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Phys.org / Using 6,000-year-old data, scientists uncover why Europe may face 42 extra days of summer by 2100

New research led by Royal Holloway reveals for the first time why Europe could gain more than an extra month of summer days by 2100 using climate data from the last millennia.

Nov 19, 2025 in Earth
Phys.org / Soil carbon decomposition varies vastly, holding implications for climate models

Soil stores more carbon than Earth's atmosphere and plants combined, which makes the speed of soil carbon's decomposition an important variable in models used to predict changes to our climate.

Nov 19, 2025 in Earth
Phys.org / How a plant-parasitic nematode can infect a wide range of organisms

UC Davis nematologists, including Valerie Williamson, professor emerita in the Department of Plant Pathology, and associate professor Shahid Siddique, Department of Entomology and Nematology, have long wondered how a plant-parasitic ...

Nov 19, 2025 in Biology
Medical Xpress / New study highlights key findings on lung cancer surveillance rates

Despite recommendations for posttreatment surveillance in lung cancer patients, there is wide variability in the follow-up care that lung cancer patients receive. A recent study, led by senior author Leah Backhus, MD, MPH, ...

Nov 21, 2025 in Oncology & Cancer
Phys.org / Emerald green degradation in masterpieces: Scientists identify the culprits

An international team of researchers have found what triggers degradation in one of the most popular pigments used by renowned 19th and 20th century painters. Using a multi-method approach, including advanced synchrotron ...

Nov 19, 2025 in Chemistry
Phys.org / Historic Colorado River deal to conserve flows advances after winning key approval from state water board

A yearslong effort to purchase two of the most powerful water rights on the Colorado River has cleared another hurdle after the state water board agreed to manage the rights alongside Western Slope water officials.

Nov 22, 2025 in Earth
Phys.org / Magnetic nanocultures: A tiny lens into the vast world of soil microbes

An estimated 1 trillion species of microorganisms reside on Earth, yet scientists have been able to study less than two percent of them. Because many microorganisms cannot be cultivated in laboratories, researchers at Carnegie ...

Nov 19, 2025 in Nanotechnology
Phys.org / Archaeologists reveal second-largest Roman olive oil mill in the Roman Empire

Ca' Foscari University of Venice is co-directing a major international archaeological mission in the Kasserine region of Tunisia. The excavations, focused on the area of ancient Roman Cillium, on the border with present-day ...

Nov 18, 2025 in Other Sciences
Phys.org / Crucial protein recruits help to protect itself while it forms

Proteins are often called the building blocks of cells, but even those building blocks need to be built. One of the most important steps in the process of building proteins is glycosylation, when sugar molecules (glycans) ...

Nov 19, 2025 in Biology
Phys.org / The world's new US$125 billion rainforest trust fund revives a 1990s idea—and shows its limits

A US$125 billion rainforest fund is being hailed as a flagship announcement from the 2025 UN climate summit in Belém, Brazil. The goal is noble: this is essentially a trust fund that will pay countries to keep their tropical ...

Nov 21, 2025 in Earth
Phys.org / Here's what Black Friday sales shopping does to your brain

Every November, Black Friday arrives with big claims of massive savings and "one-day-only" deals. We are bombarded with offers that seem too good to pass up. But beneath all this lies something far more strategic.

Nov 21, 2025 in Other Sciences
Phys.org / Webb reveals Apep's four 'spiraling' dust shells shaped by Wolf-Rayet stars

NASA's James Webb Space Telescope has delivered a first of its kind: a crisp mid-infrared image of a system of four serpentine spirals of dust, one expanding beyond the next in precisely the same pattern. (The fourth is almost ...

Nov 19, 2025 in Astronomy & Space