Your Top Science Stories for this Week
| Storing water doesn't necessarily mean pouring a lot of concrete anymore – and that's affecting which projects get funded. | |
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| The inspriring story of how one family was instrumental in bringing Epidiolex to market | |
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| Wildfire smoke can carry the oil from burned poison oak. Residents in one California community think that might be what caused their mysterious rashes. | |
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| Kelp is a keystone in the ocean ecosystem. It's not entirely clear why the urchins have taken over – it could be related to otters – but there's optimism that the kelp devastation is temporary. | |
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| In an interview on KQED Newsroom, KQED Science Editor Craig Miller says California is seeing a wider range of climate effects than any other state. | |
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| Contra Costa county health officials are warning people to stay out of Discovery Bay after recent tests showed elevated levels of a toxin from blue-green algae. | |
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| Join Jeffrey Silverman and Kishore Hari from Science vs. Cinema for a screening of the 1995 award-winning film Apollo 13, followed by a discussion of 'fake science' in movies. Saturday, July 28, 7:30pm. Admission: Free. | |
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