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The Hemp Ban Shows America Still Works | Opinion
With a federal ban on intoxicating hemp products officially signed into law, November saw the most consequential change in ...
They mirror our own impermanence: always in motion, always fading. Magical yet melancholy, the trees offer both a celebration ...
11hon MSN
Teens may have come up with a new way to detect, treat Lyme disease using CRISPR gene editing
To compete at iGEM, a sort of science Olympics, teens at a Georgia high school set their sights on finding a better way to ...
The Oak Ridger on MSN
AMSE receives $12,000 grant for America 250th initiative
The American Museum of Science and Energy is a recipient of a $12,000 grant for Tennessee America 250 initiatives from the ...
The atmosphere is emerging as a domain of strategic competition with profound implications for national security, economic ...
These breakthroughs remind us that scientific advancement depends on nurturing a full pipeline of scientists — from young ...
Feature: From nuclear weapons testing to climate modeling, nine new machines will give the US unprecedented computing ...
A new study published in Science Advances overturns a long-standing paradigm in climate science that stronger Northern ...
Tsuki on MSNOpinion
America’s most dangerous snakes and the science behind their venom
These three snakes are responsible for some of the most dangerous encounters in the United States. Their venom, speed, and ...
Federal science funding is already vital to research and innovation in Tennessee, but it also powers so much more.
As winter closes in across much of North America, migratory birds are heading south to warmer climes and more abundant food.
The Department of Energy will open up its data sets and equipment to outside researchers looking to tinker with AI tools.
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