In the battle against time, the body’s muscles face a relentless foe: aging
Creatine: Gains for Muscles and the Brain, Especially in Older Adults
Written by Vance Voetberg
Written by Vance Voetberg
In the battle against time, the body’s muscles face a relentless foe: aging
Written by Stephen C. George
From 20 million-year-old fossils to brand-new molecules, girls rule in the arena of outstanding science finds
Written by Michelle Standlee
Early research shows reason for concern, finding microplastics can cause inflammation and oxidative stress in mice and accumulate in animal organs
Written by John Leake
A few days ago the Epoch Times published a long feature about Dr. Peter McCullough’s three-year investigation of mRNA vaccines and his bold challenge of the most basic and beloved premise of the Bio-Pharmaceutical Complex
Written by Phillip Altman
Wouldn’t it be fantastic if those legislators, regulators and health experts who supported the problematic COVID pandemic policies and the claim the COVID-19 so-called “vaccines” were “safe and effective” would come and exchange views in the open. It has not happened previously
Written by Phillip Altman
More answers to why some people had serious adverse effects and others did not
Written by BBC
JBM Solar Projects 21 Ltd has been given approval to create a 49,9-megawatt solar farm with battery storage on land near Highleadon, between Newent and Gloucester
Written by Alan Brough
Over the last two years we have all watched in horror as the extent of the harm and damage that has been caused by the Covid injections has been revealed, with more and more irrefutable evidence of unnecessary death and disability coming to light on an almost daily basis
Written by Laura Baisas
Scientists have learned new information about the ancient ocean floor at the core-mantle boundary of our planet
Written by Kai Xiang Teo
When a group of researchers asked an AI to design a robot that could walk, it created a “small, squishy and misshapen” thing that walks by spasming when filled with air
Written by BBC
Barry Green recounts the moment in June 1983 when the JET fusion laboratory at Culham in Oxfordshire undertook its first experiment: “It felt brilliant. One thing is to work on a design, another thing is to operate it.”
Written by Mark Garcia
NASA engineering and flight control teams are continuing to review data and video associated with a coolant leak from a backup radiator on the station’s Nauka multipurpose laboratory module
Written by Bobby Azarian
If the “self” is not real, then we are slaves to a billiard ball universe, trapped in a nihilistic nightmare in which we cannot change our fate
Written by Dr Peter McCullough MD, MPH
I rarely have the opportunity to review general health measures that help people feel and function better, and with good execution, live longer
Written by Mohammad Qusir Rather
Some asteroids have measured densities higher than those of any elements known to exist on Earth. This suggests that they are at least partly composed of unknown types of “ultradense” matter that cannot be studied by conventional physics
Written by Gemma Conroy
Researchers catalogue more than 3,000 different types of cell in our most complex organ