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Shells, composed mostly of invasive zebra mussels pile up at Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore in Michigan. The Nonindigenous Aquatic Nuisance Species Control and Prevention Act of 1990 and the United States Geological Survey's Nonindigenous Aquatic Species database were created in response to this mussel.
corfoto/Getty Images
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The central European bicolored ant, L. emarginatus, wanders around a rock in New York City. Researchers hope that people will continue uploading sightings of the so-called ManhattAnt to sites like iNaturalist so they can track the ants' movement and learn more about their behaviors.
Julian F./iNaturalist
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Many people get into their phones when they're bored, then scroll through social media in the hopes of alleviating that boredom. But new research suggests that swiping from video to video might increase boredom, not alleviate it.
Tippapatt/Getty Images
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At this point, public health officials generally agree that COVID is endemic, meaning it is here to stay in predictable ways.
Peter Zelei Images/Getty Images
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During its 1997 flight, the Galileo spacecraft returned images of the Moon. This color picture is a mosaic assembled from 18 images taken by Galileo's imaging system through a green filter.
NASA/JPL/USGS
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Braille literacy is directly linked to higher rates of academic success and better employment outcomes for blind and low vision adults.
Hill Street Studios/Getty Images
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During the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, many U.S. military personnel were exposed to blast waves from nearby explosions. Over time, the military realized that soldiers' brains had been injured by these blast waves — and that being exposed to many smaller blast waves could cause some of the same problems as getting hit by one big one.
Stocktrek Images/Getty Images
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Ahead of the 2024 Paris Olympics, the International Olympic Committee advised athletes to acclimatize to hot weather with a technique called heat training.
Natacha Pisarenko/AP
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Over the next week, forecasts project extreme heat across much of the South, Midwest and parts of the West. So, this episode, health correspondent Pien Huang helps us take heat training cues from Olympians, many of whom spent weeks preparing for a sweltering Paris Olympics, by training in the heat to get their bodies used to hot, humid weather. But heat training is not just for competitive athletes. It's recommended for people in the military and those who work outdoors in hot weather — and it could even be useful for generally healthy members of the public. Plus, we get into some important caveats about who is best positioned to heat train — and why doing so doesn't minimize the problems of a warming climate.
Cool off like an Olympian: Here's how athletes cope with intense heat
This composite image shows the Cartwheel Galaxy, located about 500 million light-years away. In the heat death scenario, the universe would expand so far that the light of one galaxy would be unable to reach its neighbor.
NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI
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Researchers glued cameras and tracking instruments to small pieces of neoprene, that they then glued to the fur of the sea lions
Nathan Angelakis
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The horn antenna in Holmdel, NJ used in the 1960s by Bell Labs scientists Penzias and Wilson, who accidentally discovered the cosmic microwave background (CMB).
Bettmann / Contributor
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In 2009, only about half of teens said they used social media every day. By 2022, 95% of teens said they used some social media — and about a third say they use it constantly, a poll from Pew Research Center found.
Daniel de la Hoz/Getty Images
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Simone Biles, widely considered one of the best athletes, competes on the uneven bars during a women's artistic gymnastics qualification round at the 2024 Summer Olympics.
Abbie Parr/AP
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There are over eight hundred species of leeches, but researchers estimate that only ten percent of all leeches are terrestrial.
Auscape/Contributor/Getty Images
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