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Contents | Science 376, 6600
COVER Humanity’s actions have committed us to a warming climate and limited our options for mitigation. Although there is no turning back, some paths are…
‘Now we know where the dead went.’ Did grave robbers plunder battlefields?
Bones went to fertilizer and sugar processing, book argues
Satellites offer new ways to study ecosystems—and maybe even save them
Remote sensing tools provide the big picture often missing from on-the-ground studies
Oldest ever ice offers glimpse of Earth before the ice ages
Climate snapshots suggest carbon dioxide levels were surprisingly modest during ancient warm period
Pioneering urban ecology finds surprising biodiversity in Berlin’s green spaces
Six decades of research reveal rare native species hanging on in Germany’s capital
Decoding cocaine-induced proteomic adaptations in the mouse nucleus accumbens
Proteomics analysis of subcellular fractions of mouse brain may reveal clues for treating cocaine addiction.
Anthropologists take up arms against ‘race science’
At their annual meeting, biological anthropologists began to build a playbook to thwart racist misuse of research
U.S. government in hot seat for response to growing cow flu outbreak
Veterinarians and researchers on the front lines say it has taken too long to share data on viral changes, spread, and milk safety
Locomotion as manipulation with ReachBot
Grasp analysis, motion plans, and field tests are presented for a robot using extendable booms to navigate difficult terrain.
Forced to eat bat feces, chimps could spread deadly viruses to humans
Tobacco farming is driving apes to seek unusual food source, brimming with pathogens