Illustration shows three large vats of cells and industrial tubing that output beef, chicken and dairy products.

Getting lab-grown meat — and milk — to the table

By Bob Holmes   Beef, chicken and dairy made from cultured cells could offer a smaller footprint than conventional farms. Companies are working on scaling up and bringing prices down. Read more

A mouse runs along a moss-covered tree branch fleeing from a swooping owl

How the brain calculates a quick escape

By Tom Siegfried   Whether fly or human, fleeing from danger is key to staying alive. Scientists are beginning to unravel the complex circuitry behind the split-second decision to beat a hasty retreat. Read more

Illustration shows a man and woman running a race, with the man leading. The women has a large female symbol tethered to her wrist. EKG lines are in the background.

America is failing women’s health

By Susan E. Short and Meghan Zacher   OPINION: Systemic inequity means women in the US die younger and suffer more than they should. It’s time for health for all. Read more

A conceptual illustration shows an elderly person with a walker looking at a vital version of themselves hiking reflected in the side of a giant pill bottle. Aging cells on the ground give way to healthy cells.

Could getting rid of old cells turn back the clock on aging?

By Amber Dance   Researchers are investigating medicines that selectively kill decrepit cells to promote healthy aging — but more work is needed before declaring them a fountain of youth Read more

 

What we are reading

Fatal food

You’ve heard of mariners getting scurvy from too little vitamin C, but explorers shedding skin because of too much vitamin A might be new to you. In the Disappearing Spoon podcast, Sam Kean relates the story of three men and their sled dogs slogging through the snowy expanse of Antarctica on a 1912 scientific expedition. Food, supplies and one man are lost to an icy crevasse. The way the remaining men find to sustain themselves leads to sloughed off skin — and worse.

Living green

Many of us do our best to minimize our personal carbon footprint, but do those actions really make a difference? If you want some fact-based guidance, take this New York Times quiz and see how a vegan diet stacks up against recycling and other measures. The quiz is part of an opinion piece by psychologist Sander van der Linden, who writes that fighting misperceptions and misinformation about what actions will slow climate change may be most important of all. And your personal contribution is small change: It’s governments and businesses that have the greatest power in this effort, he notes, so don’t take it too hard if you don’t ace the test. (To see more of van der Linden, watch our event on conspiracy theories.)

Costly gains

Today’s bodybuilders would outdo Arnold Schwarzenegger at his peak, but achieving this degree of muscle mass is not easy. In fact, it’s nearly impossible without steroids or other drugs that can cause severe health problems. For the Washington Post, Bonnie Berkowitz and William Neff dive into the often ad-hoc regimens of steroids, drugs and supplements that extreme bodybuilders take and the dangers therein, revealed in the story’s graphics. Weakened hearts, ’roid rage and permanent infertility are among the problems — and that’s not all that afflicts the biz: The story is one in a series, Built & Broken, that explores the dark corners of the competitive bodybuilding world.

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Climate Change and Extreme Events

 

Art & science

Aroma of Christmas trees graphic

Get a whiff of this

The fresh, sharp smell of Christmas trees in the December air isn’t holiday magic — it’s chemistry: The scent comes from a suite of compounds, each bringing in its own essence. Most of these molecules show up in our everyday lives. The turpentine-smelling compound alpha-pinene can be made into camphor, a main active ingredient in Vicks VapoRub. Myrcene shows up in lemongrass and hops, while bornyl acetate — the star player in the trees’ scent — makes a more discreet appearance in rosemary.

Some of the standouts in the odor cocktail are shown above in an infographic by Andy Brunning, the educator and creator behind Compound Interest, a blog that introduces readers to all sorts of molecules we regularly encounter. His infographics span materials chemistry, food chemistry, chemistry in the news and more. Whether porridgecat pee, or the polymers in a World Cup jersey, Brunning has the chemistry covered. We encourage you to peruse the blog, but if you want to keep referring to a piney scent as “Christmas-tree smell” instead of “bornyl acetate,” we won’t judge.