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Coloured scanning electron micrograph (SEM) of Escherichia coli bacteria (green) taken from the small intestine of a child.

Escherichia coli bacteria, coloured green, in a scanning electron micrograph.Credit: Stephanie Schuller/SPL

AI discovers antibiotics

A machine-learning approach has spotted powerful new types of antibiotic from a pool of more than 100 million molecules, including one that works against bacterial strains considered untreatable. This is the first time artificial intelligence has identified completely new kinds of antibiotic from scratch, without using any previous human assumptions.

Nature | 4 min read

Reference: Cell paper

Warm water spied under imperilled glacier

Scientists have taken their first look underneath Thwaites Glacier, a massive and increasingly unstable formation perched at the edge of Antarctica, using a robotic submarine. Their readings suggest that warm water from the deep ocean is welling up from three directions and mixing underneath the ice. “Thwaites has got these three guns pointed right at it,” says glaciologist Erin Pettit. The finding has increased fears that the glacier might collapse — which could raise global sea levels by more than half a metre.

Nature | 4 min read

China to clamp down on wildlife trade

In the wake of the ongoing coronavirus outbreak, China’s top law-making body is expected to permanently tighten rules on trading wildlife at a meeting next week. Scientists speculate that this could include a ban on eating some wild animals, such as snakes and bats, but they don’t think wildlife used for fur or traditional medicine will be affected. The virus is thought to have originated in a wild-animal market in the city of Wuhan.

Nature | 5 min read

Features & opinion

Missing data driving the reproducibility crisis

When journal editor Tsuyoshi Miyakawa felt results in some submitted papers were ‘too beautiful’, he asked researchers for the raw data underlying their findings, and was dismayed when 40 out of 41 sets of authors were unable to provide them. “We are in a serious situation,” he tweeted, adding that without data, or evidence of raw data, to support conclusions, science is “like a tower built on the sand.”

Molecular Brain | 17 min read

Podcast: harnessing energy from thin air

A new device produces electricity using water in the air, with the help of bacterial nanowires. Plus, a machine-learning algorithm that helps batteries charge faster, and the language of mice decoded.

Nature Podcast | 26 min listen

Subscribe to the Nature Podcast on iTunes, Google Podcasts or Spotify.

Books & culture

Four Moais, the typical large monolithic human figures statues, on Easter Island

Monuments to resilience or collapse? The 800-year-old statues of Easter Island.Credit: Andia/Universal Images Group via Getty

The end of the world as we know it

In his book Before the Collapse, energy specialist Ugo Bardi urges us not to resist the inevitable breakdown of society, which helps the Universe to “get rid of the old to make way for the new”. Reviewer Laura Spinney compares this to earlier books with an end-is-nigh theme, and finds that historical case studies are giving way to big data in authors’ search for understanding.

Nature | 6 min read

Five best science books this week

Andrew Robinson’s pick of the top five science books to read this week includes spontaneous cures, seeing the stars, and secrets of invisible aircraft.

Nature | 3 min read

Where I work

Graham Edgar in SCUBA gear is taking notes near the sea floor above coral and surrounded by fish

Graham Edgar is a senior marine ecologist at the University of Tasmania in Hobart, Australia.Credit: Scott D. Ling

Underwater data collection is the norm for marine ecologist Graham Edgar, who makes around 150 dives each year to look for threatened species and investigate the impact of human activities on their ecosystems. “I love the sense of peace underwater: all the stresses and problems of the terrestrial world drop away,” he says.

Quote of the day

“I hope that everyone will have their light bulb moment, like I did, when they realise what they really care about and want to fight for.”

Seventeen-year-old birdwatcher and environmental campaigner Mya-Rose Craig has been awarded an honorary doctorate by the University of Bristol, making her the youngest person in the United Kingdom to get an honorary degree. (BBC)