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fromThe Verge
57 minutes ago

Why Honda is suddenly launching reusable rockets

Honda launched and landed a 20-foot reusable rocket, extending its transportation expertise into space and pursuing reusable launch vehicle development under a dedicated space strategy.
Science
fromMail Online
35 minutes ago

What would really happen if our sun dimmed like in Project Hail Mary

A small sustained dimming of the Sun (about 1% per year, 5% over 20 years) would cool Earth rapidly and could collapse human civilization.
#dark-matter
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fromFast Company
2 hours ago

How SailGP turned the niche sport into a $200 million celebrity investment magnet

Celebrities are investing in SailGP because the league transformed high-speed foiling catamarans into a commercially attractive, spectator-friendly motorsport-style competition.
Science
fromLos Angeles Times
11 hours ago

Magnitude 3.2 earthquake shakes San Francisco Bay Area

Multiple earthquakes struck California this week, including a magnitude 3.2 near Pacifica and a 3.4 near Monterey Bay, felt across Bay Area and Riverside regions.
Science
from24/7 Wall St.
23 hours ago

What Alphabet's CEO Just Said Should Get Quantum Computing Investors Very Excited

Quantum computing shows palpable progress and could achieve real-world superiority within five years, while error-corrected, fully useful machines remain a decade or more away.
Science
fromNature
1 day ago

Audio long read: Faulty mitochondria cause deadly diseases - fixing them is about to get a lot easier

Please provide the full article text or authorize retrieval via the DOI so I can produce an accurate, quote‑based analysis.
fromBusiness Insider
1 day ago

14-year-old won $25,000 and 1st place for his innovative work on origami

I've been folding origami as a hobby for more than six years, mostly of animals or insects.
Science
fromBig Think
1 day ago

Ask Ethan: What's the point of exploring the Universe?

There are some major problems facing humanity in the 21st century, and they're all going to require an enormous investment of our collective resources if we want to solve them. From climate change to global pandemics to the energy and water crises and more, none of these problems are going to solve themselves. If they're to be solved at all, it's going to come down to humanity's collective actions.
Science
fromwww.bbc.com
1 day ago

Will boats be a breakthrough for 3D printing tech?

After two years of experimentation, the material was finally right: a particular mix of thermoplastics and fibreglass that is strong, has no need of extra coating to protect it from sunlight, and is resistant to fouling and marine growth. The perfect base, says Mr Logtenberg, from which to 3D print a boat. Boats need to withstand the unforgiving nature of the marine environment.
Science
fromwww.nature.com
1 day ago

Author Correction: Evidence for improved DNA repair in the long-lived bowhead whale

Full text for the reported correction and underlying study was not provided. Exact, verbatim quotes cannot be extracted without the article body or correction text. Please supply the article PDF, DOI, or the corrected text so that two to four precise extractable quotes (each ~60–85 words) can be returned verbatim from the source.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
22 hours ago

NASA Recruits Mars Perseverance Rover to Monitor Sun's Activity

NASA has drafted its Mars rover Perseverance to help monitor the sun's activity. Every day for the next two months, the rover will image the sun with its Mastcam-Z cameras, capturing crucial information about sunspots and other large features that can give clues to solar activity. Mars is currently passing behind the sun, giving the rover a view of the star's far sidea perspective we can't see from Earth.
Science
fromMail Online
18 hours ago

Airbus issues emergency warning for 6,000 passenger jets

The aeronautics company announced Friday that they have discovered a potential vulnerability in the software on board the Airbus A320 during solar storms, which may hinder pilots from steering or stabilizing the plane while in the air. Airbus issued an Alert Operators Transmission (AOT), a global warning that urges all airlines using the A320 passenger jet to immediately update their software and hardware to better protect against radiation interference.
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fromBusiness Insider
1 day ago

Russia's only way to send astronauts to space just suffered serious blast damage

Russia's only crewed launchpad at Baikonur was severely damaged during a Soyuz liftoff, dislodging its service bay, though the crew was unharmed.
Science
fromwww.aljazeera.com
1 day ago

Russian space agency says cosmodrome damaged after joint launch with US

Damage was detected at Baikonur Cosmodrome launchpad after the Soyuz MS-28 launch; Roscosmos reports reserve elements are available and repairs will be completed very soon.
#soyuz
Science
fromenglish.elpais.com
23 hours ago

The fall of a prolific science journal exposes the billion-dollar profits of scientific publishing

A high-volume, pay-to-publish mega-journal compromised scientific quality, enabling irregular studies while generating large profits for major publisher Elsevier.
fromBusiness Insider
18 hours ago

Human brain ages at four major turning points: 9, 32, 66, 83

Scientists at the University of Cambridge's cognition and brain sciences unit have used images of roughly 3,800 "neurotypical" brains, ranging in age from birth to 90, to pinpoint these turning points where our brains change shape to serve different functions as we grow, age, and eventually decline. Roughly speaking, ages nine, 32, 66, and 83 mark pivotal shifts in how our brains operate. "This study is the first to identify major phases of brain wiring across a human lifespan," Dr. Alexa Mousley, who led the research, said in a release.
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fromBusiness Insider
22 hours ago

A Cold War nuclear bunker is buried deep inside a Colorado mountain. See inside the Cheyenne Mountain Complex.

Cheyenne Mountain is a hardened underground NORAD backup facility that can seal itself, withstand large nuclear blasts, and support NORAD and USNORTHCOM operations.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 day ago

To See a Star's Face, You Have to Interfere with It

The only major difference between the sun and the stars we see at night is that the sun happens to be close to uswhich is advantageous, assuming you enjoy being alive. Astronomers enjoy this as well but have another reason for rejoicing in the sun's proximity: this allows us to see it as a disk. The sun is, of course, three-dimensional.
Science
Science
fromTheregister
1 day ago

GPUs aren't worth their weight in gold

Supercomputing remains focused on high-precision FP64 workloads, driving specialized architectures, large-scale industry participation, and persistent trade-offs between performance and application changes.
Science
fromMail Online
1 day ago

Mystery of the Temple of Venus is SOLVED after 2,000 years

Roman builders used volcanic materials in Temple of Venus construction, producing geomaterials that consolidate and remain durable for nearly 2,000 years despite ground subsidence.
fromWIRED
1 day ago

How to Measure the Earth's Radius With Legos

More than 2,000 years ago, pretty much every educated human knew the Earth was round. There are some pretty obvious clues, after all. If you travel south, you see stars and constellations you've never seen before (because they're blocked by Earth's curvature). When a ship comes into port, you see the top of it before the bottom (because the ocean surface is curved). Finally, when Earth's shadow falls on the moon in a lunar eclipse, the shadow is a circle. I mean, c'mon!
Science
fromMail Online
21 hours ago

Earthquakes strike California for THIRD DAY sparking 'Big One' fears

Three minor earthquakes were detected less than 30 miles south of San Jose Friday morning, striking within three minutes of each other between 10.40 and 10.43am ET. The US Geological Survey (USGS) reported that the first tremor registered as a magnitude 3.4 earthquake, and was then followed moments later by magnitude 2.6 and 2.5 quakes. No injuries or damage to local property has been reported at this time.
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Science
fromMail Online
1 day ago

French fry facial? Scientists are turning potato into 'skincare gold'

Potato plant waste contains solanesol and vitamin K2 that can be used in cosmetics to support collagen, antioxidant protection, and replace tobacco-derived ingredients.
Science
fromArs Technica
1 day ago

Reintroduced carnivores' impacts on ecosystems are still coming into focus

Human hunting and management, more than large carnivores, primarily drive elk, moose, and deer population changes across most mainland systems.
#fever
#urban-wildlife
Science
fromMail Online
19 hours ago

'Worrying' virus resistant to body's defense system, study shows

Bird flu viruses tolerate higher, bird-body temperatures that often exceed human fever ranges, enabling continued replication and severe disease despite human fever responses.
Science
fromComputerWeekly.com
1 day ago

UK partnership extends fibre optic tech for more reliable radio comms | Computer Weekly

Aston University and Pulse Power & Measurement will develop a radio-over-fibre prototype to amplify and extend radio signals over fibre optics for ultra-stable, long-distance communications.
fromBig Think
1 day ago

What we can learn from butterflies

Ever since I first read Janine Benyus's Biomimicry: Innovation Inspired by Nature, I've descended into a rabbit hole in search of what " intelligence " really means (and who has it). Perhaps that's why I love the name of this newsletter so much. [It's a worm, after all. A humble, indispensable critter buried beneath the soil.] Benyus's central argument is that the "smartest" solutions to human problems already exist in nature. We just need to know where, and how, to look for them. (For instance: wind turbines inspired by humpback whales.)
Science
Science
fromSustainable Bus
1 day ago

Inside Cummins' multi-energy strategy for the bus market: from LFP batteries to Euro VII, gas and hydrogen engines - Sustainable Bus

Cummins advances parallel decarbonisation pathways by developing LFP battery packs and continuing investment in advanced combustion, hydrogen, and natural gas technologies.
Science
fromTESLARATI
1 day ago

Blue Origin announces Super-Heavy New Glenn 9x4 to Rival SpaceX Starship

Blue Origin is developing the New Glenn 9×4 super-heavy rocket to carry 70 metric tons to LEO with uprated BE-4/BE-3U engines and increased reusability.
fromTheregister
1 day ago

Rosalind Franklin rover catches a break as NASA stays in

The European Space Agency's long-delayed Rosalind Franklin rover has received a boost with confirmation that NASA is staying in the project. During Director General Josef Achbacher's speech at the agency's Ministerial meeting, where funding is debated and projects proposed and selected, he said [PDF]: "Just yesterday, I received very good news from NASA to confirm their contribution to the Rosalind Franklin Mission."
Science
fromNature
2 days ago

A structured system: the secrets of Germany's scientific reputation

In 2019, shortly after finishing her master's at Nanjing University in China, Xinyi Zhao opened an e-mail to learn that she had been offered a PhD position at the Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research in Rostock, Germany. "When I told my parents, they asked me to double-check whether the offer was real, as they weren't familiar with the institute." But Zhao knew of its glowing scientific reputation.
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fromMail Online
1 day ago

Earthquake swarm rattles California on Thanksgiving

Multiple small earthquakes occurred near The Geysers geothermal field, where geothermal operations and local faults contribute to frequent, sometimes induced, seismicity.
Science
fromwww.npr.org
2 days ago

NASA astronauts celebrate Thanksgiving with Russian cranberry sauce

International Space Station crew will celebrate Thanksgiving with a special group meal of space-safe festive foods shared among multinational astronauts and arriving crew.
Science
fromScienceDaily
2 days ago

Your body may already have a molecule that helps fight Alzheimer's

Spermine induces misfolded amyloid proteins to clump into harmless aggregates, offering a potential therapeutic approach for Alzheimer's and Parkinson's.
fromMail Online
2 days ago

Scientists come up with method to stop the Gulf Stream collapsing

Melting the West Antarctic Ice Sheet could save the Gulf Stream, a remarkable new study reveals. The vast icy mass in the southern hemisphere contains around 750,000 cubic miles of ice - enough to fill Wembley Stadium nearly three billion times. As it melts, the West Antarctic Ice Sheet sends salty water towards the North Atlantic, which helps the water stay dense enough to keep the crucial ocean current moving, the study authors reveal.
Science
Science
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

The Biology of Gratitude

Gratitude triggers neurochemical responses that reduce stress, elevate mood, enhance empathy and brain plasticity, and communal rituals amplify these biological benefits.
fromMail Online
1 day ago

Just one session of weight training boosts brain power, study finds

In the study, they tracked 121 adults aged between 18 and 50 and split them into two groups. All underwent cardiovascular fitness tests and were quizzed about their lifestyle. Two days later, all participants then gave blood samples and had an electroencephalographic (EEG) scan to record the electrical activity of the brain. The first group then did sets of weight exercises of moderate difficulty, while the other was asked to watch a video of adults performing resistance exercises. The resistance exercises lasted for 42 minutes.
Science
Science
fromFuncheap
1 day ago

Free King Tides Walk + Science Talk (Palo Alto)

Free, interactive King Tides learning walk at Palo Alto Baylands with a hands-on science talk; highest tide at 12:24pm; register on EventBrite due to limited space.
Science
fromwww.dw.com
1 day ago

Germany news: ESA plan for German astronaut to head to moon DW 11/27/2025

The European Space Agency aims to include a German astronaut in an Artemis moon mission, while a German-Turkish family in Istanbul died from insecticide poisoning.
fromMail Online
2 days ago

UN says planetary defenses will observe interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS

Starting on November 27, a global team of scientists with the International Asteroid Warning Network (IAWN) will kick off a two-month campaign to track the comet as it nears our planet. 'While it poses no threat, comet 3I/ATLAS presents a great opportunity for the IAWN community to perform an observing exercise due to its prolonged observability from Earth and high interest to the scientific community,' the UN explains on its website.
Science
#earthquake
fromSFGATE
1 day ago
Science

Magnitude 3.7 earthquake rattles Northern California early Thanksgiving morning

fromSFGATE
1 day ago
Science

Magnitude 3.7 earthquake rattles Northern California early Thanksgiving morning

Science
fromMail Online
1 day ago

Scientists baffled as halo of red light appears over Italian town

A rare red halo over Possagno, likely an ELVE caused by lightning-driven electromagnetic pulses, was photographed twice in three years.
fromSustainable Bus
2 days ago

Kiira Motors electric coach completes first 1,700 km of a 13,000-km trans-African journey - Sustainable Bus

Kiira Motors Corporation has concluded a 1,771-kilometre electric coach run across Tanzania along its journey on the Made in Uganda Grand Trans-Africa Electric Expedition, which is offering the company a detailed set of observations on long-distance electric coach operation in East African conditions. The company was founded a few years ago and is owned by the State of Uganda. It focuses on the development of zero emission vehicles.
Science
#mars
fromMail Online
1 day ago

Inside the mating rituals of turkeys- from wingmen to sexy snoods

Most Americans think of turkeys in November, but for wild turkeys, the real drama unfolds in spring, when breeding season transforms forests and fields into complex social arenas filled with high-stakes courtship. During this time, male turkeys, or toms, display a striking combination of physical traits and behaviors to attract females, including gobbling calls, fanned tails, sharp spurs, hair-like beards on their chests, and the elongated snood draping over their beak, which research shows is a key factor in female choice.
Science
fromTasting Table
1 day ago

Having Nightmares? What Foods You Eat Before Sleeping Might Be The Culprit - Tasting Table

A 2025 study, published in Frontiers in Psychology, surveyed more than a thousand college students to find out how they thought food affects their sleep and dreams. About 40% said certain foods make their sleep better or worse. Only 5.5% said food changes their dreams, which suggests there is not one surefire, nightmare-inducing snack, so much as sensitive people whose guts and sleep are tightly linked.
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Florida professor may have solved mystery of Peru's Band of Holes

A Florida archaeologist's decades-long persistence has helped solve one of Peru's most puzzling geographical conundrums: the origin and purpose of the so-called Band of Holes in the country's mountainous Pisco Valley. Charles Stanish, professor of archaeology at the University of South Florida, and an expert on Andean culture, spent years studying the more than 5,200 curious hillside shallow pits known to local residents as Monte Sierpe - serpent mountain.
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fromTheregister
3 days ago

India satisfies its supercomputing needs, not its ambitions

India's National Supercomputing Mission has built substantial compute capacity and local indigenization but still lacks domestic semiconductor leadership and a completed homegrown CPU.
Science
fromTheregister
2 days ago

Norway's new supercomputer to use waste heat to raise salmon

Olivia supercomputer multiplies Norway's computing capacity sixteenfold using AMD Turin CPUs and Nvidia Grace Hopper Superchips to support diverse scientific and AI research sustainably.
fromNature
3 days ago
Science

Author Correction: Photocatalytic low-temperature defluorination of PFASs - Nature

Researchers are affiliated with the University of Science and Technology of China and Nanjing Tech University; correspondence directed to Jian-Ping Qu and Yan-Biao Kang.
Science
fromThe Hacker News
2 days ago

Shai-Hulud v2 Campaign Spreads From npm to Maven, Exposing Thousands of Secrets

Shai-Hulud v2 compromised npm and Maven artifacts, infecting PostHog-linked releases to backdoor developer machines and exfiltrate API keys, cloud credentials, and tokens.
Science
fromNature
3 days ago

Why the world must wake up to China's science leadership

China is rapidly building scientific and technological self-reliance through large R&D spending, innovation-focused policy, and growing STEM graduate capacity.
Science
fromNature
3 days ago

The Venus project

Afrodi passionately prefers Venus's volatile, potentially habitable past and sisterly danger to the popular Mars colonization obsession.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

China's Giant Underground Neutrino Observatory Just Released Its First ResultsAnd They're Promising

JUNO's 59-day run produced world-leading measurements of two neutrino oscillation parameters and advances prospects for determining the neutrino mass ordering.
fromArs Technica
2 days ago

Russia's Soyuz 5 will soon come alive. But will anyone want to fly on it?

The Soyuz 5 rocket, also named Irtysh for a river that flows through Russia and Kazakhstan, answers to that purpose. Its first stage is powered by a single RD-171MV engine, which at sea level has three times the thrust of a single Raptor 3 engine, and is part of a family of engines that are the most powerful liquid-fueled rocket engines in the world. The RD-171MV uses only Russian components.
Science
fromwww.nature.com
3 days ago

Thalamocortical transcriptional gates coordinate memory stabilization

The molecular mechanisms that enable memories to persist over long timescales from days to weeks and months are still poorly understood1. Here, to develop insights into this process, we created a behavioural task in which mice formed multiple memories but only consolidated some, while forgetting others, over the span of weeks. We then monitored circuit-specific molecular programs that diverged between consolidated and forgotten memories. We identified multiple distinct waves of transcription, that is, cellular macrostates, in the thalamocortical circuit that defined memory persistence.
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fromFuturism
2 days ago

This Video of a Robot Playing Basketball Is EXTREMELY Impressive

Unitree G1 humanoid robot was programmed to play basketball using SkillMimic to mimic human and ball motions, executing dribbles, jump shots, and pivots.
fromWIRED
3 days ago

Boeing's Next Starliner Flight Will Only Be Allowed to Carry Cargo

NASA and Boeing are now targeting no earlier than April 2026 to fly the uncrewed Starliner-1 mission, the space agency said. Launching by next April will require completion of rigorous test, certification, and mission readiness activities, NASA added in a statement. "NASA and Boeing are continuing to rigorously test the Starliner propulsion system in preparation for two potential flights next year," said Steve Stich, manager of NASA's Commercial Crew Program, in a statement.
Science
fromBig Think
2 days ago

How your body could outlive the genome you were born with

As humans, we all want the same thing, a life that's full of good experiences, more time with family, with friends, more time to love, but sometimes genetic illness can cut that short or really, for all of us at some point, our body breaks down. And our bodies are genetic machines. For many diseases, the cause of the disease is a mutation in the genome. Gene therapy is a vision that many have had for decades, more than 50 years.
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fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

When Math Meets Mind

Observer-relative time dilation can make long computations feasible for local observers near strong gravity, altering notions of computational efficiency for finite minds.
Science
fromArs Technica
2 days ago

ULA aimed to launch up to 10 Vulcan rockets this year-it will fly just once

Vulcan launches face delays driven by solid rocket motor performance concerns and inspections despite available hardware and ongoing launch infrastructure upgrades.
Science
fromwww.aljazeera.com
3 days ago

Does adolescence last until 32? Scientists unlock brain's five eras

Human brain development progresses through five phases with major turning points around ages 9, 32, 66, and 83, and adolescence can extend to age 32.
fromMail Online
3 days ago

Radical new theory of consciousness explains what happens when you die

Consciousness does not emerge from human brains, according to Professor Maria Strømme, a professor of nanotechnology at Uppsala University. Instead, she claims that it exists as a fundamental field. If this is correct, 'mysterious' phenomena such as telepathy, near-death experiences, and even life after death could finally be explained by science. According to Professor Strømme's theory, consciousness does not end when we die. Instead, when a person passes away, their consciousness simply returns to the background field.
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fromFast Company
3 days ago

Time for a CRISPR discussion about genetic engineering

Gene editing in agriculture requires consistent regulatory oversight because exempting edited crops risks unchecked entry into the food supply and uneven safety standards.
Science
fromMail Online
3 days ago

Forget Yellowstone! Hidden volcanoes pose the greatest risk

Poorly monitored 'hidden' volcanoes can erupt unexpectedly and cause severe, far-reaching hazards, as shown by the long-dormant Hayli Gubbi eruption.
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fromNature
3 days ago

Slipknot-gauged mechanical transmission and robotic operation - Nature

Slipknot-gauged mechanical transmission encodes and transmits force information via peak force signals enabling intelligent control in constrained environments.
Science
fromNature
3 days ago

Vicarious body maps bridge vision and touch in the human brain - Nature

174 participants (104 female, 70 male; mean age 29.3) underwent 7T fMRI while watching concatenated film clips across four runs with REST periods.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

Mars Has Lightning, Scientists Prove

Mars experiences electrical activity and lightning caused by triboelectrification of wind-blown dust and sand, confirmed by Perseverance acoustic and electromagnetic detections.
Science
fromNature
3 days ago

Building compositional tasks with shared neural subspaces - Nature

Two adult male rhesus macaques performed a fixation-based task discriminating morphing stimuli varying continuously in colour and shape along circular continua.
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Lab Beagles: What Science and All of Us Owe To Research Dogs

Beagles are very popular companion dogs and also very popular among breeding facilities and research laboratories where they live highly compromised lives, all "in the name of research" to help humans. 1 Many, if not most people, have no idea what goes on behind these closed doors. I've often wondered why these wonderful dogs rather than others wound up being used for a sorts of research, and now I know because of Dr. Brad Bolman's excellent new book Lab Dog.
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fromwww.npr.org
3 days ago

How studying lions' roars with AI can help with conservation efforts

AI analysis revealed a previously unrecognized lion roar type and enabled individual identification, offering a new tool for lion monitoring and conservation.
fromThe Atlantic
2 days ago

A Cascade of Lies About Turkey

There's a fairy tale about Thanksgiving that gets refuted every fall. Does eating turkey really make you fall asleep? When science writers check in with the experts, they always get the same response: No, no, no, and no. Also no and no. These holiday debunkers tell you what the science says: Turkey meat is not a sedative. They tell you what the studies show: Drumsticks don't produce fatigue.
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fromwww.mercurynews.com
3 days ago

Flam: James Watson had a brilliant mind and a broken moral compass

James Watson co-discovered DNA's double helix yet later expressed racist, bigoted views, tarnishing his legacy despite genetics showing recent common human origins in Africa.
Science
fromNature
3 days ago

Ethylene modulates cell wall mechanics for root responses to compaction - Nature

Reduced cellulose synthesis enables roots to penetrate compacted soil by promoting ethylene-driven radial cortical expansion and soil fissure formation.
Science
fromSFGATE
3 days ago

A California geological wonder sits just off Highway 395

Fossil Falls is an accessible, fossilized waterfall shaped by ancient basalt lava flows and Ice Age rivers, revealing the region's volcanic and glacial geological history.
Science
fromBig Think
3 days ago

The Moon's two faces don't match, and we think we know why

The Moon dominates Earth's night sky, appearing much larger and brighter than Venus and showing varied surface features—craters and maria—that reveal its geological history.
fromArs Technica
3 days ago

Many genes associated with dog behavior influence human personalities, too

Many dog breeds are noted for their personalities and behavioral traits, from the distinctive vocalizations of huskies to the herding of border collies. People have worked to identify the genes associated with many of these behaviors, taking advantage of the fact that dogs can interbreed. But that creates its own experimental challenges, as it can be difficult to separate some behaviors from physical traits distinctive to the breed-small dog breeds may seem more aggressive simply because they feel threatened more often.
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fromMail Online
3 days ago

Scientists uncover dark new behavior among bloodthirsty rats

Brown rats ambush and kill bats in darkness using whisker sensing, potentially decimating colonies and increasing risk of zoonotic pathogen transfer.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

Scientists Finally Solve Mystery of Ancient Fossil Foot

Sixteen years ago a group of anthropologists discovered 3.4-million-year-old fossilized foot bones in Ethiopia. While they suspected the foot belonged to an ancient human that likely lived alongside the species we know as Lucy, Australopithecus afarensis, without a skull or teeth to analyze, they couldn't be sure. What they did know is that unlike Lucy, which walked upright on arched feet like our own, the mystery foot had a grasping toe that was adapted for climbing trees.
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fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

Wild Turkeys Went from Almost Gone to Millions Strong

Wild turkey populations rebounded from near-extinction due to habitat loss and overhunting, recovering to more than six million across the U.S.
Science
fromwww.npr.org
3 days ago

The origins of your dog's unique look may be older than you think

Most physical diversity in domestic dogs, including varied skull shapes, had already emerged by about 10,000–11,000 years ago, predating Victorian selective breeding.
Science
fromMail Online
3 days ago

Dying for fame: Singers die 4 YEARS earlier than non-famous people

Fame among singers is associated with higher mortality: famous singers die about four years younger than comparable lesser-known singers.
fromDefector
2 days ago

Why Won't Nora The Leopard Seal Abandon Her Dead Pups? | Defector

He was thrilled; this was the first leopard seal he'd ever seen in Chile, where he is from. As he peered through his binoculars, he noticed another, smaller seal: a pup. "I got so excited, and then we got there, and it's dead," he said. As the boat drew nearer, he could see the pup was still haloed in downy white hairs, suggesting it was less than a week old. Its head was submerged and its limp body was frozen to the ice.
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fromTechCrunch
3 days ago

Fleet Space finds massive lithium deposit using AI and satellites | TechCrunch

Satellite-powered AI and subsurface sensing expanded the known extent of a massive Quebec lithium deposit and reduced drilling-targeting time to 48 hours.
Science
fromFast Company
3 days ago

Boeing's troubled Starliner won't carry astronauts on its next mission

Boeing and NASA will fly the next Starliner as a cargo-only test to validate propulsion and safety before resuming crewed missions.
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