Facing methanol poisoning in a place like Laos means hurdles to getting help, including accessing health care in time.
In this week’s edition of the Science for All newsletter, Priyali Prakash writes on a new type of nanopasta created by scientists.
Good luck trying to twirl your fork around the world’s thinnest piece of spaghetti. This nanofiber is about 200 times thinner ...
The world's thinnest spaghetti, about 200 times thinner than a human hair, has been created by a UCL-led research team. The ...
The footage might make your skin crawl, but hornbills and other birds initiate this behavior as sort of a spa treatment.
Spaghetti strands that are 200 times thinner than a human hair could be woven into bandages to help prevent infections ...
Scientists have created the world's thinnest spaghetti, but it's not for eating -- it's for wound healing to tissue ...
Formic acid has attracted significant attention as one of the promising hydrogen carriers. In the conventional method, formic acid is first produced from carbon dioxide and hydrogen as a stable ...
Six foreign tourists have died of suspected methanol poisoning in Laos, Southeast Asia. What is the substance and how does it ...
Two Australian teenagers have died after a suspected methanol poisoning in Laos. A pharmacologist explains what to know about ...
No, you can't eat the world's thinnest spaghetti. It's 200 times thinner than a human hair, which means you'd have a hard ...