Fish can adapt their metabolisms to cope with warmer ocean temperatures, but not necessarily with extreme heat.| Norwegian SciTech News
Two tiny Scandinavian settlements in Greenland persisted from the late 980s to 1450, and then vanished. Was the walrus tusk trade the reason?| Norwegian SciTech News
We all know that exercise is good for us, but how much, how hard, how long? One exercise physiologist's research journey to find the answers.| Norwegian SciTech News
Researchers from SINTEF and NTNU are going to save winter wonderland with climate friendly and temperature independent snowmaking.| Norwegian SciTech News
More than 80 years ago, Norwegian teachers refused to teach Nazi ideology. The story of how they won — and why it still matters.| Norwegian SciTech News
How the unlikely combination of WWII Norway and a jumble of personalities helped build modern Norway, one aluminium ingot at a time.| Norwegian SciTech News
When fish evolve to tolerate higher temperatures, those evolutionary changes might have other negative effects. But maybe not.| Norwegian SciTech News
Why does Norway always rank among the top countries on the planet when it comes to gender equality? Part of the answer lies in medieval times, when Norwegian women battled the Hanseatic League with pirates and threatened to burn down towns to wield their power.| Norwegian SciTech News
An EU-funded research programme coordinated out of NTNU called LanPercept looks at language and perception in autism as just one of 15 projects.| Norwegian SciTech News
Physicist Sol Jacobsen from the Norwegian University of Science and Technology's QuSpin has been awarded a prestigious award.| Norwegian SciTech News
Uncommon lessons learned from the world's most widespread bird.| Norwegian SciTech News
By now, most people know that a regular diet of animal-based products isn’t a good choice for the planet. But how bad is this food, really?| Norwegian SciTech News
A new app under development is using deep learning and artificial intelligence to classify different kinds of sea ice.| Norwegian SciTech News
Researchers who are studying medieval pandemics, like the Black Death, are learning lessons about the past that may help us in the future.| Norwegian SciTech News
Everyone knows there’s just too much carbon dioxide in the atmosphere — and we’re heating up the planet at an unprecedented pace. In the third episode of NTNU’s new English-language podcast, 63 Degrees North, we’ll hear what Norwegian researchers are doing to help address this problem.| Norwegian SciTech News
Listen to Nobel Laureates May-Britt and Edvard Moser tell the story of how they discovered grid cells, which help form a GPS in the brain.| Norwegian SciTech News
The polar night is dark — if you’re a person, but not if you’re a krill or a seabird or a fish. Surprisingly, there’s more than enough light.| Norwegian SciTech News
A 2024 Kavli Award winner, Nancy Kanwisher, discovered a specific area of the brain that responds preferentially to faces.| Norwegian SciTech News
He’s been called the father of carbon capture and storage in Norway – but Erik Lindeberg isn’t resting on his laurels. At 76, he’s still crusading to make sure this technology is put to use as quickly and comprehensively as possible, to help the world avoid the worst consequences of global warming.| Norwegian SciTech News
Trondheim's Nidaros Cathedral is full of secrets, messages from the past written in stone. One researcher is now decoding these missives.| Norwegian SciTech News