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Is Voting by Mail Bias, Returning to Work After Covid, Maple Trees Disappearing

A month’s worth of cool science stories, summed up.
Culture
Tuesday, September 1, 2020
Alistair Jennings, Contributor

(Inside Science) -- Here is this month's science research recap with Alistair Jennings.

Filed under
Environment
Climate
Infectious/emerging diseases
Author Bio & Story Archive
Alistair Jennings

Alistair Jennings

Ali Jennings has his PhD in neuroscience from University College London.

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Inside Science is an editorially independent news service of the American Institute of Physics

© 2022 American Institute of Physics

About Inside Science | Contact Us | Privacy Policy | Reprint Rights

   
Skip to main content
Reliable news for an expanding universe
   

Main navigation

  • Creature
  • Culture
  • Earth
  • Human
  • Physics
  • Space
  • Sports
  • Technology

Is Voting by Mail Bias, Returning to Work After Covid, Maple Trees Disappearing

A month’s worth of cool science stories, summed up.
Culture
Tuesday, September 1, 2020
Alistair Jennings, Contributor

(Inside Science) -- Here is this month's science research recap with Alistair Jennings.

Filed under
Environment
Climate
Infectious/emerging diseases
Author Bio & Story Archive
Alistair Jennings

Alistair Jennings

Ali Jennings has his PhD in neuroscience from University College London.

Related Articles

Mycorrhizal fungi in soil

Could Trees Benefit from Fungal Transplants?

A person prepares to release a white weather balloon.

Climate Change is Raising the Top of the Troposphere

Fossil skulls

Scientists Find Hints of a Hidden Mass Extinction 30 Million Years Ago

Leech from genus Haemadipsa, against a background of green moss.

Leeches Reveal Biodiversity Treasure in China

Golden sunlight bathes Los Angeles street, with cars, pedestrians, marquees, and some trees.

Trees May Become the Biggest Air Pollution Contributors in LA

Latest News Articles

The New Quantum Frontier
Physicists Unspool What Happens When Fabrics Dry
We're Ending Our Coverage, But Science Goes On
Heated Debate Rises Over Hints of Superconductivity Above Boiling Temperatures
New Analysis of Pigs' Grunts Reveals How They're Feeling

Latest Video Articles

Nicole Yunger Halpern: When Physics Marries the Past to the Future
James Poskett: Science Has Always Been Global
A Bat's Life
Kristen Nicholson: The Science of Athletes in Motion
Bats Make Predictions on Prey Movements

Inside Science is an editorially independent news service of the American Institute of Physics

© 2022 American Institute of Physics

About Inside Science | Contact Us | Privacy Policy | Reprint Rights