ScienceNOWScienceWormholes and Quantum Entanglement May Be LinkedBy Katia MoskvitchScienceHow Egyptian Mummies Took Food to the AfterlifeBy Lizzie WadeScienceGut Bacteria May Be Implicated in Rheumatoid ArthritisBy Beth SkwareckiScienceMass Killings Can Haunt Elephants for DecadesBy Virginia MorellScienceChinese Bats May Be Carrying the Next SARS PandemicBy Kai KupferschmidtScienceCAPTCHA Busted? AI Company Claims Break of Internet's Favorite Protection SystemBy John BohannonScienceBabies' Intuition for Numbers Predicts Later Skill at MathBy Rachel NuwerScienceBenefits of Slowing Aging Could Outweigh the CostsBy Mitch LeslieScienceCyborg Cockroach Company Sparks Ethics DebateBy Emily UnderwoodScienceHow Existing Drugs Could Fight Resistant BugsBy Gunjan SinhaScienceEvolution's Clock Ticked Faster at the Dawn of Modern AnimalsBy Kelly ServickScienceBig-Brained Birds May Stress LessBy Alex ReisScienceClimate Change May Have Impacted Half of 2012's Extreme WeatherBy Carolyn GramlingScienceVideogame May Help Rejuvenate Elderly BrainsBy Kelly ServickScienceStriking Patterns: Study Suggests Tool Use and Language Evolved TogetherBy Michael BalterScienceMale Humpback Whales Attract Mates by Singing in ChorusBy Virginia MorellScienceA Magnetic Trick to Define ConsciousnessBy Kelly ServickScience'Female' Chromosome May Play Unexpected Role in Male BiologyBy Elizabeth PennisiScienceChimps, Orangutans Have Human-Like MemoriesBy Virginia MorellScienceVirtual Reality Allows Adults to See World Through a Child's EyesBy Nisha GiridharanScienceSummer May Be Best Time to Make BabiesBy Kelly ServickScienceLaser Scanning Reveals the Hidden City of Angkor WatBy Richard StoneScienceSuper Sugar Keeps Naked Mole Rats Cancer-FreeBy Elizabeth PennisiScienceEarliest Bird Claim Ruffles FeathersBy Michael BalterMore Stories