Science News


Bears Wildlife Service Area Grizzly Bears Groups Bear Committee
- The feds will "actively restore" grizzly bears to the area sometime in the future. The federal government announced on Thursday that it will begin to "actively restore" grizzly bears to the North Cascades of Washington sometime in the future. The ... [Read More]


Alexander Oldenburger Portrait Denmark Metal Disc
- A one-inch bronze portrait of  Alexander the Great dating to around 200 C.E. has been unearthed on an island in Denmark. Two metal detectorists, Finn Ibsen and Lars Danielsen, were searching a field outside of Ringsted, a city on the island of ... [Read More]


Species Cuckoos Cuckoo Color Polymorphism Host
- Sexual dimorphism , which is the observable difference in appearance between male and female members of a species, occurs widely across the animal kingdom, including in humans. An interesting variation of this is sex-limited polymorphism, where one ... [Read More]

Source: earth.com

Space Crew Board Spacecraft Iss Shuttle
- KENNEDY SPACE CENTER — It's not just another ride for a pair of veteran NASA astronauts who arrived to the Space Coast ahead of their flight onboard Boeing's CST-100 Starliner. Barry "Butch" Wilmore and Sunita "Suni" Williams, who both joined ... [Read More]


Cross Believers Old Believers Office Experts Church
- A metal detectorist in eastern Poland recently uncovered a religious artifact that experts believe dates back hundreds of years. Experts said the cross icon is likely a relic of the Orthodox communities that continued to practice after a series of reforms split the Russian church in the middle of the 17th century, and an example of the kinds of symbols that were outlawed during a later monarch's reign. The cross, made from copper alloy, was flagged by a metal detector in Niedrzwica Duża, a commune roughly 100 miles outside of Warsaw, according to the provincial government's monument ... [Read More]

Source: cbsnews.com

Vaccine Omicron 8208 Study Original Strain Immunity
- A major bivalent COVID-19 vaccine induces production of neutralizing antibodies against the coronavirus that circulated at the start of the pandemic as well as subvariants of omicron, albeit less abundantly, according to a Brazilian ... [Read More]


Virus Us Department Cattle Sky News Scientists Dairy
- A DEFRA spokesperson says the risk level in Britain has not changed but that they are watching the situation in America closely. Cows in the UK are not being tested for bird flu, despite the outbreak sweeping through American dairy herds, Sky News ... [Read More]

Source: news.sky.com

Remains Burial Royals Team Burning Fire
- In the ancient Maya kingdom of K'anwitznal—a lowland city located in present-day Guatemala—dead royals weren't always treated with reverence, archaeologists say. New research, published last week in the journal Antiquity , suggests some ... [Read More]


Whales Wildlife Water Pilot Toby's Inlet Beach
- A mass stranding of long-finned pilot whales in southwestern Australia led to the deaths of 29 of the beached creatures on Thursday, officials said . Another 100 or so of the whales were rescued and redirected out to sea from Toby's Inlet, which is ... [Read More]

Source: cbsnews.com

Tombaugh Regio Pluto's Sputnik Planitia Heart Impact Ocean
- When NASA released images of Pluto in 2015 taken by the New Horizons spacecraft, many were captivated by the dwarf planet's heart-shaped feature, now called Tombaugh Regio.   And now the mystery of how this "heart," which is nearly 1,000 miles (1,600 kilometers) across, came to be may be solved. A recent study in  Nature Astronomy  reveals how the western half of the heart, known as Sputnik Planitia, is the result of a massive impact. Based on simulations, the team suggests a planetary body roughly the size of Arizona from north to south collided with Pluto at a slow speed, ... [Read More]


Asteroid Apophis Earth Spacecraft Scientists Flyby
- In about five years' time, a potentially hazardous asteroid will swing by Earth at an eerily close distance of less than 20,000 miles (32,000 kilometers). During this rare encounter, Apophis will be ten times closer to Earth than the Moon and ... [Read More]

Source: gizmodo.com

El Ni Dengue Disease Mosquito Diseases Professor Lowe
- As our planet warms and urban areas expand, the threat of mosquito-borne diseases such as malaria and dengue is escalating, reaching regions previously untouched by these dangerous illnesses. Now, with over half of the global population at risk, ... [Read More]

Source: earth.com

Virus Cows Health Milk Officials Outbreak
- Federal agencies with competing interests are slowing the country's ability to track and control an outbreak of highly virulent bird flu that for the first time is infecting cows in the United States, according to government officials and health ... [Read More]


Cm Depth Desert Gypsum Researchers Deposits
- Abundant, diverse bacterial communities have been found deep beneath the almost uninhabitable surface of the Atacama Desert in Chile. The researchers who discovered them say they're likely 19,000 years old and could be linked to microbial life on ... [Read More]

Source: newatlas.com

Ayahuasca Church Settlement Cec Purposes Dea
- The Church of the Eagle and the Condor has affirmed its members' right to use ayahuasca for religious ceremonial purposes. An Arizona church has reached a settlement in a lawsuit against the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration and other federal agencies that allows the Indigenous religious organization to use the psychedelic brew ayahuasca for sacramental purposes. Under the agreement, the Church of the Eagle and the Condor (CEC) will be permitted to import, prepare and distribute ayahuasca to its members at religious ceremonies. "The Church of the Eagle and the Condor has reached a ... [Read More]


Neutrino Neutrinos Tau Icecube Electron Particle
- About a trillion tiny particles called neutrinos pass through you every second. Created during the Big Bang, these "relic" neutrinos exist throughout the entire universe, but they can't harm you. In fact, only one of them is likely to lightly tap an atom in your body in your entire lifetime. Most neutrinos produced by objects such as black holes have much more energy than the relic neutrinos floating through space. While much rarer, these energetic neutrinos are more likely to crash into something and create a signal that physicists like me can detect. But to detect them, neutrino physicists ... [Read More]


Brain Neurons Rat Cells Mouse Mice
- Mice lacking an olfactory system have had their sense of smell restored with neurons from rats, the first time scientists have successfully integrated the sensory apparatus of one species into another. f mice ever wonder what it's like to experience the world as a rat, some are now able to live that dream, at least when it comes to the sense of smell. Researchers led by Columbia University's Kristin Baldwin have created mice with hybrid brains -- part mouse, part rat -- that sense the odors of the world with their rat neurons. It is the first time that an animal has been able to use the ... [Read More]


Asteroids Hubble Astronomers Years Asteroid Objects
- The venerable Hubble Space Telescope is like a gift that keeps on giving. Not only is it still making astronomical discoveries after more than thirty years in operation. It is also making discoveries by accident! Thanks to an international team of citizen scientists, with the help of astronomers from the European Space Agency (ESA) and some machine learning algorithms, a new sample of over one thousand asteroids has been identified in Hubble's archival data. The methods used represent a new approach for finding objects in decades-old data that could be applied to other datasets as well. The ... [Read More]


Water Ice Dr Pettinelli Radar Ice Penetrating Liquid Water
- The initial step in the search for extraterrestrial life involves identifying the presence of liquid water. The moons of Saturn and Jupiter like Enceladus, Ganymede, Europa, and Callisto are suspected of holding oceans of liquid water beneath icy crusts. Similarly, some exoplanets beyond our solar system likely host liquid water, crucial for habitability. But detecting water, when we can't physically access these celestial bodies, poses challenges. Ice-penetrating radar, a geophysical tool, has proven capable of detecting liquid water on Earth and beneath Mars ' South polar cap. Now, this ... [Read More]


Bird Diversity Spaces Species Parks Areas
- Researchers at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign have recently reported that both public parks and private backyards play a vital role in supporting bird diversity in urban environments. "Greenspaces are increasingly valued for supporting biodiversity in urbanized landscapes. Previous research efforts have emphasized the importance of public land such as parks and nature preserves for biodiversity, yet private yards in residential neighborhoods also have great potential for species conservation," wrote the researchers. By studying two closely situated cities in Illinois with ... [Read More]

Source: earth.com