Thank you for visiting nature.com. You are using a browser version with limited support for CSS. To obtain
the best experience, we recommend you use a more up to date browser (or turn off compatibility mode in
Internet Explorer). In the meantime, to ensure continued support, we are displaying the site without styles
and JavaScript.
Centennial celebrations mark the discovery of oxygen, and a physicist shares ideas about why the pyramids were built, in our weekly dip into Nature’s archive.
A brain haemorrhage late in pregnancy upended Parisa Hosseinzadeh’s life — and her tenure clock. Thanks to supportive physicians, family and colleagues, she’s restarting her academic career.
The US vice-president has stood up for maternal health issues and for improving the diversity of the scientific workforce. Plus, a mysterious source of ‘dark oxygen’ discovered on the sea floor.
Coating implants with an adhesive layer that bonds them to target tissue can prevent the formation of observable fibrous capsules on various organs and tissues, including the abdominal wall, colon, stomach, lung and heart, in diverse animal models, such as rats, mice and pigs.
Self-replicating programs can emerge from a random soup of tens of thousands of pieces of computer code. Plus, how astronomers unmask deepfakes and did AlphaFold really solve protein folding?
A hybrid model that combines a differentiable solver for atmospheric dynamics with machine-learning components is capable of weather forecasts and climate simulations on par with the best machine-learning and physics-based methods.