Science & Technology
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An 'orchestrated dance': Nevada moves bighorn sheep to help restore northern herd
As the roar of a helicopter intensified, an unusual sight came into view: Suspended beneath the aircraft was a bighorn sheep. As soon as it reached the ground, a team of veterinarians and wildlife biologists moved in with practiced precision.
Monday was the second day of an effort led by the Nevada Department of Wildlife to relocate 39 sheep in...Read more
SpaceX moonlit launch marks year's midway point as pace slows on Florida's Space Coast
A SpaceX launch Sunday night sent up a Sirius XM satellite under a nearly full moon, capping off the final launch planned from Florida in the first half of the year.
A Falcon 9 rocket on the SiriusXM SXM-11 mission headed to geosynchronous transfer orbit lifted off from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station’s Space Launch Complex 40 at 10:25 p.m...Read more
Loggerhead sea turtle releases at Virginia Beach's North End draw applause
VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. — A crowd of North End beachgoers hurried to the water’s edge at 47th Street on Thursday afternoon as an aquarium team released a rehabilitated loggerhead turtle.
Wearing blue shirts and gloves, two team members lifted the animal out of a plastic bin they had carried to the shoreline. They lowered it onto the wet sand ...Read more
Money was sought to restore Tampa Bay's coastal habitat. Gov. Ron DeSantis just vetoed it
TAMPA, Fla. — A suite of habitat restoration goals on a federal wildlife refuge offshore Pinellas County promised big benefits for human and animal residents alike:
More eastern oyster reefs to clean Tampa Bay’s water and curb erosion; more marsh grasses to soften storm surge and give shelter for nesting birds; more hardened shorelines for ...Read more
San Diego's Qualcomm to buy startup Modular for $3.9 billion in AI push
SAN DIEGO — Qualcomm agreed to acquire AI software startup Modular in an all-stock deal valued at $3.92 billion, the San Diego chipmaker said Wednesday during its Investor Day, as it works to expand beyond smartphone chips into data center and AI markets.
Equity holders of Modular will receive up to 19.2 million newly issued Qualcomm common ...Read more
As state lawmakers stall on data center rules, Illinois cities and counties step in to fill the void
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. — In lieu of statewide regulations, a growing number of Illinois cities and counties are telling data centers to come back later or adhere to new regulations.
In Aurora, what began as a 180-day moratorium ended with city officials bringing the regulatory hammer down on data centers after many community members complained ...Read more
Fireworks, heat and drought make this July 4th a recipe for wildfires
Across the United States, the sky will be erupting with fireworks on July 4, 2026, and the days around it as America celebrates the 250th anniversary of its independence. Many cities will be hosting spectacular fireworks shows.
But not everyone will be leaving the pyrotechnics to the professionals, so let’s talk about the risk of ...Read more
Microsoft's $530 billion rout sets up its worst month since 2008
Microsoft Corp. shares are heading for their worst month in years as investors continue to fret about how the software giant will fare in a world marked by artificial intelligence.
The stock at one point fell more than 20% in June, which would have represented its worst monthly showing since December 2000, although a two-day gain has helped it ...Read more
Commentary: Here's the case for the US leading the harvesting of solar energy in space
The United States is fast approaching an inflection point in energy policy. Artificial intelligence, advanced manufacturing, cloud computing and advanced defense systems are driving electricity demand at a level that the existing grid cannot reliably meet. The next generation of data centers will require ever more constant large-scale power ...Read more
Billionaire ranch owner's fence is harming wildlife in a southern Colorado valley, experts find
A controversial 8-foot fence erected by a billionaire ranch owner on long stretches of his property’s perimeter is harming wildlife and degrading habitat across a vast valley in southern Colorado, according to a report by wildlife experts made public this month.
The report by two environmental consulting firms — one chosen by the ranch’s ...Read more
As insects die off, birds are shrinking at this Lake Erie observatory
Tree swallows at a Great Lakes bird observatory are shrinking, a troubling finding that University of Michigan researchers said is tied to crashing insect populations in the region and world.
Tree swallows are small songbirds that primarily eat insects. As the amount and diversity of insects declined at the Long Point Bird Observatory in ...Read more
As insects die off, birds are shrinking at this Lake Erie observatory
Tree swallows at a Great Lakes bird observatory are shrinking, a troubling finding that University of Michigan researchers said is tied to crashing insect populations in the region and world.
Tree swallows are small songbirds that primarily eat insects. As the amount and diversity of insects declined at the Long Point Bird Observatory in ...Read more
Dead tree in remote NC is hiding colony of rarely seen creatures, biologists say
A winged creature not caught in North Carolina for more than a decade has been rediscovered, and the circumstances resemble Halloween decorations.
Deep in the 531,148-acre Nantahala National Forest stands a towering and twisted hemlock that appears to be dead, but is very much alive on the inside with a colony of bats.
Specifically, Indiana ...Read more
What's killing Southern California seabirds? 'Just one damn thing after another'
LOS ANGELES — Between disease, pesticide contamination and starvation, seabirds are fighting multiple battles along the California coastline this year.
Since March, beachgoers have discovered dozens of sick or dead seabirds along the coastal stretch between Santa Barbara and San Diego. Among them have been “tremendous numbers” of dead ...Read more
US, Mexico open sterile fly plant to fight screwworm threat
The U.S. and Mexico took a major step in the battle against New World screwworm, opening a facility to produce sterile flies that authorities believe is the best method for stopping the flesh-eating parasite from spreading through cattle herds.
The production facility in Metapa, near Mexico’s southern border, is expected to produce up to 100...Read more
Editorial: Sticker shock comes suddenly to the Apple store
A week after Apple CEO Tim Cook warned that price hikes for the company’s devices were “unavoidable” due to soaring costs in key components, consumers woke up Thursday to just how steep and immediate those increases would be.
Try up to 20% for many of Apple’s popular laptop computers.
And up to 25% for iPads.
On Apple’s website, the...Read more
NASA audit warns $1 billion needed to repair Kennedy Space Center's stressed infrastructure
NASA officials have been shouting for years more money is needed to support infrastructure of a souped-up launch rate on Florida's Space Coast, and now it has an audit confirming things are bad, and could get worse.
NASA’s Office of the Inspector General released its report Monday on NASA launch infrastructure at Kennedy Space Center in ...Read more
Cisco to lay off more than 400 workers in California
California tech company Cisco plans to cut 471 workers in three Bay Area offices, according to layoff notices filed to a state agency.
The company, which provides networking devices along with other services including video conferencing and cybersecurity, told employees in May that it was going to cut fewer than 4,000 jobs or less than 5% of ...Read more
Bio-Techne will be sold for $11.3B, one of largest deals in Minnesota history
Germany’s Merck KGaA will buy Bio-Techne Corp. in a deal worth $11.3 billion, one of the largest acquisitions in Minnesota history.
The sale follows investor pressure on Minneapolis-based Bio-Techne, which makes lab materials and equipment used to develop drugs.
Bio-Techne’s stock had fallen nearly 50% in five years while Merck KGaA — ...Read more
US appeals court rejects Trump EPA bid to roll back soot pollution limit
WASHINGTON — In a blow to the Trump administration’s deregulatory agenda, a federal appeals court on Friday rejected the Environmental Protection Agency’s attempt to roll back soot pollution standards set in 2024.
The decision upholds the tightened National Ambient Air Quality Standards for small particulates, called PM2.5, set by former ...Read more
Popular Stories
- As insects die off, birds are shrinking at this Lake Erie observatory
- Fireworks, heat and drought make this July 4th a recipe for wildfires
- Dead tree in remote NC is hiding colony of rarely seen creatures, biologists say
- Microsoft's $530 billion rout sets up its worst month since 2008
- SpaceX moonlit launch marks year's midway point as pace slows on Florida's Space Coast





