individuals who can suppress the virus without treatment. Ancient skeletal remains from Vietnam are forcing researchers to rethink long-held assumptions about the origins of syphilis, adding new complexity to one of history's biggest medical debates. Astronomers may have captured something never seen before in deep space — a cosmic event so unusual it could represent an entirely new category of explosion. New research is also sounding alarms about stress-driven drinking in early adulthood, revealing lasting changes to the brain's stress systems that may increase relapse risk and cognitive decline. Plus: a wall-dwelling spider hunting prey six times its size, black licorice as a potential IBD treatment, and a popular edible mushroom quietly invading ecosystems across 25 states.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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332
🔬 A Ghost Particle Just Arrived From Across the Cosmos — And Scientists Are Scrambling for Answers
The most energetic neutrino ever recorded has finally been traced back to its cosmic origin, and the source is raising eyebrows across the astrophysics world. Meanwhile, a 100-million-year-old snake fossil from Argentina has shattered assumptions about how snakes evolved — turns out early snakes were large, wide-mouthed predators, not tiny burrowers. In quantum news, a Japanese team has cracked a major bottleneck in quantum computing with a single-step method for reading complex quantum states, while separate research hints at a mind-bending link between quantum mechanics and the nature of time itself. Archaeologists have also pinpointed hidden air-filled voids inside Egypt's Menkaure pyramid using radar technology, suggesting a concealed entrance may be waiting to be found. From dinosaur tracks rewriting southern Africa's prehistoric timeline to an AI that just discovered new physics, this episode is packed with science that genuinely changes what we thought we knew.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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331
🔬 Scientists Just Mapped Depression at the Cellular Level — And That's Only the Start
For the first time ever, researchers have identified the exact brain cell types that behave differently in people with depression, moving science beyond the vague 'chemical imbalance' theory toward precise biological targets for treatment. Deep beneath our feet, a global seismic survey has confirmed the ghostly presence of ancient tectonic plates buried in Earth's mantle for hundreds of millions of years, still shaping how our planet moves. In the fossil record, a poodle-sized crocodile relative has stunned paleontologists by appearing to switch from four-legged to two-legged walking as it grew — a developmental shift almost unheard of in known prehistory. A 289-million-year-old mummified reptile is revealing the earliest known origins of rib-powered breathing, the same fundamental mechanism used by reptiles, birds, and mammals today. And new research from UC Irvine suggests a specific combination of fatty acids may be able to restore vision and reverse retinal aging in mice, pointing toward a potential new approach to age-related vision loss.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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330
🔬 The Universe Is Expanding Too Fast & Scientists Can't Explain Why
Astronomers have delivered one of the most precise measurements ever of the universe's expansion rate — and it's deepening a crisis in cosmology that no one can yet solve. The James Webb Space Telescope has directly imaged a distant Jupiter-like planet, revealing unexpected water-ice clouds that challenge everything we thought we knew about giant planet atmospheres. Back on Earth, a blood pressure medication has shown surprising power against one of the deadliest antibiotic-resistant bacteria, while cannabis compounds completely free of THC are emerging as a promising new front in pain treatment. Scientists also captured glowing electrical discharges shimmering from treetops during thunderstorms for the very first time — a phenomenon that may mean forests are quietly cleaning the air around us. From baby dinosaur bones finally identified after 20 years of confusion to university students setting new limits on dark matter detection, this episode is packed with discoveries that are rewriting the rules.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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329
🔬 Alzheimer's Hidden Double, A Heart-Mood Chemical Twist & The Black Hole Jets Packing 10,000 Suns of Energy
Scientists have discovered that many Alzheimer's patients are simultaneously battling a second lesser-known brain disorder, raising urgent questions about how the disease is diagnosed and treated. A surprising large-scale study has revealed that serotonin — the brain's 'happiness chemical' — may be quietly driving the progression of a common and serious heart valve condition. Researchers have identified a mysterious 'protector protein' that could hold the key to reversing hair loss by keeping follicle stem cells alive through a critical regenerative window. In genetics, non-coding DNA once dismissed as genomic 'dark matter' has been found to harbor mutations that trigger diabetes in newborns, potentially reshaping how infants are screened. Meanwhile, a global network of radio telescopes has captured unprecedented images of black hole jets radiating the energy of ten thousand suns, offering a landmark confirmation of how black holes sculpt entire galaxies.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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328
🔬 Just Discovered: A Rule-Breaking Planet, 5.5 Million Hidden Bees & A Nasal Spray Targeting Brain Aging
Astronomers have identified a mysterious fourth planet in a distant star system that defies everything we thought we knew about how planets form — and it's making scientists question whether our own solar system is the odd one out. A two-hundred-year-old geological mystery has finally been cracked, with implications that go far beyond textbooks and into the future of advanced materials manufacturing. Researchers used AI to uncover surprising new insights about a tiny organ most of us forget we have — and it turns out it may hold the key to how long we live. A shocking study out of USC has found an unexpected link between healthy eating habits and lung cancer risk, and the explanation behind it is a wake-up call about the world we live in. Plus: 5.5 million bees discovered beneath a New York cemetery, ancient diets revealing prehistoric social inequality, and a fuel cell that literally runs on dirt.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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327
🔬 Black Hole Jets, Gut Worms & The Supplement Secrets Scientists Just Exposed
Researchers have just measured the raw power of black hole jets for the very first time, clocking energy equivalent to ten thousand suns blasting out at half the speed of light from one of the universe's most studied black holes. On the health front, a surprising new study reveals that intestinal parasites may actually reduce inflammation — but only under one very specific dietary condition most people ignore. Scientists have also uncovered an unexpected new way that metformin, one of the world's most prescribed drugs for over sixty years, appears to work inside the body — and it's nothing like what doctors assumed. Meanwhile, two of the most popular daily supplements are under fresh scrutiny after major new studies cast serious doubt on their widely believed benefits. Plus, ancient ocean fossils are forcing climate scientists to completely recalibrate their models for how hot our future could actually get.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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326
🔬 Mass Itself May Work Differently Than We Thought — Plus Jellyfish Just Got Scarier
Scientists have captured events lasting just femtoseconds using a revolutionary AI-powered imaging technique, while new experimental evidence suggests particle masses actually shift inside atomic nuclei — potentially rewriting our understanding of where mass comes from. Researchers have also achieved quantum-encrypted communication over 120 kilometers using semiconductor quantum dots, marking a major milestone toward a real-world quantum internet. A routine campus tree inspection in Japan led to the discovery of a brand-new beetle species and the first overhaul of Japanese ladybird beetle classification in half a century. Meanwhile, a landmark study in The Lancet Psychiatry finds no reliable evidence that medicinal cannabis effectively treats anxiety, depression, or PTSD, and Mayo Clinic scientists are exploring milk-derived nanoparticles as a delivery system for gene therapy targeting one of oncology's hardest-to-treat cancers.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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325
🔬 A 250M-Year-Old Egg Just Rewrote Prehistory — Plus The Blood Test That Could Detect Cancer Before Symptoms Appear
Archaeologists have pushed back the timeline for human settlement in Britain by 500 years, revealing just how dramatically small climate shifts shaped early human migration. A 250-million-year-old fossilized egg containing an embryo has finally settled a long-standing debate about early mammal relatives — and may explain how they outlasted one of Earth's deadliest mass extinctions. Researchers at UCLA have developed a single blood test capable of detecting multiple cancers and organ diseases simultaneously, potentially transforming how we screen for illness. A common industrial chemical hiding in groundwater has been linked to a staggering 500% increased risk of Parkinson's disease, prompting urgent calls for regulation. And a new study suggests the people you live with may be silently reshaping your gut microbiome in ways that affect everything from digestion to mental health.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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🔬 Ancient Microbes, Quantum Particles & A 31-Foot Croc That Hunted Dinosaurs — This Week in Science Just Changed Everything
Scientists have uncovered stunning evidence inside ancient stromatolites that could finally explain how simple cells evolved into complex life — the leap that made animals, plants, and fungi possible. A newly analyzed throat bone has ended the decades-long Nanotyrannus debate, confirming it was a distinct tyrannosaur species sharing an ecosystem with T. rex. Physicists have observed quantum interference in one of nature's rarest atoms and described an entirely new class of particle that defies our basic categories of matter. Meanwhile, researchers have identified a hidden protein transport system inside moving cells that could unlock new ways to stop cancer from spreading. From a 430,000-year-old wooden toolkit in Greece to a potential new strategy for detecting alien life across entire solar systems, this episode covers the biggest science stories you haven't heard yet.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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🔬 Electrons Are Breaking Physics, A Hidden Alzheimer's Trigger Is Detected In Seconds & Ancient Eggs Rewrite Mammal History
Scientists have observed electrons in graphene flowing like a frictionless liquid in a way that defies a fundamental law of physics, potentially unlocking technologies we haven't yet imagined. A newly identified genetic variant already known for causing 'Asian Flush Syndrome' may also be silently triggering serious heart damage in nearly half of people with East Asian ancestry. Researchers are now using AI-powered speech analysis to detect Alzheimer's disease in under a minute, a potential game-changer for the more than 7 million Americans currently living with the condition. A 250-million-year-old fossil containing a curled embryo has finally confirmed that mammal ancestors were egg-layers, closing a decades-long scientific debate. This episode also covers a major Epstein-Barr virus breakthrough, a two-form dark matter hypothesis, a yellow fever warning from the Amazon, and the surprisingly tender friendship between tiny ants and the giants they groom.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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322
🔬 Quantum Metal, Ancient Vomit Fossils & The Ocean Secret That Could Rewrite Climate Science
Physicists have just demonstrated that a visible chunk of metal can exist in two places at once — pushing quantum superposition far beyond the subatomic world and blurring the line between quantum and classical physics in ways scientists didn't think possible. Deep in the ocean, a geological feature long considered unremarkable may be quietly storing vast amounts of carbon, a hidden sink that could reshape our entire understanding of Earth's climate system. Paleontologists are rewriting the prehistoric record with three jaw-dropping discoveries: a 34-million-year-old snake fossil, a flying reptile identified from an ancient predator's regurgitated meal, and a crocodile relative that may have walked on two legs. A new study has pinpointed the exact brain mechanism that explains why chronic pain spirals into depression for some people but not others — a finding that could transform treatment for millions. Plus: a revolutionary toothpaste that targets gum disease without wiping out your good bacteria, and why gray whales are wandering into San Francisco Bay with devastating consequences.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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🔬 A Sleeping Black Hole Just Erupted After 100 Million Years — And That's Just the Start
A supermassive black hole has violently awakened after nearly 100 million years of silence, blasting jets of energy across a million light-years and reshaping the galaxy cluster around it. NASA's Artemis II crew made history with a successful splashdown after the first crewed journey toward the Moon in over 50 years, marking a giant leap toward future deep space missions. Scientists have identified a natural alternative to Ozempic discovered with the help of AI, while a separate study reveals why roughly 10% of people may not respond to GLP-1 weight loss drugs at all. On the longevity front, a landmark twin study suggests genetics may account for far more of our lifespan than previously thought — a finding that could reshape how we approach aging research. From a heat-proof memory chip that survives lava-level temperatures to quantum breakthroughs speeding up error detection, this episode is packed with discoveries that challenge what we thought we knew.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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320
🔬 Scientists Just Discovered Water Has a Secret — And It Changes Everything We Know About Life
Researchers have uncovered evidence of a hidden transition between two distinct forms of liquid water, potentially rewriting our understanding of one of Earth's most fundamental substances. Meanwhile, lab experiments reveal that yeast cells can survive simulated Martian conditions by forming protective molecular clusters, keeping the possibility of life on Mars alive. A newly confirmed measurement of the universe's expansion rate is deepening the Hubble tension, suggesting our current model of the cosmos may be fundamentally broken. Scientists have also found that immune cells begin destroying smell-related nerve fibers in the early stages of Alzheimer's disease — long before any cognitive symptoms appear — opening a new door for early diagnosis. From optical tornadoes and hidden superconductivity to a plant compound hiding in plain sight that may slow aging, this episode is packed with discoveries that challenge what we thought we knew.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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319
🔬 Astronomers Just Confirmed What They Could Only Theorize — And That's Just the Start
A landmark discovery 320 light-years away has given scientists their first direct proof of a long-held theory about how planets form — and it could change how we search for life beyond Earth. Researchers have also identified a mysterious new state of matter potentially hidden inside Uranus and Neptune, while a surprising compound found in python blood is opening a radical new door in obesity treatment. A bacterium originally found in frog gut has wiped out tumors in mice with a single dose, raising hopes for a cancer therapy that leaves healthy cells completely untouched. Meanwhile, thawing permafrost is releasing greenhouse gases at rates 25 to 100 times greater than current models account for — and scientists say we may be badly underestimating how fast things could spiral.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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318
🔬 Just In: The Hidden Code In Your DNA, A Rotten Egg Gas Fighting Alzheimer's & What 100-Year-Olds Know That We Don't
Scientists have cracked open a secret second layer of instructions buried inside your DNA — and it changes everything we thought we knew about how genes work. Meanwhile, a gas that smells like rotten eggs has been found to protect brain cells and stave off Alzheimer's, while a surprising connection between your gut bacteria and deadly neurological diseases like ALS is turning heads in the research world. On the cancer front, a previously unknown virus has been linked to one of the most common cancers in the Western world, and a massive new study is reshaping how we think about everyday pesticide exposure and cancer risk. Plus: quantum batteries are now real, ancient humans were seafaring far earlier than we thought, and centenarians appear to age at the biological level in ways that could unlock the secrets of living longer for all of us.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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317
🔬 Scientists Just Found a Hidden Brain Circuit Behind Chronic Pain — And It Changes Everything
Stanford researchers have mapped a previously unknown brain circuit responsible for chronic pain that operates entirely separately from normal pain pathways — a potential turning point for the 60 million Americans who suffer from it. Johns Hopkins scientists unveiled a nasal-delivery DNA vaccine targeting tuberculosis in people who already have the disease, designed to help the immune system clear bacteria that antibiotics can't fully eliminate. A new study complicates the Ozempic hype, finding that behavioral factors play a surprisingly significant role in why the blockbuster drug works dramatically for some people and barely at all for others. Cornell researchers may have cleared a major hurdle in the decades-long search for male birth control, using a compound that temporarily and reversibly shuts down sperm production in mice — without hormones. Meanwhile, a UC Irvine climate study found that nitrous oxide is breaking down in the atmosphere faster than models predicted, and a cosmological paper proposes that gravitational waves from the Big Bang may have actually generated dark matter — connecting two of physics' deepest mysteries.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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316
🔬 A 'Lost World' Just Rewrote Earth's History — And That's Not Even the Biggest Story This Week
Scientists have unearthed a 540-million-year-old 'lost world' of ancient animals in China, pushing back the timeline for complex life and rewriting one of biology's most fundamental chapters. In medical news, researchers are engineering bacteria that seek out and consume tumors from the inside, while a newly identified opioid compound promises powerful pain relief without the dangerous side effects of current drugs. The James Webb Space Telescope has spotted a 'forbidden' Jupiter-sized planet that defies every model we have of how giant planets form. Meanwhile, a 20-year genomic study reveals that cholera bacteria are locked in an evolutionary arms race that shapes outbreaks worldwide, and NASA's Artemis II crew is circling the Moon right now, preparing to break records for how far humans have ever traveled from Earth.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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315
🔬 Cancer's Hidden Weakness, Earth's Gold Kitchen & A 436-Million-Year-Old Fish Just Changed Everything
Researchers have discovered that cancer cells may be hijacking a molecule normally used to protect healthy cells, pointing to a potential new way to target tumors. A tiny ancient fossil fish is rewriting the origin story of vertebrates — and by extension, the story of how we got the bodies we have today. Deep beneath volcanic arcs, scientists have uncovered how Earth concentrates gold in ways that eventually bring it within human reach. A landmark analysis of over 1,700 languages is finding that universal grammar rules may be real after all, with evolutionary biology helping to explain why. Plus: a new oxygen-delivering gel that could help chronic wounds heal, surprising findings from inside the Earth's deepest mantle layer, and what the latest longevity research reveals about who actually benefits from life-extending treatments.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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314
🔬 AI Just Heard Cancer in Your Voice — Plus Martian Lightning, Quantum Batteries & A 12,000-Year-Old Gambling Secret
Scientists have developed an AI that can detect laryngeal cancer simply by analyzing patterns in a person's voice, while a separate study found gut bacteria biomarkers may allow earlier, less invasive detection of serious digestive diseases. Researchers have identified a single protein called FTL1 as a major driver of brain aging, and remarkably, reducing it in mice actually reversed memory loss by rebuilding lost neural connections. On Mars, new research reveals that dust storms generate powerful static electricity strong enough to trigger chemical reactions that have been quietly reshaping the planet's surface and atmosphere for eons. A working quantum battery prototype has been built that defies conventional energy storage logic — it actually becomes more efficient as it scales up. Archaeologists also unearthed a hidden Roman sanctuary beneath Frankfurt suggesting dark ancient rituals, mathematicians overturned a 150-year-old geometric law, and humans were rolling dice 12,000 years ago during the Ice Age.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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313
🔬 Humans Just Left Earth's Orbit & Physicists Are Stunned By What a Liquid Just Did
For the first time since 1972, humans are venturing beyond Earth orbit as NASA's Artemis II crew makes its way toward the Moon — and the spacecraft was so precisely on course that mission controllers cancelled the first planned trajectory correction burn entirely. Back on Earth, a newly identified brain circuit may finally explain why some pain becomes chronic while other pain fades, a discovery that could transform treatment for hundreds of millions of sufferers worldwide. A massive Scandinavian study of over 100,000 people found that semaglutide — the drug behind Ozempic and Wegovy — may also reduce risks of depression, anxiety, and substance use disorders, raising urgent questions about how the drug interacts with the brain. Physicists at Drexel University were left stunned after discovering that a liquid, when stretched fast enough, doesn't flow or splash — it snaps apart like shattering glass, challenging fundamental assumptions about how matter behaves. The episode also covers shape-shifting semiconductors, a 150-year geological mystery finally solved, mysterious contaminants quietly entering our food supply, and a laser-based Wi-Fi system that hits speeds of over 360 gigabits per second at half the power of conventional wireless technology.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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312
🔬 A Single Injection Restored Hearing, Ancient Fossils Just Rewrote Evolution & Something In Your Sweat Is Fighting The Flu
A groundbreaking gene therapy delivered in a single injection is giving deaf patients the ability to hear within weeks, while researchers have uncovered a 500-million-year-old fossil that pushes the origins of spiders back by 20 million years. Scientists made multiple major Alzheimer's advances this week, including an experimental drug that targets gene regulation at a molecular level and a surprisingly simple nasal swab that could detect the disease years before symptoms appear. A sweeping new review is sounding the alarm on vaping and cancer risk, children's clothing is testing positive for dangerous lead levels, and NASA's Artemis II crew got the green light for a historic lunar orbit — right after fixing a broken toilet in space. Plus, your sweat may be quietly fighting the flu, inconsistent sleep could be doubling your heart disease risk, and science figured out how to make a better french fry.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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311
🔬 Humans Are Orbiting the Moon Again — Plus Zombie Cells, Warrior Wheat & an Inside-Out Solar System
NASA's Artemis II mission has just launched four astronauts on the first crewed lunar journey in over fifty years, marking a historic leap toward returning humans to the Moon's surface. Astronomers have also discovered a planetary system arranged in the opposite order of our own solar system, throwing current formation theories into question and forcing a major rethink of how worlds are born. In biology, scientists have identified a metabolic weakness in so-called zombie cells — senescent cells that accumulate and drive aging — potentially unlocking new treatments for age-related disease. Ancient farmers unknowingly bred 'warrior wheat' through unintentional evolutionary pressure, a discovery that could reshape modern crop design. And a new study found that even occasional binge drinking may triple the risk of liver damage, challenging the common assumption that moderation throughout the week cancels out the occasional excess.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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310
🔬 Cells Have Hidden Winds, Mars Was Wetter Than We Thought & A 40-Year-Old Can of Salmon Just Revealed Something About Our Oceans
Scientists have discovered mysterious "cellular winds" inside living cells — internal airflow-like currents that may explain how aggressive cancers spread, and could become a new target for treatment. Meanwhile, fresh analysis of samples returned from asteroid Bennu reveals a chemically complex world shaped by ancient water activity, offering new clues about how life's building blocks travel through space. Ancient Mars is getting a major reputation upgrade, with new evidence of sustained rainfall suggesting the red planet may have once harbored genuine conditions for life. In evolutionary biology, researchers cracked the secret behind the explosive diversification of hundreds of fish species in Lake Malawi, tracing it to "supergenes" that fast-track adaptation. And deep beneath a Canadian mine, one of the coldest experiments ever built has just hit its operating temperature — and it's hunting for dark matter.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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309
🔬 Your Coffee Is Protecting Your Brain, A 7-Hour Explosion Defies Physics, & The Universe's Origin Just Got Rewritten
A landmark study reveals that two to three cups of coffee daily may cut dementia risk by up to 35%, but there's a catch that most coffee drinkers won't see coming. Researchers have also mapped a newly discovered 'sleep switch' in the brain that links deep sleep to a powerful cascade of physical and cognitive benefits. In space, the James Webb Telescope captured a gamma-ray burst that lasted seven hours — obliterating current models of what these cosmic explosions even are. Meanwhile, scientists in South Korea have uncovered a surprising natural weapon against the microplastics accumulating inside your body, and it's already sitting on grocery store shelves. From a new type of friction that works without any physical contact to AI producing its first verified original proof in mathematics, today's episode is packed with discoveries that are rewriting the rules across nearly every field of science.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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308
🔬 Antarctica Is Controlling Life Across the Planet — And Scientists Just Found Out How
New research reveals that ancient Antarctic ice cycles once dictated biological productivity in subtropical oceans thousands of miles away, while a sweeping genetic survey of the Southern Ocean has uncovered an invisible microbial world that may be quietly controlling Earth's climate. Meanwhile, a 50-year bottleneck in producing one of the world's most widely used chemotherapy drugs has finally been cracked, and scientists have pinpointed a biological pathway connecting gut bacteria to age-related memory loss — and it may be reversible. Plus, a controversial replication study is sending shockwaves through quantum computing, a popular weight-loss drug has raised a serious new safety flag, and your kitchen sponge has some explaining to do.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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307
🔬 Your Brain Has Secret Connections, Glaciers Are Lunging Forward & A Hidden Freshwater World Just Emerged
Scientists have finally captured cell membrane lipids in action for the first time, a discovery that could reshape our understanding of disease and drug delivery. MIT researchers have uncovered millions of 'silent synapses' in the adult brain — dormant connections that may explain how we keep learning without losing existing memories. Beneath the shrinking Great Salt Lake, a vast hidden freshwater reservoir has been discovered using airborne surveys, potentially transforming water management in the drought-stressed region. A record-breaking superconductivity milestone has been achieved at normal pressure, edging humanity closer to near-lossless power grids and transportation. Meanwhile, a new gene therapy uses AI to map pain circuits and create a targeted 'off switch' — delivering morphine-like relief without the addiction risk.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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306
🔬 Zoo Penguins Are Aging Faster, A Blood Test Could Predict Dementia Decades Early & Rogue Planets May Harbor Life
A shocking new study reveals that zoo penguins age faster than wild ones despite living longer — and the implications for human health are hard to ignore. Scientists at UC San Diego have identified a blood protein that may predict dementia risk up to 25 years before symptoms appear, potentially transforming how we approach Alzheimer's prevention. Astrophysicists are upending everything we thought we knew about dark matter, suggesting it may be a complex mixture rather than a single substance — deepening one of cosmology's greatest mysteries. A security camera in Myanmar captured something scientists have never seen before: a fault rupture happening in real time during a magnitude 7.7 earthquake. From ancient fossil apes rewriting human evolutionary history to Bronze Age mines discovered in Spain with links to Scandinavia, this episode is packed with discoveries that are changing the way we understand our world.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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305
🔬 Japan's Supervolcano Is Recharging, A New Dinosaur Was Just Named After a Cartoon & The Space Fertility Crisis No One Is Talking About
South Korea just named its first new dinosaur species in 15 years — and the story behind the name is as charming as the discovery is significant. Meanwhile, scientists have confirmed that Japan's most powerful supervolcano is quietly refilling with magma, offering unprecedented real-time insight into how these massive systems rebuild. In bee research, a yeast-based superfood produced results so dramatic researchers are calling it a potential lifeline for collapsing colonies worldwide. A newly discovered fossil ape from northern Egypt is challenging the long-held belief about where humanity's earliest ancestors actually originated. And new findings are quietly dismantling an 80-year-old theory about turbulence — with implications that reach far beyond physics classrooms.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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304
🔬 Ants Can Reprogram Themselves, A New Bird Species Was Hiding In Plain Sight & Scientists Just Shattered Solar Energy's "Impossible" Limit
Researchers have discovered that ant colony recognition systems are far more flexible than previously believed, upending what we thought we knew about social behavior in insects. A brand-new bird species called the Tokara Leaf Warbler has been confirmed hiding in plain sight for decades, and it's already considered rare and vulnerable. So-called 'Hulk Lizards' are rapidly wiping out other color variants that coexisted for millions of years, offering a stark warning about how quickly evolutionary balance can collapse. Scientists may have found a promising new drug target for Alzheimer's disease after significantly reducing amyloid plaque buildup in brain neurons by removing a specific enzyme. And in what could be the biggest energy news in decades, researchers have shattered the long-standing theoretical efficiency limit for solar panels using a process that could fundamentally change how we capture power from the sun.Subscribe to Peer Review'd Newsletter: https://peerreviewd.com/Love Science? Check out our other Science tools: 60sec.site and Artificial Intelligence Radio
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Explore the Universe - One Day at a Time🔬 From space missions and biology breakthroughs to physics, tech, and the wonders of our world—Science News Daily delivers fast, fascinating science updates to keep your brain buzzing. Whether you're a student, a science lover, or just curious, we've got your daily fix.https://peerreviewd.com
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