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Starting July 1, visitors to the Shedd can experience nearly all the aquarium has to offer for one price. And for Chicago residents, this means potential savings of nearly 50 percent.
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The backyard chicken trend gets a leg up with the prospect of temporary ownership – and farm-fresh eggs.
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Infertile mice with 3-D printed ovaries were able to give birth to healthy pups, according to a new study from Northwestern University. 
The latest on one of the world’s most extensive cyberattacks ever.
The monarch butterfly’s remarkable migration is in peril. Its habitat has been decimated by rapid urbanization and changing agricultural practices. Could cities come to the rescue?
They can play blackjack, dance and climb walls. The Museum of Science and Industry brings back its interactive exhibition – with a few new additions.
A first-of-its-kind study shows that forests in Chicago face significant threats from climate change, with native trees especially vulnerable to increases in temperature, precipitation and other changes.
Legislation proposed this week in the Illinois Senate would require electronics manufacturers to pay for permanent recycling drop-off sites set up by counties.
Northbrook native Beth Moses, chief astronaut instructor for the world's first commercial spaceline, returns to Chicago to receive Adler Planetarium's Women in Space Science Award. 
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Annual physicals often come with a roster of tests, and the results of those tests can leave many of us scratching our heads. Scientists at the University of Illinois are trying to change that.
Issues impacting the Great Lakes and communities surrounding the massive freshwater system will be at the center of a two-day conference in Chicago starting Wednesday.
Rabiah Mayas returns to review some of the latest, breaking stories from the world of science.
Why do some squirrels live in more affluent neighborhoods, while others dwell in more disadvantaged ones? WTTW's online series “Urban Nature” has the story.
An announcement last month from the EPA prompts Chicago to launch its own website dedicated to the science behind climate change.
Microphones placed across the Chicago area by the Lincoln Park Zoo are tracking the return of bats to the region this spring. 
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A look at the Chicago Police Department's technological crime-fighting strategy.
 

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