Daily Snapshot

Science headlines for Sunday, March 22, 2026

Science headlines for 2026-03-22 focused on 3 major developments: 1) Transformational Tools and Technologies Resources (NASA Breaking News) 2) Why mosquitoes always find you and how they decide to attack (ScienceDaily) 3) Beavers are turning rivers into powerful carbon sinks (ScienceDaily) Across these stories, coverage emphasized high-impact updates, policy shifts, and events with broad audience relevance. Together they provide a representative view of the day in science news before diving into each full report.

Why it matters: This snapshot shows where science attention concentrated on 2026-03-22, highlighting the themes, entities, and geographies that dominated publisher coverage. Because ranking blends freshness, engagement, and source diversity, it helps separate signal from noise. Use it as a quick daily briefing and then open the top stories for fuller context.

Key Points

3 highlights
  1. Transformational Tools and Technologies Resources

    Sources: #1 NASA Breaking News
  2. Why mosquitoes always find you and how they decide to attack

    Sources: #2 ScienceDaily
  3. Beavers are turning rivers into powerful carbon sinks

    Sources: #3 ScienceDaily

Top 10 Stories

Ranked by daily score
  1. Transformational Tools and Technologies Resources
    #1 Score 55
    Transformational Tools and Technologies Resources

    Vision Studies, Analysis of Alternatives (AoA) Studies, and White Papers

    NASA Breaking News 9 hours ago
  2. #2 Score 35
    Why mosquitoes always find you and how they decide to attack

    Scientists have finally cracked how mosquitoes decide where to fly—and it’s not by following each other. Instead, each insect independently reacts to visual cues and carbon dioxide, zeroing in on humans when both signals align. Dark colors and CO2 together create the strongest attraction, triggering swarming and biting behavior. This insight could reshape how we design traps and prevent mosquito-borne diseases.

    ScienceDaily 16 hours ago
  3. #3 Score 33
    Beavers are turning rivers into powerful carbon sinks

    Beavers may be unlikely climate heroes, but new research suggests they could play a powerful role in fighting climate change. By building dams and transforming streams into wetlands, these industrious animals dramatically reshape how carbon moves and is stored in landscapes. Over just 13 years, a beaver-engineered wetland in Switzerland stored over a thousand tonnes of carbon—up to ten times more than similar areas without beavers.

    ScienceDaily 16 hours ago
  4. This 67,800-year-old handprint is the oldest art ever found
    #4 Score 28
    This 67,800-year-old handprint is the oldest art ever found

    Researchers have uncovered the world’s oldest known cave art—a 67,800-year-old hand stencil in Indonesia. The unusual, claw-like design hints at early symbolic thinking and possibly spiritual beliefs. This discovery also strengthens the case that humans reached Australia at least 65,000 years ago. It offers rare insight into the creative lives of some of our earliest ancestors.

    ScienceDaily 18 hours ago
  5. #5 Score 27
    Friction without contact discovered as magnetic forces break a 300-year-old law

    Researchers have uncovered friction without contact—driven entirely by magnetic interactions. As two magnetic layers slide, their internal forces compete, causing constant rearrangements that dramatically increase resistance at certain distances. This creates a surprising peak in friction instead of a steady rise, breaking a long-standing physics law.

    ScienceDaily 18 hours ago
  6. #6 Score 25
    Webb Telescope spots “impossible” atmosphere on ancient super Earth

    Astronomers have uncovered surprising evidence of a thick atmosphere surrounding TOI-561 b, a scorching, fast-orbiting rocky planet once thought too extreme to hold onto any gas. Using NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope, researchers found the planet is far cooler than expected for a bare rock, hinting at a heat-distributing atmosphere above a churning magma ocean. This strange world—where a year lasts just over 10 hours and one side is locked in eternal daylight—may even be rich in volatile materials, behaving like a “wet lava ball.”

    ScienceDaily 19 hours ago
  7. #7 Score 10
    Ancient DNA reveals a farming shift that pushed a society to the brink

    A new study reveals that farming in Argentina’s Uspallata Valley was adopted by local hunter-gatherers rather than introduced by outside populations. Centuries later, a stressed group of maize-heavy farmers migrated into the region, facing climate instability, disease, and declining numbers. Despite these pressures, there’s no sign of violence—instead, families stayed connected across generations, using kinship networks to survive. The research shows how cooperation, not conflict, helped communities navigate crisis.

    ScienceDaily 1 day ago
  8. #8 Score 4
    A massive freshwater reservoir is hiding under the Great Salt Lake

    A hidden freshwater system deep beneath the Great Salt Lake has been revealed using airborne electromagnetic surveys. Scientists found that freshwater extends much farther under the lake than expected, reaching depths of up to 4 kilometers. The discovery began with mysterious reed-covered mounds formed by pressurized groundwater pushing upward. Researchers are now investigating whether this underground water could help control hazardous dust from the drying lakebed.

    ScienceDaily 1 day ago