Latest CNAS in the Media

'Chaotic' protein that fuels 75% of cancers can be controlled

EARTH.COM - In a significant breakthrough, scientists at the University of California, Riverside (UCR) have developed a method to control a notoriously elusive protein called MYC, implicated in 75% of human cancers. This development could ultimately lead to a new era of potential cancer treatments. MYC’s role in cancer MYC is a protein that plays...
By Chrissy Sexton | Earth.com |

Scientists succeed in stopping cancer engine fueling 75% of tumors

INTERESTING ENGINEERING - Scientists have developed a peptide that holds promise in controlling the activity of the MYC protein, a key contributor to exacerbating 75 percent of human cancer cases. According to researchers from the University of California, Riverside, this discovery might pave the way for developing more effective cancer treatments. The identified peptide compound...
By Mrigakshi Dixit | Interesting Engineering |

The newest reason to follow a low-fat diet... ward off Covid!

THE DAILY MAIL - There are more benefits to following a healthy low-fat diet than shedding pounds and dropping a few pant sizes. Now, scientists have discovered eating less fat could also help protect you against infectious diseases like Covid-19. Researchers from the University of California - Riverside found 'concerning' changes in gene expression -...
By Alexa Lardieri | DailyMail.com |

Scientists spent half a century creating avocado of the future with incredible features: ‘He never gave up’

THE COOL DOWN - Scientists at the University of California, Riverside (UCR), have successfully developed a new avocado tree after more than 50 years of research and development. UCR’s news website reported that the patent-pending avocado, the Luna UCR, was invented by a team of agricultural scientists at the university. Luna UCR avocados are said...
By Caitlin Samonte | The Cool Down |

Why Are Alaska’s Rivers Turning Orange?

SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN - It was a cloudy July afternoon in Alaska's Kobuk Valley National Park, part of the biggest stretch of protected wilderness in the U.S. We were 95 kilometers (60 miles) from the nearest village and 400 kilometers from the road system. Nature doesn't get any more unspoiled. But the stream flowing past our...
By Alec Luhn | Scientific American |

Plants use a ‘trojan horse’ defense to fight mold infestations

EARTH.COM - Researchers at the University of California, Riverside, have made an exciting discovery in the ongoing war between plants and their fungal mold adversaries. In a recent study, the team revealed a novel defense mechanism plants employ against the notorious gray mold, a fungus responsible for extensive damage to a wide array of crops...
By Eric Ralls | Earth.com |

New Clues for What Will Happen When the Sun Eats the Earth

QUANTA MAGAZINE - Earth’s fate rests on a coin flip. In 5 billion years, our sun will balloon into a red giant star. Whether Earth survives is an “open question,” said Melinda Soares-Furtado, an astrophysicist at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. Sure, Earth could be swallowed by the sun and destroyed. But in some scenarios...
By Jonathan O'Callaghan | Quanta Magazine |

Plants may fight mold with molecules and bubbles

POPULAR SCIENCE - While refrigerators store food at safe temperatures and keep it fresh, they can also be a breeding ground for fuzzy gray mold that spoils fruit. Most molds thrive in warm temperatures, but many can grow in the refrigerator by producing spores. The spores can go airborne and accumulate inside the refrigerator and...
By Laura Baisas | Popular Science |

Giant Planets May Be “Agents of Chaos”

EOS - The folks next door can have a big impact on the livability of a neighborhood. If they’re loud, pushy, and obnoxious, they can force you out of even the most comfortable of homes. That truism applies to planets as well as people. The wrong kind of neighbor can kick an Earth-like planet out...
By Damond Benningfield | Eos |

Stricken NASA mission VERITAS in prolonged wait to kick off ‘decade of Venus’

NATURE - Budget pressures at NASA, specifically arising from the increasing costs of several planetary science mission programmes, have rendered the Venus orbiter VERITAS as collateral damage. Currently on subsistence funding, mission scientists worry about the impact of ongoing delays on Venus exploration. Perpetually shrouded by dense, toxic clouds and sizzling with temperatures hot enough...
By Sharmila Kuthunur | Nature |

12 ingenious discoveries from a year of UC research

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA - This time last year, nobody knew how our bodies regulate age-related decline or why some people still hadn’t gotten sick from COVID-19. The origins of the human species remained murky and the world’s avocado supply was more vulnerable to disease. What a difference a year makes. Thanks to the tireless curiosity...
By Julia Busiek | University of California |

Scientists make 'huge' $540 billion discovery at the bottom of a giant lake

INDY100 - A 'white gold' mine containing $540 billion in treasures has been discovered at the bottom of a giant lake in Southern California. The Salton Sea, which is the largest lake in the US state was being studied by scientists as part of research funded by the Department of Energy. The study aimed to...
By Greg Evans | Indy100 |

Discovery of $540 billion worth of 'white gold' sitting beneath giant lake could change the future

UNILAD - This is what the discovery of $540 billion 'white gold' under a lake could mean for the US and the rest of the world. I detested science lessons and dropped them as swiftly as I could age 16; alas, if I'd known it could've led to me stumbling across a whopping $540 billion...
By Poppy Bilderbeck | UNILAD |

'Dark force' theory could solve 2 open cosmic mysteries

SPACE.COM - A new theory that suggests dark matter is made up of particles that strongly interact with each other via a so-called "dark force." If true, this may finally explain the extreme densities we see in dark matter haloes surrounding galaxies. The existence of particles called self-interacting dark matter (SIDM) acts as an alternative...
By Robert Lea | Space.com |

Lithium at California's Salton Sea could power millions of electric vehicles: Report

USA TODAY - Southern California's Salton Sea may be sitting atop a lithium gold mine that, if extracted, could power a staggering 375 million electric vehicle batteries, according to a new report. It's not exactly a secret that lithium is present in the hot brine located in the shallow, landlocked body of water's vast underground...
By Eric Lagatta and Erin Rode | USA TODAY |

Why The Salton Sea Could Be The Key To EV Growth: New Report Finds Enough Lithium In Sea To Produce 375 Million EV Batteries

YAHOO - An extensive underground lithium reserve has been discovered beneath California's Salton Sea, according to a report backed by the U.S. Department of Energy and the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. The Characterizing the Geothermal Lithium Resource at the Salton Sea report found that the lithium beneath the sea could create more than 375 million...
By Aran Richardson | Yahoo Finance |

Threat Of Fruit Flies Returns To California

NPR / KQED - Fruit Fly Threat Being Fought In Different Manner In California Four decades ago, California went to war against an enemy that wasn’t human. The adversary was the Mediterranean fruit fly, an invasive pest that threatened to destroy California’s agricultural economy. To fight the fly, the state launched controversial aerial pesticide spraying...
By News Staff | NPR / KQED |

“Agricultural nightmare” for California farmers as flies attack crops

NBC PALM SPRINGS - Christiana Green runs four farmers markets across the Coachella Valley with vendors selling all kinds of produce. “It could decimate our farmers markets and the availability of the freshest food available,” she said. Green is talking about a large infestation of the Oriental Fruit Fly (Bactrocera dorsali) which were recently found...
By Pristine Villarreal | NBC 36 (KMIR) |

‘A whole lot hotter’ for rich people: Research suggests the wealthy’s ‘luxury’ shield against climate change is melting

FAST COMPANY - Scientists use the term “luxury effect” to refer to the fact that the wealthier and whiter your neighborhood becomes, the likelier your block is to be green. Having a greater disposable income gives people the resources to increase the plant biodiversity of where they live. Research shows that increased vegetation yields a...
By Clint Rainey | Fast Company |

Study: Salton Sea has enough lithium to make more than 375 million EV batteries

THE PRESS-ENTERPRISE - The mineral-rich stew bubbling thousands of feet beneath the shores of Southern California’s Salton Sea contains one of the largest lithium deposits in the world, with enough of the valuable metal to make batteries for more than 375 million electric vehicles, according to a long-awaited analysis published Tuesday. “It’s pretty exciting how...
By Brooke Staggs | The Press-Enterprise |
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