Daily Snapshot

Science headlines for Saturday, June 13, 2026

Science headlines for 2026-06-13 focused on 3 major developments: 1) Can the Artemis III Mission Go on as Planned? (NYT Science) 2) Your brain can keep improving into your 90s, study finds (ScienceDaily) 3) Lucy’s hunter revealed: Giant crocodile terrorized early human ancestors (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 2026-06-13, 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. Can the Artemis III Mission Go on as Planned?

    Sources: #1 NYT Science
  2. Your brain can keep improving into your 90s, study finds

    Sources: #2 ScienceDaily
  3. Lucy’s hunter revealed: Giant crocodile terrorized early human ancestors

    Sources: #3 ScienceDaily

Top 10 Stories

Ranked by daily score
  1. #1 Score 61
    Can the Artemis III Mission Go on as Planned?

    NASA has chosen four astronauts for the Artemis III mission, but there has been a major setback: the destruction of a Blue Origin rocket and its only launchpad. Our science reporter Katrina Miller describes what this event might mean for the U.S. goal of landing on the moon by 2028.

    NYT Science 5 hours ago
  2. Your brain can keep improving into your 90s, study finds
    #2 Score 43
    Your brain can keep improving into your 90s, study finds

    A three-year study of nearly 4,000 adults ranging from age 19 to 94 found that brain health can improve at any age, challenging the common belief that mental sharpness must decline as we get older. Participants spent just a few minutes a day on brain-training activities, and researchers found measurable gains across multiple aspects of brain health, including thinking clarity, emotional well-being, and sense of purpose.

    ScienceDaily 11 hours ago
  3. #3 Score 42
    Lucy’s hunter revealed: Giant crocodile terrorized early human ancestors

    A newly identified crocodile species nicknamed “Lucy’s hunter” prowled Ethiopia’s rivers when Lucy’s species walked the Earth more than 3 million years ago. The giant predator was likely the most dangerous animal in the ecosystem and may have regularly hunted early human relatives.

    ScienceDaily 12 hours ago
  4. #4 Score 38
    Alien planet spins revealed a hidden clue to how worlds form

    Using the Keck Observatory, astronomers measured the spins of dozens of giant planets and brown dwarfs orbiting distant stars. They found that giant planets can spin faster than much more massive brown dwarfs, challenging simple assumptions about mass and rotation. The results suggest that magnetic fields and formation processes play a major role in determining how fast worlds end up spinning.

    ScienceDaily 13 hours ago
  5. #5 Score 36
    Learning a musical instrument in your 70s could help protect memory

    Learning a musical instrument later in life may help keep the brain younger for longer. In a four-year study, older adults who continued practicing maintained their memory performance and showed less age-related brain shrinkage than those who quit. The benefits were especially noticeable in brain regions tied to memory and learning.

    ScienceDaily 14 hours ago
  6. What NASA Needs to Stay on Track for the Moon
    #6 Score 27
    What NASA Needs to Stay on Track for the Moon

    The agency gave a rosy update on Artemis III, a test flight for its goal to return humans to the moon, but experts say the timeline is ambitious.

    NYT Science 17 hours ago
  7. #7 Score 17
    Dark energy survives major challenge as universe keeps accelerating

    A bold claim that the universe’s accelerating expansion was an illusion has been put to the test—and failed. Researchers found that the study behind the controversy made key mistakes when analyzing supernova data. After revisiting the evidence, astronomers concluded that cosmic acceleration remains as strong as ever.

    ScienceDaily 20 hours ago