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A model embryo helps researchers model human congenital spine diseases. Plus, hints of how cochlear implants help hearing and a pivotal year for working scientists.
Data that raised hopes of a new elementary particle has turned out to be a fluke. Plus, plastic ‘nurdles’ hurt sea urchins and Twitter changed science — what happens now it’s in turmoil?
Researchers have never found fossils of dinosaurs’ sound-producing organs. Plus, South Korea’s lunar orbiter has arrived at the Moon and a historic global deal to save species.
Model predicts a wave of COVID-19 deaths as China reduces its strict health protections. Plus, a historic global agreement on biodiversity and how researchers can help to solve the energy crisis.
Pfizer and GSK are racing to get approval for the first-ever jabs against respiratory syncytial virus. Plus, nine stark charts show how UK science is failing Black researchers and the best science books to read this week.
The people behind this year’s biggest science stories. Plus, the James Webb Space Telescope scrutinizes seven Earth-sized planets and the satellite that will track all of the world’s water.
Discover our pick of the best science shots of 2022. Plus, a nuclear-fusion lab achieves ‘ignition’ and nine sites that could describe a new geological epoch.
This recipe approximates the food cooked by Neanderthals 70,000 years ago. Plus, flu causes huge spike in child hospitalizations in Canada and ankylosaurs might have wooed mates with their enormous tail clubs.
Academics worry about students using artificial intelligence tools to write their homework. Plus, why strep A infections are surging and the historic Artemis mission is home safe.
Why do some dogs chase squirrels? Plus, researchers worry that easing COVID restrictions could overwhelm China’s health-care system and how world leaders can save a million species from extinction.
Ancient DNA suggests that Greenland was once a lush forest inhabited by surprisingly large animals. Plus, remains of the last Tasmanian tiger found in museum storage and the winners of Nature’s Scientist at work photo competition.
A radioactive isotope from nuclear power plants’ spent fuel will power lengthy space missions. Plus, the first gene therapy for haemophilia is the world’s most expensive drug.
Remarkable images highlight what’s at stake in the United Nations Biodiversity Conference opening today. Plus, severe COVID could cause markers of old age in the brain and what happens when your neural implant’s maker goes bust.
Journals trial paper mill-detecting tools, how smallpox inoculation shaped America’s concept of freedom and the James Webb Space Telescope’s best images so far.
Resist the temptation to push for quick returns on basic biology research, implores a Nature editorial. Plus, ants make milk to feed their young and a beak fossil upends the bird evolutionary tree.
The eruption of a volcano in Hawaii has disrupted the Keeling curve, a key climate record. Plus, two new minerals have been discovered in a meteorite and an ancient skull could be a million-year-old Homo erectus.
‘Mpox’ is the new preferred term for the disease caused by the monkeypox virus. Plus, three problems a plastics treaty could solve and deep bass makes people dance — even when they can’t hear it.
The world’s largest active volcano is erupting for the first time in almost 40 years. Plus, mosquitos’ blood meals reveal past infections and how to improve the European Union’s ambitious climate plan.