Mars May Have Had a Northern Ocean—and a Weird Mineral “Ring” Just Gave It a Timeline

A new Nature Communications study spots a mineral “ring” and manganese signature in Mars’ Utopia Planitia—clues that could finally pin down the timeline of a lost northern ocean.

Trump’s “AI compromise” has Washington buzzing — but the details are basically vapor

Trump allegedly cut an AI regulation deal that pleases MAGA and Big Tech—but the “article” provided has no facts, names, or terms.

China Just Logged a 7‑Month Spaceflight—and the Hard Part Wasn’t the Launch

China’s crew just came home after nearly seven months in orbit—a national record that signals serious operational maturity, not just PR.

Amazfit’s New Balance 3 and Ultra Get Smarter—and 15% More Expensive

Amazfit’s Balance 3 and Ultra bring better health sensors and long battery life—but a 15% price bump risks alienating the brand’s value crowd.

Apple Might Ditch USB‑C on Some iPhones—But This “Article” Has No Actual Reporting

Apple ditching USB‑C on two iPhones would be a big deal—too bad the “article” provided contains zero reporting to rewrite.

Why Americans and Latin Americans Clash on Wildlife—Blame Europe’s Colonial Hangover

Colonial history still shapes how the Americas treat wildlife—coexistence vs. control isn’t biology, it’s values baked in centuries ago.

Why North and Latin America Fight Over Wildlife: Europe’s Colonial Hangover

A Colorado State study says North vs. Latin America’s wildlife attitudes split along colonial lines—and it still shapes conservation fights today.

Perseus Cluster’s “Chemical Fingerprint” Didn’t Add Up—Now Supernova Models Are Catching Up

Perseus Cluster’s element ratios didn’t match classic supernova theory. Three new papers propose revamped star-and-explosion models that finally fit.

A New Math Trick Could Tell Us Which River Deltas Can Outrun Rising Seas

A new research formula aims to predict how river deltas can build (or lose) land as seas rise—helping planners judge whether channel diversions will save coastlines.

A New Math Trick Could Tell Us Which River Deltas Can Outrun Rising Seas

A new formula aims to predict how much land river deltas can build or save—so channel diversions and coastal restoration aren’t just expensive guesswork.

Ethanol’s Early-2000s Gold Rush Didn’t Stop at Gas—It Jacked Up Midwest Farmland

Ethanol’s early-2000s boom pushed corn up to 31%—and farmland values up to 44% in producing states, pricing out would-be buyers.