History Snob on MSN
The most historically significant discovery
There are few scientific advances that have had such a dramatic impact on the course of human history as the theory that ...
A research team from the Faculty of Science, Charles University in Prague has discovered Solarion arienae, an extremely rare and morphologically unique unicellular eukaryote that sheds new light on ...
LONDON/GENEVA, Nov 7 (Reuters) - The Trump administration wants countries that receive U.S. health aid to share data with Washington about pathogens that could spark epidemics as a condition of the ...
Take a look at the Demo Launch Trailer for Pathogenic, a 2D twin-stick roguelike shooter developed by Aberrant Labs. Players will embody a parasite on a mission to rid a human body of unhealthy beings ...
In 1812, Napoleon Bonaparte led a disastrous military campaign into Moscow. The death toll was devastating: Out of some 615,000 men, only about 110,000 survivors returned. (Napoleon abandoned his army ...
Become the infection: a lone parasite, fighting a biological war. Here's your look at gameplay from Pathogenic in this trailer for the upcoming 2D roguelike twin-stick shooter game. In Pathogenic, ...
Let's face it—bats get a bad rap. Their links to disease outbreaks and their spooky association with vampires influence their notoriety. In reality, bats are truly remarkable. Bats support our ...
Open annotations (there are currently 0 annotations on this page). Microbes can cause a variety of plant diseases and pose a major threat to global food production. To infect plants, many of these ...
Not revised: This Reviewed Preprint includes the authors’ original preprint (without revision), an eLife assessment, public reviews, and a provisional response from the authors. Li et al. investigate ...
A bottleneck to enabling widespread access to molecular diagnostics, especially in low- and middle-income countries, has been the high cost and complex logistics associated with rapid point-of-care ...
In a new genetic study, scientists have charted the rise of 214 human diseases across ancient Europe and Asia. By Carl Zimmer To prepare for future pandemics, scientists look to the past for clues.
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