Of the six or more different species of early humans, all belonging to the genus…
Browsing: Cell Press
Cell Press is a leading scientific publisher known for its high-impact journals that cover a wide range of disciplines in the life, physical, and earth sciences. Founded with the launch of the journal Cell in 1974, it has grown to include titles such as Neuron, Immunity, Chem, and Joule, among many others. Cell Press is recognized for publishing cutting-edge research, insightful reviews, and forward-looking commentary that drive scientific discovery and innovation. This page brings together the latest studies and highlights from Cell Press publications, showcasing influential science shaping the future across multiple fields.
By placing 3D-printed and GPS-enabled decoy sea turtle eggs into nests on the beach, it’s…
If you want a dog to hunt something down, it helps to let them sniff…
Most of the wind available on land is too gentle to push commercial wind turbine…
Seabird species such as gulls and pelicans are often overlooked when it comes to conservation…
Two major theories have fueled a now 1,500-year-long debate started by Saint Augustine: Is consciousness…
Our sense of who we are is thought to be influenced by things like our…
When paleontologists digging in a quarry in southwestern China uncovered the nearly complete skeleton of…
For the first time, researchers in Germany sent perovskite and organic solar cells on a…
Woolly rhinoceros likely went extinct due to climate change, not overhunting. The extinction of prehistoric…
By formulating positively charged fluorescent dyes into a new class of materials called small-molecule ionic…
Of about 3,500 mosquito species around the world, only a few have taken to specifically…
The effects of the forced deportation of over 10 million African people during the transatlantic…
Since the time of Charles Darwin, scientists have marveled at sea turtles’ impressive ability to…
Most bird species are slow to change their tune, preferring to stick with tried-and-true songs…
A report in the journal Current Biology on July 9 offers a detailed description of the…
Caecilians are limbless amphibians that, to the untrained eye, can be easily mistaken for snakes.…
Solar power systems with double-sided (bifacial) solar panels — which collect sunlight from two sides…