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Octopuses use mirrors to find food they cannot see
Octopuses use mirrors to find food they cannot see Octopuses just joined an exclusive intelligence club by learning to use mirrors to find hidden food. - Date: - June 5, 2026 - Source: - Dartmouth College - Summary: - Octopuses may be even smarter than we thought.
Overarming America: Game theory explores how fear and social pressure drive gun purchases
Overarming America: Game theory explores how fear and social pressure drive gun purchases Stephanie Baum Scientific Editor Robert Egan Associate Editor A Dartmouth College study is the first to map the interplay of personal choice and social networks that has led to the United States being one of the world's most heavily armed countries, with 120 firearms for every 100 people. The researchers describe in Science Advances how individual incentives to buy firearms can lead to a phenomenon they...
Shock survey reveals voters will back scandal-hit candidates just to stop the other side from winning
Shock survey reveals voters will back scandal-hit candidates just to stop the other side from winning The six-day poll, which concluded on Monday, found that two-thirds of party-aligned respondents would vote for a candidate they dislike simply to stop the other party from winning - Bookmark - CommentsGo to comments A new Reuters/Ipsos poll reveals a stark reality in American politics: deep partisan divides mean many voters are willing to overlook significant controversies to prevent the...
Ancient lake cores reveal unprecedented 2012 Rwenzori fire and ecological shift
Ancient lake cores reveal unprecedented 2012 Rwenzori fire and ecological shift Andrew Zinin Lead Editor For the past several years, Penn State geoscientist Sarah Ivory and her students have been among a team of scientists scaling the East African Rwenzori Mountains, collecting sediment core samples from lakes formed at the end of the last ice age as glaciers began receding in the region some 12,000 years ago. Among those cores was a surprising revelation: A 2012 wildfire that ravaged 16...
Octopuses learn mirror-guided navigation to locate prey
Octopuses learn mirror-guided navigation to locate prey Lisa Lock Scientific Editor Robert Egan Associate Editor Octopuses are remarkably intelligent creatures, as was demonstrated by Inky the Octopus's famous escape from the National Aquarium of New Zealand through a drainpipe back to sea in 2016. A new Dartmouth study shows octopuses can use mirrors to find food out of sight, demonstrating spatial cognitive abilities. The results are published in Current Biology.
Volatile summer weather threatens to turn World Cup into test of heat
Volatile summer weather threatens to turn World Cup into test of heat June 10 : The World Cup will kick off on Thursday under familiar North American summer threats: extreme heat, suffocating humidity and thunderstorms capable of delaying matches with little warning. Seasonal forecasts indicate above-normal temperatures across large parts of the United States, while moisture flowing north from the Gulf of Mexico could fuel thunderstorms and severe weather during the opening weeks of the...
California professor argues need for 'objective measures' after state drops ACT/SAT requirement
A growing consortium of University of California professors is urging the state university system to bring back standardized testing, warning that the elimination of admissions tests has degraded academic readiness and forced instructors to teach "middle school math" to college undergraduates. More than 1,400 UC faculty members have signed an open letter calling on leadership to reinstate the SAT and ACT mathematics requirements for Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math (STEM) majors....
Future Power Rankings: How all 68 Power 4 college football teams stack up
Projecting a college football program's future is harder than ever. Rosters and fortunes change dramatically and championship pathways are more open than ever. The assets that make a program great in 2026 might not be there in 2027.
How back is the U? Can Clemson rebound? Previewing...
Life in the ACC certainly isn't boring. In the past year alone, the conference has produced a long and awkward CFP rankings battle, an irate affiliate member, a thrilling national title game run, the strangest tiebreaker result imaginable, an out-of-nowhere 11-win season, the most disappointing team in the country, an epic pro-to-college face-plant, 18 of the 38 best games of the 2025 season, the No. 1 pick in the NFL draft (indirectly) and the most awkward possible move to nine-game...