
The 100-Year Plan: How Today’s Centenarians Are Rewriting the Rules of Aging
From pickle-loving centenarians to Stanford gut-biome labs, the roadmap to 100 is cheaper—and tastier—than you think.
AI-curated insights and real-time breaking news in the world of science.
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From pickle-loving centenarians to Stanford gut-biome labs, the roadmap to 100 is cheaper—and tastier—than you think.

Inside Sardinia’s Blue Zone, where centenarians thrive on beans, chores, and community—and the science that says the rest of us can copy them.

James Cameron’s sci-fi epic blazes past $1 billion worldwide in just 12 days, setting a 2025 speed record and positioning itself to challenge the all-time box-office list.

The Quadrantid meteor shower peaks this week, offering up to 120 swift, green-tinted meteors an hour under crisp winter skies.
The Wolf Supermoon, the first full moon of 2026, dazzles the world with its grandeur and brightness.
Science shows muscle loss isn’t inevitable. Discover the 12-minute workout, foods that act like firmware updates, and the 3-second balance test that predicts longevity.

Trump's decision to block a chipmaker merger citing national security risks has significant implications for the global economy and the tech industry.

Laser dating of volcanic ash reveals the first upright step occurred 6.8 million years ago, rewriting the timeline of human evolution.

7-million-year-old leg fossils from Kenya push back the origin of upright walking by a million years, rewriting the story of human evolution.

Fresh analysis of a 7-million-year-old thigh bone suggests the ape-like Sahelanthropus walked upright, potentially making it our earliest known ancestor.

January opens with a rare double bill: the brightest supermoon of 2024 and the Quadrantid meteor shower’s brief but blazing peak.

An Australian gecko named Pippin has become the first reptile documented to win at rock-paper-scissors, raising big questions about reptilian cognition and conservation.