Could Animals Predict Disasters? Unraveling Their Mysterious Sixth Sense

Moments before a powerful earthquake hit the Indian Ocean in 2004, tourists later reported something eerie: elephants breaking their chains and running for higher ground, flamingos abandoning their low-lying breeding sites, and dogs refusing to go outdoors. Stories like these keep coming back every time disaster strikes, like ghostly echoes reminding us that maybe animals … Read more

The Silent Language of Fungi: How Mushrooms Connect Ecosystems

The Silent Language of Fungi: How Mushrooms Connect Ecosystems

Sumi

If you were told the forest can whisper, argue, and share resources beneath your feet, you’d probably raise an eyebrow. Yet that’s exactly what’s happening in the hidden world of fungi, where delicate threads of mycelium weave trees, plants, and even microbes into one sprawling living network. This isn’t just poetic imagery; it’s a real, … Read more

Why Do We Dream? The Science Behind Our Nocturnal Narratives

Why Do We Dream? The Science Behind Our Nocturnal Narratives

Sumi

Almost everyone has had that moment: you wake up with your heart racing, your mind buzzing from a dream that felt more vivid than real life, and for a second you’re not quite sure which world you’re in. It’s strangely moving that our brains, even when our bodies are completely still, spin entire stories every … Read more

The Universe's Earliest Moments: What the Oldest Light Tells Us About Creation

The Universe’s Earliest Moments: What the Oldest Light Tells Us About Creation

Sumi

Imagine standing in a vast, silent cathedral so old that its stones still echo with the first words ever spoken there. That’s what cosmologists are doing when they study the oldest light in the universe: they’re listening to the after-echo of creation itself. This ancient glow, called the cosmic microwave background, is not just a … Read more

The Arctic's Hidden Treasures: What Lies Beneath the Melting Ice?

The Arctic’s Hidden Treasures: What Lies Beneath the Melting Ice?

Sumi

The Arctic has always felt a bit like the final chapter of a book we never quite finished reading. For decades, it was shown to us as an endless white desert, beautiful but empty, somewhere far away from our everyday lives. Now the ice is melting faster than scientists expected, and suddenly this “empty” place … Read more

Our Sun is a Living Star: New Discoveries About Its Dynamic and Powerful Nature

Our Sun is a Living Star: New Discoveries About Its Dynamic and Powerful Nature

Sumi

If you grew up thinking of the Sun as a steady yellow ball in the sky, recent discoveries feel almost shocking. Modern solar telescopes and spacecraft have revealed a restless, boiling, magnetic monster that’s constantly changing, pulsing, and throwing colossal storms across the solar system. From delicate magnetic threads the size of planets to eruptions … Read more

The Ancient Megaliths of Europe: How Were These Colossal Stones Moved?

The Ancient Megaliths of Europe: How Were These Colossal Stones Moved?

Sumi

All across Europe, from the misty fields of England to the windswept coasts of Brittany and the sun‑baked plains of Spain, gigantic stones stand where no sane person would try to move them today without heavy machinery. Yet thousands of years ago, people with no metal cranes, no trucks, and no GPS somehow quarried, transported, … Read more

CAR T-cell therapy may slow neurodegenerative conditions like ALS

Research Finds CAR-T Cells can Tame Brain Inflammation in ALS Patients

Sumi

Rogue Defenders Accelerate ALS Destruction (Image Credits: Images.newscientist.com) Researchers unveiled a novel CAR-T cell therapy designed to neutralize overzealous immune cells fueling the destruction of motor neurons in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS).[1] Rogue Defenders Accelerate ALS Destruction Microglia, the brain’s resident immune cells, play a critical role in defending against threats and clearing debris. In … Read more

Insects are moving pharmaceutical pollutants from rivers to land; risks unknown

Aquatic Insects Ferry Pharmaceuticals from Rivers to Land Predators, Raising Wildlife Concerns

Sumi

New Research Reveals Drug Transfer Pathway (Image Credits: Unsplash) Common medications such as antibiotics, antidepressants, and painkillers flow into rivers through wastewater, where insects absorb them and deliver the contaminants to birds, bats, and other land dwellers upon emergence.[1] New Research Reveals Drug Transfer Pathway Scientists recently documented how aquatic insects accumulate pharmaceuticals at multiple … Read more

6:00 AM | **Showers from time-to-time this weekend and maybe even a strong-to-severe thunderstorm**

Warmer Air Sets Stage for Weekend Storms in Tennessee Valley

Sumi

Spring-Like Warmth Arrives Early (Image Credits: Flickr) Tennessee Valley – A warming trend collides with unstable weather this weekend, delivering intermittent showers and the outside chance of a strong thunderstorm. Spring-Like Warmth Arrives Early Forecasters noted a clear shift in the weather pattern across the Tennessee Valley. High temperatures climbed into the lower 60s over … Read more

Leaving the subterranean river.

The Lost Rivers of the Underworld: Unseen Waterways Flowing Beneath Our Feet

Trizzy Orozco

As we walk through cities and landscapes, we often remain blissfully unaware of the hidden marvels flowing beneath us—the lost rivers of the underworld. These unseen waterways, veiled in mystery and scientific intrigue, weave through urban and rural landscapes, carrying stories of geology, history, and urban development. The article delves into the enchanting world of … Read more

Rain takes over on Saturday, warming trend begins Sunday

St. Louis Savors Friday’s Sunshine Before Saturday Rains Arrive

Sumi

Friday Offers a Brief Taste of Spring (Image Credits: Pixabay) St. Louis residents face a classic Midwest weather pivot this weekend, with mild conditions giving way to precipitation followed by a welcome warmup. Friday Offers a Brief Taste of Spring Clear skies dominate the forecast for Friday across the St. Louis region. Temperatures will climb … Read more