The New York Times, June 25, 2025

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If you’ve ever cooed at a baby, you have participated in a very special experience. Indeed, it’s an all but unique one: Whereas humans constantly chatter to their infants, other apes hardly ever do so, a new study reveals.

“It’s a new feature that has evolved and massively expanded in our species,” said Johanna Schick, a linguist at the University of Zurich and an author of the study. And that expansion, Dr. Schick and her colleagues argue, may have been crucial to the evolution of language.

Continue reading “Did Baby Talk Give Rise to Language?”

The New York Times, June 18, 2025

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When Qiaomei Fu discovered a new kind of human 15 years ago, she had no idea what it looked like. There was only a fragment of a pinkie bone to go on.

The fossil chip, found in a Siberian cave called Denisova, looked as if it might have come from a 66,000-year-old relative of today’s humans, or maybe a Neanderthal. But Dr. Fu, then a graduate student at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Germany, and her colleagues found DNA in the fossil that told a different story. The bone had belonged to a girl who was part of a third human lineage never seen before. They named her people the Denisovans.

Continue reading “Mysterious Ancient Humans Now Have a Face”

The New York Times, June 18, 2025

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Geography is one of the things that sets apart modern humans.

Our closest living relatives — chimpanzees and bonobos — are confined to a belt of Central African forests. But humans have spread across every continent, even remote islands. Our species can thrive not only in forests, but in grasslands, swamps, deserts and just about every other ecosystem dry land has to offer.

Continue reading “When Humans Learned to Live Everywhere”

The New York Times, June 12, 2025

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You could be forgiven for assuming that scientists know how many kinds of proteins exist. After all, researchers have been studying proteins for more than two centuries. They have powerful tools in their labs to search for the molecules. They can scan entire genomes, spotting the genes that encode proteins. They can use artificial intelligence to help decipher the complex shapes that allow proteins to do their jobs, whether that job entails catching odors in our noses or delivering oxygen in our blood.

Continue reading “Shining a Light on the World of Tiny Proteins”

The New York Times, May 28, 2025

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In the winter of 2006, biologists in New York State got a gruesome surprise. As they surveyed colonies of hibernating bats, they discovered heaps of dead animals on the floors of caves and abandoned mines.

The culprit was a fungus new to science. It caused white-nose disease, named for the fuzzy pale tendrils that sprouted from the nostrils of its victims. (The disease was originally known as white-nose syndrome, but was renamed in recent years.) The fungus, Pseudogymnoascus destructans, or P. destructans, has spread from New York to 40 states and nine Canadian provinces.

Continue reading “A Fungus Devastated North American Bats. A New Species Could Deliver a Killer Blow.”