When Richard Dawkins’s first blockbuster book was published half a century ago, few genes had ever been sequenced or studied ...
New Scientist on MSN
Read an extract from The Selfish Gene by Richard Dawkins
Dive into the opening of The Selfish Gene's first chapter 'Why are people?', the New Scientist Book Club’s read for June to mark 50 years since the popular science classic was first published ...
The transgender creative discusses his new documentary, Second Nature, which shows how gay penguins and sex-changing fish are part of the animal kingdom's diversity.
Manisha Mandhare, Pune Teacher Behind NEET-UG 2026 Exam Biology Question Paper Leak, Arrested ...
Morning Overview on MSN
A new map of the smell receptors inside the nose just overturned the textbook picture scientists have used for decades — the receptors cluster where no one said t…
For roughly 30 years, biology students have learned the same tidy diagram of the inside of the nose: four broad zones, each ...
15don MSN
CBI arrests Pune teacher, the ‘second mastermind’ who leaked NEET-UG Biology question paper
The Botany teacher, Manisha Gurunath Mandhare, allegedly disclosed important questions from Botany and Zoology and made the students note down the same in their notebooks and also mark in their ...
The Sunday Guardian Live on MSN
Must-read books: 10 fascinating science-backed books that decode human behavior, habits and decision-making
India, May 30 -- Understanding why people think, act, and make decisions the way they do has long fascinated scientists, ...
Pullela Gopichand on The Longevity Code, his recently-released book, co-authored with physician-scientist Dr Sophia Pathai ...
This week's books seem oddly preoccupied with things societies try to sink, pave over or explain away. All three circle the ...
A study of 10 million siblings suggests birth order may influence the risk of allergies, autism, migraines, and other ...
Indian Defence Review on MSN
Biologists Just Found a Bizarre Fuzzy Fish Hiding in Pacific Reefs That No One Had Ever Identified and Named It After a Sesame Street Character
A clump of algae that moved. A fish no book could identify. Two decades later, scientists have a name for it, and it's ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results