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5 votes
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Drug-free nasal spray blocks, neutralizes viruses, bacteria
14 votes -
Can music improve our health and quality of life?
8 votes -
Before I reach my enemy, bring me some heads
12 votes -
Scientist cited [by Christopher Rufo to make allegations of plagiarism] in push to oust Harvard’s Claudine Gay has links to eugenicists
10 votes -
Bill Ackman and the crusade against free speech
16 votes -
Despite support from corporation, Harvard president Claudine Gay under fire over plagiarism allegations
18 votes -
Harvard gutted initial team examining Facebook files following $500 million donation from Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, Whistleblower Aid client reveals
42 votes -
The Columbian Exchange: A History of Disease, Food, and Ideas
10 votes -
After writing an anti-Israel letter, Harvard students are doxxed
36 votes -
Economist, business professor, digital economy expert Shane Greenstein discusses the US Department of Justice vs Google antitrust case
4 votes -
How a Harvard professor became the world’s leading alien hunter
12 votes -
500-million-year-old fossil of invertebrate sea creature illuminates gap in fossil record
A rare, half-billion-year-old fossil gives us a clue to how a bizarre marine invertebrate can possibly be related to humans. In a study published on July 6 in the journal Nature Communications,...
A rare, half-billion-year-old fossil gives us a clue to how a bizarre marine invertebrate can possibly be related to humans. In a study published on July 6 in the journal Nature Communications, Harvard University researchers identified a prehistoric specimen in a collection at the Natural History Museum of Utah as a tunicate, or sea squirt. The preserved invertebrate, which was originally discovered in the rugged, desert-like landscape of the House Range in western Utah, can be used to understand evolution mysteries that go way back to the Cambrian explosion.
“There are essentially no tunicate fossils in the entire fossil record. They’ve got a 520- to 540-million year-long gap,” says Karma Nanglu, an invertebrate paleontologist at Harvard. “This fossil isthe first soft-tissue tunicate in, we would argue, the entire fossil record.”
14 votes -
US federal civil rights lawsuit filed against Harvard, challenging legacy admissions preference
45 votes -
US Supreme Court strikes down race-based admissions programs at Harvard University and the University of North Carolina
85 votes -
Several charged with trafficking body parts stolen from Harvard Medical School morgue
14 votes -
Harvard CS50 – Full Computer Science University course
5 votes -
Doctors share views on patients with disability
7 votes -
Harvard, MIT sue US immigration authorities over new rule for foreign students
23 votes -
Coronavirus prompts Harvard, MIT to send students home
5 votes -
The Anger of Achilles
6 votes -
Harvard sued by 'descendant of slave for profiting from photos'
7 votes -
Solar geo-engineering: It won’t hurt a bit!
4 votes -
Interstellar object may have been alien probe, Harvard paper argues, but experts are skeptical
23 votes -
Successful treatment of a rare genetic disorder in the womb
5 votes -
How the Chinese government fabricates social media posts for strategic distraction, not engaged argument
14 votes