Surviving one of Earth’s most extreme environments
New research finds a unique component of cell membranes in an archaea species conveys protection against acidic surroundings.
New research finds a unique component of cell membranes in an archaea species conveys protection against acidic surroundings.
Simons Foundation-backed CBIOMES brings together researchers in oceanography, statistics, data science, ecology, biogeochemistry, and remote sensing.
MIT professor sees many “big, deep questions in biology” that benefit from study by both physicists and life scientists.
Network tracks the evolution of microbial communities in sourdough starter mixtures shared around the world.
Scientists conclude methane-producing microbes date back 3.5 billion years, supporting the hypothesis that they could have contributed to early global warming.
New discovery suggests that all life may share a common design principle.
The unusual characteristics of these abundant, bacteria-killing viruses could lead to evolutionary insights.
Influenza viruses can hijack host cellular machinery to help mutated viral proteins fold and function.
Method may help predict hotspots of instability affecting climate, aircraft performance, and ocean circulation.
Researchers in Greg Fournier’s geobiology lab are seeking to calibrate the ancient history of life on Earth using genomic analysis.
Analysis of largest collection of Zika genomes to date reveals trajectory and evolution of the virus.
In a history seminar, engineering students explore shifting ideas about animal intelligence and human uses of animals throughout the ages.
Andrew Lo’s new book urges a rethink of financial markets, along evolutionary lines.
Asian flu strains can enter North America through Alaska, study finds.
New estimate predates earliest fossil evidence by 800 million years.