Science
One Bird Nest, 30 Years of Human Trash
Auke-Florian Hiemstra, a doctoral student at the Naturalis Biodiversity Center in the Netherlands, has spent years studying how birds use human materials in their nests.
Much of his research involves collecting abandoned coot nests and painstakingly logging their contents: drug paraphernalia, earbuds, windshield wipers. “Everything that ends up in the canals in Amsterdam most likely finds its way to a coot nest,” he said.
But in late 2021, he found a piece of trash, buried at the bottom of a large coot nest, that stopped him short: a wrapper from a Mars bar promoting the 1994 World Cup. “That really gave me goose bumps,” he said. “Suddenly we had this big realization. Like, these deeper layers are actually older layers.”
Fittingly, the nest had been built just outside an archaeological museum, atop a metal pipe jutting above the canal’s surface. Mr. Hiemstra wondered if, like an archaeologist, he could peer back in time by dating the artifacts he found in each layer of the nest.
All told, the nest contained 635 artificial items, including foil from cigarette packages and a ticket to Amsterdam’s National Maritime Museum. Roughly one-third of the items were related to food. Mr. Hiemstra carefully examined each object for an expiration date that might indicate roughly when it had been added to the nest.
These were estimates. Highly processed foods could have expiration dates that extended for months or years after when they were eaten. And any given piece of trash might have lingered for a while before a coot added it to its nest.
For a recent paper, published in the journal Ecology, Mr. Hiemstra and his colleagues documented every roughly datable item they found in the nest, opening a small window onto the history of the city’s avian and human residents.
Near the top of the nest was a bounty of candy bar wrappers (including one from a Bounty chocolate bar) bearing 2021 expiration dates, as well as packaging from a protein bar set to expire in 2022.
There was also a thick layer of surgical face masks, which was likely to have been added to the nest sometime after the Covid-19 pandemic began in 2020.
“Face masks, of course, are like a little mattress,” Mr. Hiemstra said. “They’re soft and they may be very warm.” But they can also be dangerous, he added, if the birds become entangled in the masks’ elastic loops.
Much of the food packaging came from items with long shelf lives. But the scientists also found a carton of milk that must have been purchased — and, one hopes, consumed — close to its expiration date of May 2013.
Mr. Hiemstra also found an abundance of trash emblazoned with the logo of a single brand: McDonald’s. The sauce containers were easy to date, as they bore expiration dates on their lids.
A faded plastic foam McChicken box was trickier, bearing only a 1996 copyright date.
“I was in a very deep rabbit hole at a certain point, just talking with these people who were vintage McDonald’s collectors,” Mr. Hiemstra said. “It really felt like a kind of McDonald’s archaeology.”
Ultimately, he was unable to pinpoint a clear date for the container, although the item remained an evocative artifact. “We found the packaging of one bird, a McChicken, as part of the nest of another bird,” he said.
And then, in a deep, mud-covered layer of the nest, which emitted “a distinct canal smell,” was the Mars wrapper that started it all. It carried a FIFA logo with a 1993 copyright and promoted the 1994 World Cup, which took place in the United States and was won by Brazil.
Mr. Hiemstra had no memory of that World Cup; he was born in 1992. “So this wrapper was just as old as I am, almost,” he said.
The nest is a testament to the ingenuity and resourcefulness of wild animals in a rapidly changing world. “It really tells the story of the Anthropocene, but then from the bird’s perspective,” Mr. Hiemstra said.
It’s also a physical embodiment of how profoundly humans are reshaping the environment, he added, and how long-lasting the effects can be.
Roughly three decades ago, some weary commuter or ravenous teenager ordered a McChicken sandwich and then tossed out the box that it came in. “Just one meal from one person — the packaging is still here,” Mr. Hiemstra said. “A bird has been breeding on it for 30 years.”
Science
What’s Inside NASA’s Mission Control
Between all the monitors, wires and keyboards are the normal trappings of a workplace: lunchboxes, water bottles, backpacks and smartphones.
A vase of roses brightens up the center of the room. Since the Challenger disaster in 1986, a couple in Houston has sent more than a hundred bouquets to mission control to commemorate NASA’s space launches and honor the lives of fallen astronauts.
Mission control is in a new room, and looks a little different than in the Apollo era. Wood desks have replaced green metal mainframes, and the ashtrays and rotary phones are gone.
But the bones of the operation have not changed, said Judd Frieling, one of the Artemis II flight directors, who spoke from mission control to reporters on Saturday. Every spacecraft needs similar systems — propulsion, navigation and the like — to succeed.
“We’re building upon the giants that started it back in the Apollo era,” Mr. Frieling said. “We continued our evolution during the space shuttle program, during the International Space Station program and now on to the Artemis program.”
Science
Contributor: Vaccine confusion sets up U.S. for a resurgence of hepatitis B in babies
Measles is back in the United States. More than 1,500 cases have already been reported in the first months of 2026, putting the country on pace to surpass last year’s total of more than 2,200, the highest number in decades. Public health officials warn that the nation’s status as “measles free” is now at risk as childhood vaccination rates decline.
Measles may not be the only disease poised for a comeback. Another virus that once infected thousands of American children each year could be heading in the same direction.
A recent study my colleagues and I conducted using national electronic health record data found that hepatitis B vaccination rates among newborns declined by more than 10% between 2023 and August 2025.
At first glance, hepatitis B may seem like an unlikely threat to infants. The virus spreads through infected blood or bodily fluids, exposures many parents assume newborns would rarely encounter. But before routine vaccination began, hepatitis B infected roughly 18,000 children under the age of 10 in the United States every year.
About half of those infections were passed from mother to child during birth. The rest occurred through everyday household exposure, often through contact with a caregiver or family member who did not know they were infected.
The consequences can be lifelong. While acute infection is often mild or asymptomatic, as many as 90% of babies infected in their first year of life develop chronic hepatitis B. Over time, chronic infection can lead to cirrhosis, liver cancer and liver failure.
The first major step toward prevention was screening. In 1988, universal hepatitis B testing during pregnancy was recommended so that infants born to infected mothers could receive protection immediately after birth. The strategy helped identify many high-risk cases, but it did not prevent all infections. Each year between 50 and 100 infants still developed hepatitis B.
To close those remaining gaps, universal newborn vaccination was recommended in 1991. Over the following decades, hepatitis B infections in children fell to fewer than 20 annually.
That is why many physicians were surprised when, in December, the federal government’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices revised its recommendation for newborn hepatitis B vaccination. Under the new guidance, babies born to mothers who test negative for hepatitis B may receive the vaccine based on individual clinical decision making rather than a universal recommendation.
The idea behind this approach is straightforward. If a mother tests negative for the virus, the immediate risk to the newborn is extremely low.
But the history of hepatitis B prevention shows why universal protection became necessary in the first place.
Today, an estimated 660,000 Americans still live with chronic hepatitis B, and roughly half are unaware of their infection. Exposure risks have not disappeared. They have been controlled through vaccination and screening.
At the same time, the nation’s vaccine guidance is becoming increasingly confusing. Earlier this year, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention revised its childhood immunization schedule, moving several vaccines from being universally recommended to being suggested as topics of discussion for parents and providers.
The changes were not supported by new evidence. In response, the American Academy of Pediatrics created its own immunization schedule that largely maintains the previous recommendations.
As a result of a lawsuit against the CDC and the Department of Health and Human Services, a federal judge has temporarily blocked the changes to the federal recommendations and invalidated actions taken by the advisory committee.
The result is growing confusion.
In my clinic, parents have begun asking questions I never heard before. Which vaccine schedule should we follow? Is this the schedule with all the vaccines or only some of them? Vaccination decisions are influenced by science but also by trust and consistency. When parents receive mixed messages, some begin to question whether vaccines are necessary at all. We have already seen the consequences of declining vaccination with measles.
For decades, hepatitis B vaccination protected American children from a virus that once infected thousands every year. Because the disease became rare, many parents and younger physicians have never seen its consequences firsthand.
If measles is a warning, hepatitis B could be next.
The lesson from the past is simple. When we stop using vaccines that work, the diseases they prevent come back.
Joshua Rothman is a pediatrician at UC San Diego Health and a clinical assistant professor of pediatrics at the UC San Diego School of Medicine.
Science
For 40 minutes, the greatest solitude humans have known
The crescent Earth — our oasis holding everything we cherish, now just a speck in the infinite blackness — seemed to kiss the jagged lunar surface. The moon’s thousands of scars projected themselves across the Earth as it slowly slipped out of sight.
“I’m actually getting chills right now just thinking about it,” said Artemis II Cmdr. Reid Wiseman, talking to The Times while still in space Wednesday evening (Earth time). “It was just an unbelievable sight, and then it was gone.”
The crew of four — in the dim green glow of their spacecraft, with no more elbow room than a Sprinter van — entered a profound solitude few have ever experienced. Farther from Earth than any humans in history, the crew could no longer reach Mission Control, their families or any other living member of our home planet.
For 40 minutes Monday, it was just them, their high-tech lifeboat and the moon.
Artemis II Cmdr. Reid Wiseman peers out the window of the Orion spacecraft as his first lunar observation period on Monday begins.
(NASA)
The crew members paused their rigorous scientific observations for just three or four minutes to let the surreal feeling settle. They shared some maple cookies brought by Canadian Space Agency and Artemis II mission specialist astronaut Jeremy Hansen.
We humans eat seven fishes on Christmas Eve, samosas on Eid al-Fitr and maple cookies behind the moon.
But the astronauts still had work to do. NASA wanted to observe the far side of the moon, eternally locked facing away from Earth, with a highly sophisticated instrument the agency has seldom had the opportunity to measure this landscape with: the human eye.
The moon, appearing about the size of a bowling ball at arm’s length to the crew, hung in the nothingness. In complete silence, it beckoned.
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Artemis II pilot Victor Glover heard the call of the terminator: the border between the moon’s daytime and nighttime — the lunar dawn. Here, the sun cast stark, dramatic shadows across the moon’s steep cliffs, rugged ripples and seemingly bottomless craters.
Artemis II mission specialist Christina Koch described the scattering of tiny craters across the daytime side proudly reflecting sunlight, like pinpricks in a lampshade. Hansen was drawn to the beautiful shades of blues, greens and browns that the surface reveals if you’re patient enough.
Even though Earth was hidden behind the moon a quarter million miles away, the crew couldn’t help but think of our home.
For Koch, the desolation was only a reminder of how much Earth provides us: water, air, warmth, food. Glover could feel the love emanating from our pale blue dot, defying distance. Hansen thought of the Earth’s gravity, still working to pull the crew home.
And yet, the crew was in the moon’s gravitational arena, where its gravity dominates Earth’s. It was the lunar monolith in front of them that gently redirected their small vessel of life around the natural satellite and toward home.
Eventually, home peaked back out from behind the dark orb.
The moon fully eclipsing the sun, as seen by the Artemis II crew. From the crew’s perspective, the moon appears large enough to completely block the sun, creating nearly 54 minutes of totality.
(NASA)
As a final show, or perhaps a goodbye, the moon temporarily blocked out the sun: a lunar eclipse.
“We saw great simulations made by our lunar science team, but when that actually happened, it just blew us all away,” Glover said. “It was one of the greatest gifts.”
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