Science News


St Catherine Seal Braniewo Battle Adrian Klos Field
- By Archaeologists searching a field in Poland came across a remarkably rare, 600-year-old brass seal which depicts a local saint, per Popular Mechanics . St. Catherine of Alexandria was a patron saint of a church in the Braniewo region of Poland ... [Read More]


Romans Worms Wall Parasites Hadrian's Hadrian's Wall
- Ancient Romans in Britain were riddled with intestinal parasites that spread through human feces. A new analysis of the sewer system at Vindolanda, a Roman fort near Hadrian's Wall, found that residents in ancient times were infected with at least ... [Read More]


Rocket Satellite H3 Engine Stage Japan's
- Reading time 2 minutes Japan's H3 rocket lifted off for its seventh mission on Sunday, but an engine failure foiled its attempt to insert a navigation satellite in geostationary orbit. Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) revealed that its ... [Read More]

Source: gizmodo.com

Fireflies Light Species Southeast Asia Atp Florida Waters
- SARASOTA, Fla. ( WWSB ) - Fireflies produce light through a chemical reaction involving two key compounds: luciferin and luciferase. The first compound glows under specific conditions and resists heat, while luciferase acts as an enzyme that ... [Read More]


Shark Lamniform Fossil Sharks Body Years
- Follow Earth on Google A new megashark fossil from northern Australia reveals the first-known giant mackerel shark, dating back 115 million years. That shark would have been around 20 feet (6 meters) long, and appears in the fossil record 15 million years earlier than expected. The work was led by Dr. Mohamad Bazzi, a paleobiologist at Stanford University who studies shark evolution and body size. His research focuses on using fossils and statistics to understand when large predators emerged and how they shaped marine ecosystems. For this project, the team reexamined five huge vertebrae ... [Read More]

Source: earth.com

Mice Anxiety Maze Mouse Michael Sheehan Researchers
- A single week completely changed their lives. The millions of mice used in labs are extremely important for medical research. But for them, life is almost always miserable. Imagine spending your entire life in a shoebox-sized cell, with stagnant ... [Read More]


Parasites Vindolanda Romans Roman Fort Soldiers Wall
- Excavations reveal the microscopic enemies plaguing Roman soldiers at Hadrian's Wall. History loves to romanticize the Romans. We see them as the "good" empire — organized, clean, and civilized. They brought us aqueducts, heated floors, and ... [Read More]


Katina Seaworld Years Peta President Tracy Reiman Whale Care
- Getting your Trinity Audio player ready... SeaWorld Orlando officials announced the death Sunday of a 50-year-old killer whale named Katina. "Her health had begun to significantly decline as she entered her geriatric years," the theme park posted ... [Read More]


Pumas Penguins Penguin Colony Argentina's Monte Le Oacute N National Park Puma Scat
- On a beach in Patagonia, 40,000 pairs of Magellanic penguins have been running their annual breeding operation like they own the place. Then the pumas came back, looked around, and treated it like a seasonal pop-up buffet. tracking pumas in ... [Read More]

Source: vice.com

Ice Shelf Cracks Thwaites Glacier Ice Shelf Collapse
- An analysis of the expansion of cracks in the Thwaites Glacier over the past 20 years suggests that a total collapse could be only a matter of time. Known as the "Doomsday Glacier," the Thwaites Glacier in Antarctica is one of the most rapidly changing glaciers on Earth, and its future evolution is one of the biggest unknowns when it comes to predicting global sea level rise. The eastern ice shelf of the Thwaites Glacier is supported at its northern end by a ridge of the ocean floor. However, over the past two decades, cracks in the upper reaches of the glacier have increased rapidly, ... [Read More]

Source: wired.com

Wildlife Octopus Numbers Trusts Wildlife Trusts West Coast
- A wildlife charity has declared 2025 "the Year of the Blooming Octopus" after record numbers were spotted off the south-west coast of England. In its annual marine review the Wildlife Trusts says octopus numbers were this summer at their highest ... [Read More]

Source: bbc.com

Hole Black Hole Van Dokkum Space Galaxy Scientists
- Supermassive black holes are an anomaly that sits quietly at the centers of galaxies, holding gas and stars closer with their powerful gravity. But now scientists have discovered a mind-boggling phenomenon: a supermassive black hole skyrocketing ... [Read More]


Associated Press Fire Evidence British Museum Discovery Years
- You can now listen to Fox News articles! Scientists recently discovered what may be the earliest evidence of deliberate fire-making by humans — and it's far older than scholars previously believed. The study, which was published in the ... [Read More]

Source: foxnews.com

Monte Sierpe Holes Band Site Monte Sierpe's Accounting
- 5,200 holes carved into a Peruvian mountain left by an ancient economy For nearly a century, a strange band of thousands of holes carved into a Peruvian hillside has defied explanation. Stretching for nearly a mile (1.5 km) along the edge of the ... [Read More]

Source: newatlas.com

Ola L Oacute Pez Cave Bones Bees Nests Fossils
- Follow Earth on Google About 20,000 years ago, a cave on a Caribbean island quietly filled with bones. Owls hunted by night, returned to their rocky shelter, and regurgitated pellets packed with the remains of rodents, birds, and other prey. Over generations, those bones piled up, layer by layer, sealed by time and rain. Long after the owls disappeared, another tenant arrived. Bees began using the ancient jaws as nurseries, laying eggs inside empty tooth sockets and sealing them with mud and pollen. Until now, no one had ever documented bees nesting inside animal bones. The discovery reveals ... [Read More]

Source: earth.com

Year Solstice Day Sun Equinox Winter
- Yes the darkest day of the year is here, but that means brighter days are ahead. Sunday is the shortest day of the year north of the equator, where the solstice marks the start of astronomical winter. It's the opposite in the Southern Hemisphere, where it is the longest day of the year and summer will start. The word "solstice" comes from the Latin words "sol" for sun and "stitium" which can mean "pause" or "stop." The  solstice is an end of the sun's annual march  higher or lower in the sky. The winter solstice is when the sun makes its shortest, lowest arc. The good news for sun ... [Read More]

Source: wfla.com

Sun Winter Southwest England Sunday Day Southern Hemisphere
- – Thousands of people cheered and danced around as the sun rose over the prehistoric stone circle on Sunday, the The crowds, many dressed as druids and pagans, had gathered before dawn, waiting patiently in the dark and cold field in southwest England. Some sang and beat drums, while others took time to reflect among the huge stone pillars. Many make the pilgrimage to the stone circle every summer and winter and consider it a spiritual experience. The ancient monument, erected between 5,000 and 3,500 years ago, was built to align with the movement of the sun on the solstices — ... [Read More]

Source: news4jax.com

Planet Star Carbon Atmosphere James Webb Space Telescope J2322
- Follow Earth on Google Astronomers spotted an object that looks like a planet, weighs about as much as Jupiter, and yet behaves like nothing anyone has seen before. This strange world sits dangerously close to a dead star. Its air is filled with carbon instead of water vapor. Sooty clouds drift through its skies. Even its shape is warped, stretched by gravity into something closer to a lemon than a sphere. It is the kind of find that makes scientists stop, stare, and admit they don't have a neat explanation. Meet PSR J2322-2650b All known planets have some basic properties. Gas giants have ... [Read More]

Source: earth.com

Time Nist Clocks Nist Utc Power U S
- The U.S. government calculates the country's official time using more than a dozen atomic clocks at a federal facility northwest of Denver. But when a destructive windstorm knocked out power to the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) laboratory in Boulder on Wednesday and a backup generator subsequently failed, time ever so slightly slowed down. The lapse "resulted in NIST UTC [universal coordinated time] being 4.8 microseconds slower than it should have been," NIST spokesperson Rebecca Jacobson said in an email.  That's just under 5 millionths of a second. To ... [Read More]

Source: npr.org

Planet Fomalhaut Dust Years Fomalhaut System System
- 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. Facebook X Whatsapp Reddit Flipboard Join the conversation Add us as a preferred source on Google Newsletter Subscribe to our newsletter Astronomers hoping to observe a planet around a nearby star have witnessed a much rarer "unprecedented celestial event," the team said: The violent aftermath of not one, but two collisions between the rocky building blocks of planets. Over the past two ... [Read More]