Skip to content
Monday, March 20, 2023
Science Connected Magazine
  • About
    • Frequently Asked Questions
    • Science Connected Website
    • Our Science Communicators
    • Practice SciComm
    • Advisors
    • Sponsors and Donors
    • Advertising Policy
    • Permissions
    • Contact Us
  • Research
    • Arts and Humanities
      • Science and Art
    • Life Sciences and Biomedicine
      • Anthropology
      • Biodiversity and Conservation
      • Biology
      • Botany
      • Citizen Science
      • Neuroscience
      • Ecology
      • Environment
        • Climate Change
        • Sustainable Living
      • Genetics and Heredity
      • Health
        • COVID-19
      • Marine and Freshwater Biology
      • Paleontology
      • Zoology
        • Ornithology
    • Physical Sciences
      • Astronomy and Astrophysics
      • Chemistry
      • Geology
      • Mathematics
      • Oceanography
      • Physics
    • Social Sciences
      • Archaeology
      • Linguistics
      • Psychology
      • Science Policy
        • Science Debate Series
    • Education
      • Book Recommendations
      • Get to Know a Scientist
    • Technology
      • Computer Science
      • Engineering
      • New Technologies
    • Opinions and Editorials
  • Blogs
    • The SciStarter Blog
    • There Be Dragons Everywhere
  • Videos
    • It’s Ok to Be Smart
    • PBS Eons
    • Science With Sophie
    • Shelf Life from AMNH
    • Cat Behavior with Simon’s Cat Logic
  • STEM Education
    • FREE RESOURCES
    • Book Catalog
    • For Grades 7-12
    • For Grades K-6
    • iBiome Games
  • Bookstore
  • Swag Shop
  • DONATE
  • Volunteer
  • Subscribe

Tag: drug testing

In experiments conducted by scientists at the University of São Paulo, the performance of a bioprinted model obtained in a 3D printer was equivalent to that of the conventional model produced manually. Image credit: FCF-USP Biology Engineering New Technologies 

Bioprinting Skin for Cosmetics and Drug Testing

February 22, 2023February 22, 2023 Science Connectedanimal testing, bioprinting, cosmetics, drug testing, skin

Bioprinting skin models that react on par with actual skin could lead to new possibilities for how labs test cosmetics and drugs.

Read More

Become a Supporter

If each person reading Science Connected Magazine donated just $1 a year, all of our not-for-profit programs would be fully funded.
subscribe to Science Connected Digest Weekly

Spotlight: Environment

A stream filling a glass of water. Water quality may be headed for a rise as scientists work to develop new technology that uses bacteria to detect harmful heavy metals in water. Biology Ecology Environment Water Pollution 

Water Quality Monitoring by Bacterial Biosensors

March 20, 2023March 14, 2023 Science Connectedbacteria, heavy metals, water contamination, water pollution, water testing
Water quality may be headed for a rise as scientists work to develop new technology that uses bacteria to detect harmful...
People putting plastic bottles in recycling bin. Biology Environment Sustainable Living 

Bacteria Has Natural Capacity to Recycle Plastics

March 10, 2023March 9, 2023 Science Connectedbacteria, plastic pollution, recycling
A common bacterium, Comamonas testosteroni, might hold the key to breaking down and recycling plastic waste on a large scale.
Researchers have developed a recycling system that can transform plastic waste and greenhouse gases into sustainable fuels and other valuable products–using just the energy from the sun. Image credit: University of Cambridge

Sunlight Powers Recycling of Carbon Dioxide and Plastic

February 15, 2023February 14, 2023 Science Connectedbiofuel, carbon dioxide, plastic pollution, recycling, solar power
Brown algae are particularly widespread on rocky shores in temperate and cold latitudes and there absorb large amounts of carbon dioxide from the air worldwide. Credit: Hagen Buck-Wiese/Max Planck Institute For Marine Microbiology

How Brown Algae Mucus Combats Carbon Dioxide

February 10, 2023February 14, 2023 Science Connectedalgae, carbon dioxide, carbon fixing, climate change, seawater
A field of sorghum. Bioenergy sorghum hybrids can restore carbon levels in soil, improve soil fertility, provide biomass for biofuel production, and combat climate change. Credit: K-State Research and Extension; license CC by 2.0

Bioenergy Sorghum: The Green Crop of the Future

February 8, 2023February 14, 2023 Science Connectedagriculture, environmental protection, green energy, soil health
A single family home made of cardboard sits on a red furniture dolly. Human migration trends toward areas affected by wildfires.

Human Migration Trends Toward Wildfire Hot Spots

January 27, 2023January 24, 2023 Science Connectedclimate change, extreme weather, heat wave, heat waves, migration, wildfires
zqezbxbucydaascqvurdef

Science Connected Magazine is an editorially independent, non-profit newsroom producing open-access science journalism and scientific fact-checking for the global public. We work to increase science literacy and public access to reliable information. We are published by Science Connected, a registered 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization headquartered in San Francisco, California. Science Connected does not endorse products or services. Advertising revenue helps to support our programs.

Contact

Terms of Use

Privacy Policy

Style Guide

ScienceConnected.Org

© 2021 by Science Connected, Inc. All Right Reserved

Proudly powered by WordPress | Theme: SuperNews by Acme Themes