After a bout of heavy rain, Hormuz Island, a small gem in southern Iran’s Persian Gulf, has become the centre of attention…
Pakistan’s military leadership is facing a sensitive diplomatic and political challenge after the United States urged Islamabad to consider sending troops to…
US President Donald Trump addressed the nation on December 17, marking nearly a year since returning to the White House. Speaking in…
The Union Ministry of Culture has clarified that letters and notes of India’s first Prime Minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, are not missing. The…
The glittering stage of world football came alive as the FIFA Best Awards 2025 celebrated the sport’s top performers from August 2024…
The United States has escalated its standoff with Venezuela by ordering a naval blockade on all sanctioned oil tankers heading to or…
The Trump administration has expanded its controversial travel ban, now affecting citizens from 39 countries, nearly double the previous list of 19.…
External Affairs Minister Dr. Subrahmanyam Jaishankar met Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Jerusalem, today, to discuss ways to deepen the strategic…
Prime Minister Narendra Modi is in Amman, Jordan, on a two‑day official visit, marking the first full-fledged bilateral engagement by an Indian…
Two men suspected in the deadly Bondi Beach shooting traveled to the Philippines last month before carrying out the attack, Australian authorities…
There's a version of science coverage that exists purely to generate clicks — superlatives, miracle cures, extinction threats, end-of-world clocks. This section tries to do the opposite. When a team of palaeontologists identifies what may be the largest scorpion species ever recorded, the story is told for what it actually is: a finding that reshapes our understanding of prehistoric marine ecosystems, not a monster headline. When the Doomsday Clock moves, it gets the weight of a genuine scientific risk assessment — not a metaphor.
The Science section covers a wide range. Fossils. Evolutionary biology. Animal cognition. Longevity research. Environmental anomalies that don't have clean explanations yet. The breadth is intentional. Real science doesn't organise itself by category.
A 180-million-year-old fossil recovered in Germany arrived in the news without much fanfare. It deserved more. Finds like this extend the biological record in ways that compound over time — each one filling in a gap that previous researchers could only speculate about. The scorpion species identification did something similar. These aren't curiosities. They're data points in a long reconstruction of life on Earth.
The right-handedness study is the kind of research that sounds minor until you think through the implications. If lateralisation — the brain's tendency to specialise one side for certain tasks — traces back further through evolutionary history than previously established, that changes what we understand about how cognition developed. The horse vocalisations story is different in character but similar in kind: an observation that challenges assumptions about what is and isn't uniquely human. Animal behaviour research consistently produces these moments, and this section covers them seriously.
Bowhead whales live past 200 years. Researchers have been trying to understand the biological mechanisms behind that for some time. The protein study covered here is one piece of ongoing work that may, eventually, have clinical implications. The word "may" is doing real work in that sentence — and this section won't strip it out to make the story sound more definitive than it is.
Iran's Hormuz coastline turning red after rainfall is the kind of story that requires a scientist, not a policy analyst. The geochemical explanation is still being worked through. Reporting it doesn't mean having the answer. The Doomsday Clock is different — that's a formal annual assessment combining nuclear, climate, and biological risk factors, produced by people with relevant expertise. Both belong here.
Palaeontology, evolutionary biology, animal behaviour, longevity research, environmental phenomena, and risk assessments like the Doomsday Clock. Not technology products, not health advice, not climate policy. The focus is on what researchers are discovering about the natural world — what the evidence shows and, where the evidence is still thin, what it doesn't yet show.
When there's a story worth covering, yes. But geography isn't the editorial filter here — significance is. A fossil find in Germany or a longevity study from a US university gets covered by the same standard as an ISRO discovery or an IISER paper. The research determines the coverage, not the country of origin.
Carefully. A single study with a small sample size doesn't get treated as settled science. Where findings are preliminary, that's stated clearly. The whale protein story was covered as promising early research, not as a breakthrough. That distinction matters — readers deserve to know how confident the scientists themselves actually are.
Yes. The writing assumes curiosity, not a biology degree. Technical terms get explained when they're essential to the story. The goal is a reader who leaves understanding what changed and why it matters — not a reader who walked away impressed but none the wiser.
Space covers missions, launches, planetary exploration, commercial spaceflight, and astronomical events. Science covers what happens on and beneath the Earth's surface — biology, palaeontology, chemistry, animal behaviour, geophysics. Occasionally a story crosses both — Mars weather data involves planetary science — but the two sections have distinct editorial focuses.
When the story is fundamentally a scientific finding, yes — the Doomsday Clock assessment includes climate trajectory as a core variable, and it's covered here for that reason. Climate policy, government targets, and economic responses to climate change sit elsewhere. The dividing line is whether the story is about what the science says or about what governments are doing in response to it.