NATURE

Why tumour geography matters — and how to map it

To people with cancer, tumours can seem like amorphous clumps of defective cells, relentlessly focused on unconstrained growth and invasion.

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How the invasion of Ukraine is affecting Russian expat researchers

Several Russian researchers are navigating academic rejection after the invasion of Ukraine.Credit: Anatolii Stepanov/AFP/Getty After Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in

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Why the man behind a ‘mouse utopia’ disappeared from the scientific literature

Hello Nature readers, would you like to get this Briefing in your inbox free every day? Sign up here. Credit:

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Turning a scientific lens on the wonderful world of fungi

Close Encounters of the Fungal Kind: In Pursuit of Remarkable Mushrooms Richard Fortey William Collins (2024) Richard Fortey, best known

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This dwarf planet might have its very own ice volcano

The dwarf planet Makemake, which chills out in the deep freeze of the outer Solar System, might be home to

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DNA need not apply: Books in brief

Nature, Published online: 22 November 2024; doi:10.1038/d41586-024-03863-8 Andrew Robinson reviews five of the best science picks. Source link

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How to create psychedelics’ benefits without the ‘trip’

Targeting just the right neurons could make it possible to reap the anti-anxiety benefits of psychedelics without the intense experience

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Antarctica’s first known amber whispers of a vanished rainforest

RESEARCH HIGHLIGHT 22 November 2024 The only continent where amber had not been found no longer has that distinction, thanks

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Epiphanies

Truth is colder than the February pavement. Three layers of cardboard cannot protect you from truth. This quantum universe. People

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I fled the war in Ukraine. Now I work on ways to help the country’s soil heal

Olena Melnyk at the Salisbury Plain military training area, UK, testing a soil-sampling protocol for use in bomb craters.Credit: Mark