Insects transmit diseases, destroy crops, and pollinate flowers — behaviors that are both beneficial and detrimental for humankind — all thanks to an in-flight guidance system driven by a well-honed sense of smell. These tasks are complicated because...
This month, Insights & Outcomes is mindful of the mental health implications of COVID-19, the moments when cells act like portfolio managers, and a missive from a Milky Way magnetar.
As always, you can find more science and medicine research news on...
In separate articles published recently by The Geological Society of London, Yale geologists David Evans, R. Damian Nance, and their colleagues debate the existence of Pannotia, a supercontinent that may — or may not — have formed near the South Pole...
The fossil remains of several small mammals discovered in tightly packed clusters in western Montana provide the earliest evidence of social behavior in mammals, according to a new study co-authored by a Yale scientist.
The fossils, which are about 75.5...