Science News


Wolves Colorado Parks Wildlife Colorado Wolf Cpw
- FORT COLLINS, Colo. (AP) — The Trump administration is telling Colorado to stop importing gray wolves from Canada as part of the state's efforts to restore the predators, a shift that could hinder plans for more reintroductions this winter. ... [Read More]


Carnegie Science System Sun Asteroid Asteroids Carnegie Science's Magellan
- You can now listen to Fox News articles! Astronomers have reportedly discovered a skyscraper-sized asteroid moving through our solar system at a near record-breaking pace. The asteroid, named 2025 SC79, circles the sun once every 128 days, making ... [Read More]

Source: foxnews.com

Earth Moons Moon Arjuna Group Quasi Lunar Moons 2025 Pn7
- As mankind was planning the first moon landing in the 1960s, an asteroid approached Earth—and still hasn't left. The Earth has just added its seventh confirmed quasi-lunar moon. It is 2025 PN7, a small Apollo-type asteroid detected in August ... [Read More]

Source: wired.com

Quantum Computing Ibm Quantum Advanced Micro Devices Report Correction
- Shares of Advanced Micro Devices jumped on a report that IBM can utilize the company's chips to run a quantum computing error correction algorithm. IBM plans to launch a particular type of large-scale quantum computer by 2029, and announced a ... [Read More]

Source: cnbc.com

Snake Venom Researchers Species Fischer's Tree Snake Fischer's
- Journal of Experimental Biology , was shot at Venomworld in Paris, a facility where venom is harvested for medical use. Researchers crafted artificial prey from a muscle-like medical gel, then tempted the snakes to attack while recording from multiple angles. "I flinched a couple of times," Vipers were the quickest, biting their target in about 0.1 seconds. That's faster than a human can blink. When their aim faltered, they simply re-angled and bit again. Elapids, including the rough-scaled death adder and Cape coral snake, closed the distance first, then delivered quick, repeated bites to ... [Read More]

Source: vice.com

Fire Forest Fires Wildfires Sierra Nevada Birds
- Up until the 1890s, the tribal people residing in Sierra Nevada's forests manually initiated small-scale brush fires to keep the ecosystem healthy. But then entered into picture human intellect. Authorities banned these manual fires and declared a ... [Read More]


Dinosaur Edmontosaurus Sereno Mummies T Rex Hooves
- Two fossilized "mummies" unearthed by scientists in the badlands of Wyoming of the duckbilled dinosaur Edmontosaurus reveal the external anatomy in exquisite detail, including the surprising presence of hooves on the feet — a first for any ... [Read More]

Source: nbcnews.com

Dinosaurs North America New Mexico Dinosaur Fossils Naashoibito
- By Will Dunham WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A fossil site in New Mexico with numerous dinosaurs, including the gargantuan Alamosaurus, dates to shortly before the asteroid strike that abruptly ended the age of dinosaurs, according to research that ... [Read More]

Source: aol.com

Chiron Rings Ring System Chiron's Science
- It's quick and easy to access Live Science Plus, simply enter your email below. We'll send you a confirmation and sign you up for our daily newsletter, keeping you up to date with the latest science news. In a universe where change usually unfolds ... [Read More]


Life Steps Earth Oxygen Hard Steps Nautilus Members
- Nautilus Members enjoy an ad-free experience. . T iming may, ultimately, be everything. Nautilus Members enjoy an ad-free experience. It seems a rather odd coincidence that in the 4.6 billion years since Earth formed, humans have emerged now. For us to be here, first life itself had to get started, of course, and then develop more complexity. Then enough oxygen had to accumulate in the atmosphere. And habitability had to continue for a further 2 billion years or so while complex animals evolved. But here we are, now, thinking about such things, on a world that seems uniquely hospitable to ... [Read More]

Source: nautil.us

Quantum Protocol Ratchet Signal Spqr Post Compromise Security
- Signal's getting ahead of the quantum curve, adding new layers of encryption to keep your chats safe from tomorrow's supercomputers. The advent of quantum computing poses a significant threat to modern digital communication security, which relies ... [Read More]


Zoo Year Columbus Rita Jean Columbus Zoo Calf
- POWELL, Ohio (AP) — The Columbus Zoo and Aquarium has welcomed its second baby elephant in a single calendar year for the first time in its nearly 100-year history, a milestone that the Ohio attraction is touting as a win for conservation. ... [Read More]

Source: aol.com

Island Flu Bird H5 Bird Flu Australia
- Wildlife scientists aboard Australia's icebreaker believe a deadly strain of bird flu has reached the sub-Antarctic Heard Island after they witnessed unusual levels of mortality in elephant seals. The scientists say penguins and other bird species ... [Read More]

Source: abc.net.au

Mosquito Culex Pipiens Princeton University West Nile Molestus London
- New research has uncovered the ancient origins of an urban mosquito species, Culex pipiens form molestus , also known as the 'London Underground mosquito' – disproving a long-held theory of when it first evolved. Published today (23 October) ... [Read More]


 1497 1493 Shark Species Scientists Father
- A father of four tragically lost his life after he was attacked and killed by sharks. The father was killed by a shark species that scientists previously believed to be harmless, adding shock and confusion to the already daunting situation. Now, experts are trying to uncover the truth of what happened. Father Of Four Killed By Surprising Shark Species Barak Tzach was just enjoying a solo snorkel off the coast of Israel. I am sure when the father jumped into the water this past April, he never imagined it would be for the last time. Video footage shows the father of four being dragged out to ... [Read More]


Coral Corals Florida Species Heat Elkhorn
- Since the Ice Age, elkhorn and staghorn corals off Florida's southern coast have been stacking their skeletons into elaborate, branching homes for parrotfish, eels and octopuses. "They've been the most important reef builders on these reefs for 10,000 years," said Ross Cunning, a coral biologist with Chicago's Shedd Aquarium. But researchers are using stark, new language to describe the status of the two species in Florida: functionally extinct. "The numbers of individuals of these species that remain are now so low that they cannot perform their ecological functions in any meaningful way," ... [Read More]

Source: nbcnews.com

Villa Frescoes Park Pompeii's Zuchtriegel New Frescoes
- Excavations of the still-buried portion of the palatial building may begin as early as next year and could unearth new frescoes On a map, Pompeii's Villa of the Mysteries looks like an afterthought—a small, distant square, as far away as possible from the ancient city's amphitheatre, where the action was. But the suburban villa, which dates to the second century BC, is the red-hot centre for many who make the pilgrimage here. Its room of celebrated frescoes contains some of the best-known and best-preserved examples of Ancient Roman art. And its palatial sprawl of 3,700 sq. m is vivid ... [Read More]


Embryos Loke Centre Cells Research Abnormalities Francis Crick Institute
- A test deployed in many fertility clinics to assess the viability of embryos for use in IVF is likely to overestimate the number of embryos with abnormalities, suggests a study published today. Using a new technique for imaging embryos in real time, a team led by scientists at the Loke Centre for Trophoblast Research, University of Cambridge, showed that abnormalities can arise at a later stage of embryo development than previously thought. This means that the tests used in some clinics may be finding errors in cells that will go on to develop into the placenta – and abnormalities in ... [Read More]


Quantum Gravity Field Theory Howl Entanglement
- The nature of gravity — and whether it can be reconciled with quantum mechanics — is one of the biggest mysteries in physics. Most researchers think that at a fundamental level, all phenomena follow the principles of quantum physics, but those principles do not seem to be compatible with the accepted theory of gravity. For years, researchers have been proposing experiments to show whether gravity could produce a phenomenon known as quantum entanglement. Now, two theoretical physicists have complicated the picture by putting forward a controversial, and seemingly counterintuitive ... [Read More]

Source: nature.com

Quantum Molecules Algorithm Nmr Computers Google Quantum
- Google LLC's quantum division today  released research showing that its Willow quantum chip can provide elegant and accurate simulations about the physical properties of molecules much faster than classical computers. Furthermore, the algorithm the team developed is verifiable, which means that the same algorithm can be run on a similarly powerful computer and get the same answer. Google Quantum AI Principal Scientist ‪Vadim Smelyanskiy said this new algorithm offers "a valuable tool to understand the nature of quantum systems from molecules, to magnets, to potentially black ... [Read More]