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Meet the 12-Year-Old Who Invented an Edible Water Bottle: “My Biggest Inspiration Was Wanting to Help the World”

Across the world, humans purchase around 1.3 billion single-use plastic water bottles a day. Because only about 9% of plastic is recycled, the vast majority of those bottles — 22 billion a year by some estimates — wind up in landfills, the ocean, or elsewhere in nature.  When beach-loving Madison Checketts began noticing many of those […]

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Madison Checketts stands in front of her poster board presentation of her edible water bottle

Rideshare in the Air: New Electric “Air Taxis” Could Be the Commute of the Near-Future

Imagine Uber-like air travel: a convenient way to order an “air taxi” from one point of a city to another. It may sound futuristic, but it isn’t light-years away — companies in the United States and across the globe have already begun investing in electric air taxis that aim to make commuting quicker and more

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Meet the Girl, 10, Who Wrote a Letter to Her Mayor Asking for More Softball Fields — And Got One

Evangeline Iarossi, 10, and her older sister Belle, 13, have been playing softball in their hometown of Tampa, Florida, since they were each about 4 years old. They love the sport, but there was a big problem: Only one softball field was available for all the teams in their local Little League to use. In

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Why Birdwatching Is Good for You: All About the “Profound” Mental Health Benefits of the Avian Pastime

Birdwatching soared in popularity during the COVID-19 pandemic, and interest in the pastime shows no signs of slowing. Researchers who have been investigating the science behind the hobby have discovered that it has numerous proven benefits to mental health and well-being. According to an October study published in Scientific Reports, birdwatching and its positive effect

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Lilac-breasted roller (Coracias caudatus) perched on an Acacia tree. Ndutu region of Ngorongoro Conservation Area, Tanzania, Africa

Meet the Posh, Prize-Winning Pets of Senegal: Ladoum Sheep

Recently proclaimed to be “the world’s most expensive sheep” by National Geographic, the Ladoum sheep of Senegal compete in annual televised beauty pageants and are known to fetch upward of $10,000 each. In some cases, it’s considerably more: a purchase price of just over $80,000 was allegedly once recorded. To be sure, Ladoum sheep are

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Ahead of Eid al-Adha in Senegal, a man poses with a Ladoum sheep

Something Old, Something New: Designer Modernizes Hand-Me-Down Wedding Dresses for Brides

“Something old, something new, something borrowed, something blue”: The tradition, based on a 19th century Old English rhyme, encourages brides to incorporate one thing from each category into their weddings for good luck and a happy marriage. Dallas-based wedding dress designer Lovell Cox has given the saying a new meaning by reconstructing old family wedding

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Breakthrough Non-Hormonal Hot Flash Medications Could Soon Be Approved

Hot flashes, also known as vasomotor symptoms or hot flushes, are brief, uncomfortable, and intense waves of heat that plague more than 80% of women experiencing menopause. It wasn’t until 1941 that the drug Premarin, which addresses the symptoms by replacing estrogen, came on the market, and since then, no new classes of drugs designed

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Abstract brain activity image. 3D generated image.

A “Major Step Forward”: Modified Peptide Could Change Landscape for Brain Cancer Treatment

Researchers from Brown University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have discovered a new way of administering medication to mice with malignant brain tumors — a milestone achievement that could one day help treat humans who are battling brain cancer.  Brain cancers are notoriously difficult to treat, with glioblastoma being the most aggressive and common

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CT Scan brain Finding isodense mass with ill-defined margin and surrounding edema at the Left frontal lobe. Glioblastoma, brain metastasis. Blurry operating room background.

This Vending Machine That Dispenses Naloxone Has Saved Over 900 Lives From Overdoses

When you see a vending machine, you likely expect it to dole out snacks or beverages — not life-saving medication. In Ohio, there exists such a machine that dispenses naloxone, a medicine that rapidly reverses an opioid overdose. And it has already saved 960 lives through overdose reversal in under two years, according to new

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