A new study theorizes that evolution ticks at different speeds, especially when a big group of organisms first appears.
The Brighterside of News on MSN
Gut microbes are reshaping how scientists think about brain evolution
A new study from Northwestern University is reshaping how scientists think about brain evolution. The research suggests that ...
A single thermal performance curve applies across life, from bacteria to animals. Species differ in optimal temperatures, but not in the fundamental shape of their response to heat. Researchers at Tri ...
Green Matters on MSN
Scientists finally solve major evolution puzzle regarding world’s oldest animals
The missing link in the mystery turned out to be an event called the Cambrian explosion. It was only after it that living ...
A genomic atlas of Nematostella vectensis reveals how primitive animals created multiple cell types millions of years ago, ...
Environmental change doesn’t affect evolution in a single, predictable way. In large-scale computer simulations, scientists discovered that some fluctuating conditions help populations evolve higher ...
A study published in the Nature journal alters how the evolution of fish has been historically understood. Fossilized fish and other sea creatures have often been pivotal in new scientific discoveries ...
5don MSN
Birds at a college changed beak shapes during the pandemic. It might be a case of rapid evolution
Songbirds on the UCLA campus changed beak shapes during the pandemic, according to a new study. Researchers suspect it might be a case of rapid evolution.
Live Science on MSN
'How can all of this be happening?': Scientists spot massive group of ancient galaxies so hot they shouldn't exist
An inexplicably hot, fast-growing cluster of galaxies in the early universe has scientists questioning theories of galactic ...
ZME Science on MSN
Cannabis Did Not Always Produce THC and a New Study Shows How Evolution Figured It Out
The results revealed a clear sequence. Enzymes predating cannabis showed no ability to process CBGA. The first enzyme unique ...
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