Can 3D Printing Help Address the Affordable Housing Crisis in the United States?
The construction is faster, cleaner and more affordable, but experts acknowledge some trial and error is needed
How 'Daylighting' Buried Waterways Is Revitalizing Cities Across America
Urban centers are exhuming creeks and streams once covered up to control floodwater—and bringing life back in the process
A New Generation of Satellites Is Helping Authorities Track Methane Emissions
Efforts to identify leaks of the harmful greenhouse gas are improving with advances in technology
Why Ecologists Are Haunted by the Rapid Growth of Ghost Forests
A study in North Carolina of dying trees may represent a foreboding preview of what may come to coastal ecosystems worldwide
How Doctors Are Using Artificial Intelligence to Battle Covid-19
Software is helping to shape treatment, but experts worry that some tools are approved too soon and others are biased
Should Parents Test for Covid if Their Kid Might Just Have a Cold?
Experts weigh in on when students with runny noses, fevers, and coughs should be quarantined and checked
A New System for Cooling Down Computers Could Revolutionize the Pace of Innovation
A Swiss team has created tiny, fluid-filled channels in microchips to spirit away heat and save energy
What Super-Spreading Events Teach Us About Protecting Ourselves From COVID-19
Scientists are increasingly finding that a small number of people may be the source of many cases
What Scientists Know About How Children Spread COVID-19
As communities struggle with the decision over whether to open up schools, the research so far offers unsatisfying answers
A Virus Study You’ve Never Heard of Helped Us Understand COVID-19
What Columbia University researchers learned when they tried to get a complete picture of how respiratory viruses spread across Manhattan
The 'New Normal' of Visiting America's National Parks
Across the country, these treasured places—and the lodges and businesses that support them—navigate a complicated reopening
Copper’s Virus-Killing Powers Were Known Even to the Ancients
The SARS-CoV-2 virus endures for days on plastic or metal but disintegrates soon after landing on copper surfaces. Here’s why
Cities Around the Globe Are Eagerly Importing a Dutch Speciality—Flood Prevention
Architects and planners from the Netherlands are advising coastal cities worldwide on how to live with water
North Carolina Bald Cypresses Are Among the World's Oldest Trees
Some of the trees along the Black River provide a window into climates dating back thousands of years
How Origami Is Revolutionizing Industrial Design
Scientists and engineers are finding practical applications for the Japanese art form in space, medicine, robotics, architecture and more
As Port Cities Dredge Deeper to Accommodate Growing Cargo Ships, the Risk of Inland Flooding May Rise
By smoothing and deepening waterways, the hydrodynamics of estuaries and rivers can be dramatically changed to invite in the sea
Here's What We Know (and Don't Know) About Flushing Contact Lenses Down the Drain
Though they are tiny, the lenses add up--and might be infiltrating the environment
What the Surging Glaciers of Svalbard Tell Us About the Future of Rising Seas
Scientists look to the Norwegian archipelago's fast-moving glaciers to better understand how other accelerating glaciers will behave
Can Virus Hunters Stop the Next Pandemic Before It Happens?
A global project is looking to animals to map the world's disease hotspots. Are they going about it the right way?
Are Craft Breweries the Next Coffeehouses?
Taprooms springing up across the country are cultivating communities and helping to revitalize entire neighborhoods
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