Your Top Science Stories for this Week
| The Trump administration is directing wildlife officials to roll back endangered species protections in California. But practically, nothing may come of it. | |
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| How one Berkeley family looking for treatment for their epileptic child helped move Epidiolex along the road to FDA approval. | |
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| Pollinator. Mason. Jeweler. A female blue orchard bee is a multitasking master. She fashions exquisite nests out of mud and pollen that resemble pieces of jewelry. And in the process, she helps us grow nuts and fruits. | |
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| The Carr Fire, which killed seven people, has been partially contained and the threat to residents reduced. But the Mendocino Complex Fire is now the largest wildfire in state history. | |
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| In fire-torn parts of the West, some people now safe are struggling mightily when they again smell smoke or see an orange haze in the sky. That's normal, say therapists. And you can quench the fears. | |
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| In the most comprehensive study yet of the climate change impacts of soil, researchers found a significant increase in the amount of carbon since the 1990s. | |
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| Make a star chart, look at the night sky through a telescope, and search for animals on a night hike with the amateur astronomers at the Don Edwards San Francisco Bay National Wildlife Refuge. Friday, August 10, 8:30-10:30. Free admission. | |
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