Bird flu, or avian influenza, is spreading among livestock and other mammals in the United States, raising concerns that another pandemic may be... Why scientists' fears about bird flu are ...
A pandemic is not inevitable, scientists say. But the outbreak has ... and has tracked the spread of H5N1 since 2003. When bird flu first struck dairy cattle a year ago, it seemed possible that ...
Why a teenager’s bird-flu infection is ringing alarm bells for scientists Although many of the infections have been mild, emerging data indicate that variants of the avian influenza virus H5N1 ...
When converted to audio signals, their sharp notes mimic high-pitched bird calls. Scientists have detected cosmic waves that sound like birds in space. JHU/APL, NASA Researchers have captured such ...
Inside, between rows of incubators and microscopes, Beth Shapiro and her team are attempting a feat straight out of science fiction: reviving the dodo, a bird that’s been extinct for more than ...
Scientists have tracked an intense radio signal coming from deep in space to its origin – and been left shocked by what they found. For years, researchers have been looking to explain fast ...
Graffiti hearts and other messages have been popping up all over downtown Bath and police are looking for a suspect. Over the past week, graffiti hearts and other unusually positive messages have ...
Prominent blockchain researcher Chen Jing has left the United States to join Tsinghua University in Beijing as a full-time professor. The award-winning scholar and chief scientist said she would ...
A subtype of bird flu caused by avian influenza A (H5) virus has been spreading worldwide in wild birds with a few outbreaks in poultry, dairy cows and other mammals across the United States ...
While acquiring funding may be challenging, the scientists argue that compared to alternatives like laser-pushed sails, electron beams could achieve 10,000 times the range, thus requiring less ...
NEW YORK (AP) — Scientists have detected cosmic waves that ... When converted to audio signals, their sharp notes mimic high-pitched bird calls.
Over the past few decades, magnetic north’s movement has been unprecedented — it dramatically sped up, then in a more recent twist rapidly slowed — though scientists can’t explain the ...