Choose your own Breakthrough of the Year with Science’s 2021 poll

For the second year running, COVID-19 dominated the airwaves, our brainwaves—and so many other facets of our lives. But this was a rich year in other areas of science, too, with a bounty of discoveries about biology and medicine, human prehistory, and the physical world.

Now, we want to know which one you consider this year’s top breakthrough.

Starting today, and running through Monday, 6 December at 9 a.m. EST, you can cast your vote via Twitter poll for your favorite breakthrough in three categories: ancient origins, health and medicine, and from molecules to space. The winners of these three rounds of voting will enter the final contest, which will run from Monday, 6 December until Monday, 13 December. On Thursday, 17 December, the winner of the People’s Choice award will be revealed, and you’ll get a chance to compare it to Science’s own pick for Breakthrough of the Year.

So pull up a chair, kick back, and scroll through a year’s worth of fantastic discoveries. Then tell us which ones you think should be Science’s Breakthrough of the Year. Candidates are listed below. Happy reading—and voting!

Ancient origins

First footprints in the Americas?

Between 23,000 and 21,000 years ago, people squished through the mud along a lakeshore in New Mexico. If the dates for their preserved footprints are right, the discovery would be the strongest evidence yet that people reached the Americas thousands of years earlier than thought.

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fossilized footprints in a lake bed.
BENNET ET AL./SCIENCE

Dragon Man skull

Who was Dragon Man? The stunningly preserved skull, unveiled in a new Chinese journal this year, could be the most complete fossil of our long-lost sister lineage, the Denisovans. Or, some scientists say, a new human species. Either way, this 146,000-year-old has a story to tell.

front and side view of a hominin skull.
Xijun Ni

Ancient soil DNA

For years, scientists have known that ancient sediments harbor DNA samples from our earliest human relatives. But this year, multiple teams made strides in finding—and untangling—those threads, rewriting the history of humans and animals living in caves from Spain to Siberia.

A scientist in protective gear surveys a dirt wall.
Devlin A. Gandy

The homeland of horses

The origins of horses—which transformed the lives of Bronze Age peoples—have long been shrouded in mystery. But a study of 300 ancient horse genomes found that the ancestors of all modern horses made their first appearance 4200 years ago on the western Eurasian steppe.

horses running.
Ludovic Orlando

Health and medicine

In vivo CRISPR

This year brought signs of success at using the CRISPR editing tool to modify genes inside the human body. An injection of genetic code for CRISPR reduced production of a toxic liver protein in several patients and modestly improved vision in two people with inherited blindness.

CRISPR/Cas9 gene-editing complex.
ELLA MARU STUDIO/Science Source

A psychedelic PTSD remedy

For decades, scientists trying to edge psychedelic drugs into mainstream medicine have faced an uphill battle. In May, they achieved results: They found that talk therapy plus the drug ecstasy effectively treated post-traumatic stress disorder in two-thirds of trial participants.

Person on couch treated for PTSD with eye mask, headphones, as two others look on.
MULTIDISCIPLINARY ASSOCIATION FOR PSYCHEDELIC STUDIES

Early human development

Understanding early embryonic development can provide insight into miscarriages and birth defects and help scientists hone in vitro fertilization protocols. New ways to cultivate embryos from mice and stem cells could obviate the need to use real human embryos in some studies.

A small ball of cells in a bottle with media.
Weizmann Institute of Science

Powerful pills for COVID-19

Vaccines have dominated the fight against COVID-19, but a new weapon may soon be added to the arsenal: antiviral pills that suppress symptoms and prevent death if taken early enough in infection. Results from drug companies suggest they may prevent 30% to 89% of hospitalizations.

Several red pills.
© 2009-2021 MERCK SHARP & DOHME CORP., A SUBSIDIARY OF MERCK & CO., INC., KENILWORTH, N.J.

From molecules to space

Measuring muon magnetism

In April, new measurements confirmed that a fleeting subatomic particle called the muon may be ever so slightly more magnetic than theory predicts. That small anomaly—just 2.5 parts in 1 billion—is a welcome threat to particle physicists’ prevailing theory, the standard model.

Two people work on a ring-shaped accelerator.
REIDAR HAHN/FERMILAB

Uncovering Mars’s core

NASA’s InSight lander has faced no end of challenges on Mars. But this year, its marsquake readings yielded the first full view of the Red Planet’s crust, mantle, and core. The crust and mantle are thinner than Earth’s—but the core is vast, taking up more than half the planet’s width.

NASA InSight lander.
NASA/JPL-Caltech

Artificial intelligence predicts proteins

For 50 years, scientists have struggled to solve one of nature’s biggest challenges: predicting the 3D shape a string of amino acids will fold into as it becomes a working protein. Artificial intelligence delivered big results this year, predicting the structures of thousands of proteins and complexes.

A.I. generated 3D view of human interleukin-12 bound to its receptor.
Ian Haydon/Institute for Protein Design

Fusion’s day in the Sun

In an August result that surprised many, including researchers, the U.S. National Ignition Facility’s giant laser sparked a fusion reaction that came tantalizingly close to reaching the so-called “break-even” point, when more energy is produced by the reaction than went into it.

artist’s rendering shows a target pellet inside a capsule with laser beams entering through openings on either end.
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

Correction, 29 November, 10:20 a.m.: The “Powerful pills for COVID-19” item has been updated to clarify the results from drug companies.

source: sciencemag.org


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