China’s COVID Wave Could Kill One Million People, Models Predict
Boosting vaccination rates, continuing widespread mask use and reimposing some restrictions on movement could reduce the number of deaths in China’s COVID wave
Smriti Mallapaty is a senior reporter at Nature.
Boosting vaccination rates, continuing widespread mask use and reimposing some restrictions on movement could reduce the number of deaths in China’s COVID wave
A genome analysis finds SARS-CoV-2 and bat coronaviruses shared an ancestor just a few years ago, but extensive recombination has muddied the picture
China’s Tiangong orbital outpost will host more than 1,000 experiments, some of which will augment results from the International Space Station
Radar images from the Zhurong rover reveal clues to the history of a largely unexplored region
One third of the country is underwater following an intense heat wave and a long monsoon that has dumped a record amount of rain
A technique that detects coronavirus strains circulating in a community could become an early-warning system
Scientists in Thailand have established that a tabby passed SARS-CoV-2 to a veterinary surgeon—although such cases of cat-to-human transmission are probably rare
Samples collected by Chang’e-5 are revealing exciting insights into the moon’s evolution
Hamsters are only the second species known to have spread SARS-CoV-2 to humans
Studies of bats in China and Laos show southeast Asia is a hotspot for potentially dangerous viruses similar to SARS-CoV-2
The 2019–20 wildfires generated 700 million tonnes of carbon dioxide—but a lot of that might have been mopped up by phytoplankton in the ocean
Innate immunity might be the key to why children have fared better with the virus. But the Delta variant poses fresh unknowns
Reprisals may come for their field of study, their ethnicity or involvement in international collaborations
The spaceborne studies will cover diverse topics, from dark matter and gravitational waves to the growth of cancer and pathogenic bacteria
An examination of the arguments that SARS-CoV-2 escaped from a lab in China and the science behind them
The virus is spreading faster than ever before in the country despite previous high infection rates in megacities, which should have conferred some protection
A World Health Organization report makes a reasonable start, scientists say, but there are many questions yet to be answered
Scientists hope the dark grains from asteroid Ryugu will improve their understanding of the solar system’s formation
Chang’e-5 has just one lunar day to collect material from a previously unexplored region of the moon’s near side
It’s too soon to say whether COVID is seasonal like the flu—but where clusters aren’t under control, infections will continue to swell
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