The long lives of sub-four-minute milers show that "extreme" exercise doesn’t reduce lifespan, according to new research. A study of the first 200 athletes to run a mile in under four minutes ...
The first people to break the four-minute mile outlived their contemporaries by nearly five years on average The exercise required for elite athleticism appears to be beneficial for health FRIDAY ...
Hannah Mason receives funding from the Queensland Department of Environment, Science and Innovation, and Queensland Fire and ...
When high temperatures take hold, we take precautions to protect ourselves and our pets. But just like the battery in your ...
The next quarter of a century will bring considerable climate danger to millions of Americans living in disadvantaged communities, who will not only experience increased exposure to life ...
From planting trees to painting streets white, US cities are fighting extreme heat. In 2013, Los Angeles became the first large city to pass a law requiring all new homes to have a cool roof.
As the planet continues its streak of record-breaking heat, the World Health Organization has issued urgent new warnings about the ways in which climate change is affecting the most vulnerable ...
Researchers have found that germ cells, which develop into eggs and sperm, drive sex-dependent differences in lifespan in vertebrates. Female and male germ cells increase and reduce lifespan ...
The problem with fiat money inflation is that not everyone gets the income boost that's needed to financially cope amid ...
Extreme exercise does not shorten life expectancy, as has been thought The first people to break the four-minute mile outlived their contemporaries by nearly five years on average The exercise ...