Science News


Bioluminescence Octocorals Species Trait Group Organisms
- Bioluminescence, the remarkable ability of organisms to generate light through chemical reactions, originated in marine invertebrates known as octocorals at least 540 million years ago, according to a new study by researchers at the Smithsonian's ... [Read More]

Source: earth.com

Footprints Dinosaur Toes Stephen Brusatte Two Toes Size
- A series of foot tracks in southeastern China points to the discovery of a giant velociraptor relative, paleontologists suggest in a new study. Thanks to their reign of terror in "Jurassic Park," Velociraptors are infamous prehistoric predators. ... [Read More]

Source: nytimes.com

Nose Rhinosinusitis Allergies Chronic Rhinosinusitis Allergy Runny Nose
- Key Takeaways As we segue from winter illnesses to spring allergies, runny noses may feel perpetual. If you're finding allergy medications aren't helping with your drippiness, it's time to consider whether you're experiencing a different condition. ... [Read More]


Reef Coral Starfish Barrier Culling Reefs
- Targeted culling of crown-of-thorns starfish has resulted in parts of the Great Barrier Reef maintaining and even increasing coral cover, leading researchers to call for the programme to be dramatically scaled up A culling programme has succeeded ... [Read More]


Moon Probe Night Agency Space Japan's Moon Lander
- Japan's first moon lander has survived a third freezing lunar night, Japan's space agency said Wednesday after receiving an image from the device three months after it landed on the moon. The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency said the lunar probe responded to a signal from the earth Tuesday night, confirming it has survived another weekslong lunar night. Temperatures can fall to minus 170 degrees Celsius (minus 274 degrees Fahrenheit) during a lunar night, and rise to around 100 Celsius (212 Fahrenheit) during a lunar day. The probe, Smart Lander for Investing Moon, or SLIM, reached the ... [Read More]

Source: foxnews.com

Kamo'oalewa Earth Moon Asteroid Impact Sun
- For nearly a decade, a near-Earth asteroid named Kamo'oalewa has invoked speculation over how it came to orbit the Sun in total synchrony with Earth as though it shares some special relationship with our planet. A new study of the oddball may have ... [Read More]

Source: gizmodo.com

Milk Bird Flu Bird Flu Virus Viruses
- Fragments of the virus that causes bird flu have been found in samples of pasteurized milk, the Food and Drug Administration said Tuesday, but officials aren't concerned about danger to humans from drinking store-bought milk at this time. Officials ... [Read More]

Source: usatoday.com

Zoo Karen Animal Keys Ostrich Friends Exhibition
- Staff at Topeka zoo are 'devastated' by death of Karen, who was known as the 'dancing queen' A popular ostrich at a zoo in Kansas known as the "dancing queen" has died after swallowing an employee's keys. The Topeka zoo and conservation center ... [Read More]


Bees Bee Honey Species Wasps Sting
- Honey Bee (Photo: Keith McDuffee/flickr/cc) Most of us have been stung by a bee and we know it's not much fun. But maybe we also felt a tinge of regret, or vindication, knowing the offending bee will die. Right? Well, for 99.96% of bee species, ... [Read More]

Source: rawstory.com

Tomb Archaeologists Complex Chinese Academy Social Sciences Year
- In an otherwise relatively normal-looking field of eastern China's Anhui Province sits a large mound. When covered with grass and trees, the mound looks quite natural. But, when archaeologists began digging, they quickly realized this wasn't a normal hill. It was a massive 2,200-year-old tomb filled with treasure. Archaeologists spent the past four years excavating the mound outside Huainan , the Institute of Archaeology at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences said in an April 17 news release. The gigantic burial complex — dubbed Wuwangdun — spans just over 16 million square ... [Read More]


Diamond Diamonds Growth Metal Carbon Liquid
- Researchers have grown diamonds under conditions of 1 atmosphere pressure and at 1025 degrees Celsius using a liquid metal alloy composed of gallium, iron, nickel, and silicon, thus breaking the existing paradigm. The discovery of this new growth ... [Read More]


Neutron Fields Burst Flares Stars Explosion
- With our skies being full of so many wonders, it's daunting to imagine what is happening when nobody's looking. That's why astronomers were thrilled when a satellite happened to be facing the right way at the right time when a rare explosion in ... [Read More]


Sail Rocket Orbit Lab Space Mission
- April 23 (UPI) -- Rocket Lab launched NASA's new composite solar sail into space where it will undergo weeks of testing, using sunlight to propel it through the solar system. The solar sail technology lifted off aboard Rocket Lab's Electron, along ... [Read More]

Source: upi.com

Saber Smilodon Fatalis Eddie Templeton Bone Cat Tiger
- Mississippi resident Eddie Templeton recently discovered a bone that once belonged to a saber-tooth tiger. Now he wants to find one of the prehistoric creature's teeth. It's not every day you dig up the fossilized remains of an apex predator.  ... [Read More]

Source: usatoday.com

Voyager Data Spacecraft Earth Interstellar Space
- For the first time since November 2023, NASA's Voyager 1 spacecraft has started transmitting useful data back to Earth about the status and functionality of its onboard systems.  The mission team is now preparing for the spacecraft to resume sending back scientific data. Voyager 1, along with its sibling Voyager 2, are the only spacecraft to venture into interstellar space . Malfunction in Voyager's computers Voyager 1 had ceased transmitting intelligible science and engineering data on November 14, 2023. Although the spacecraft appeared to be receiving instructions and operating as ... [Read More]

Source: earth.com

Light Years Bioluminescence Octocorals Animals Luciferase
- Some 540 million years ago, an ancient group of corals developed the ability to make its own light 1 . Scientists have previously found that bioluminescence is an ancient trait — with one group of tiny crustaceans first making their own light an estimated 267 million years ago. But this new finding pushes back the origins of bioluminescence even further by around 270 million years. "We had no idea it was going to be this old," says Danielle DeLeo, an evolutionary marine biologist at Florida International University in Miami, who led the study, which was published on 24 April in ... [Read More]

Source: nature.com

Avar Family Dna Researchers Avar Empire History
- Most people know about the Huns , if only because of their infamous warrior-ruler Attila. But the Avars, another nomadic people who subsequently occupied roughly the same region of eastern and central Europe, have remained obscure despite having assembled a sprawling empire that lasted from the late sixth century to the early ninth century. Even archaeologists have struggled to piece together their history and culture, relying on spotty and potentially biased contemporaneous chronicles that, in many cases, were authored by the Avars' adversaries. A deep dive into 424 genomes collected from ... [Read More]

Source: nature.com

Glow Species Study Coral Corals Animals
- – Many animals can glow in the dark. Fireflies famously blink on summer evenings. But most animals that light up are found in the depths of the ocean . In a new study, scientists report that deep-sea corals that lived 540 million years ago may have been the first animals to glow, far earlier than previously thought. "Light signaling is one of the earliest forms of communication that we know of — it's very important in deep waters," said Andrea Quattrini, a co-author of the study published Tuesday in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B. Some use light to startle ... [Read More]

Source: news4jax.com

Flares Light Hole Models Holes Time
- Astronomers have found some hot magnetized gas swirling around our galaxy's center. Something is alight in Sagittarius A* (Sgr A*), the supermassive black hole in the heart of our Milky Way galaxy . In a multi-institutional study, astronomers have created the first three-dimensional visualization of a high-energy flare from Sgr A*. This accomplishment, achieved using data collected by the Atacama Large Millimeter/Submillimeter Array (ALMA), provides distinctive insights into the turbulent surroundings of black holes. "This is the first three-dimensional reconstruction of gas rotating close ... [Read More]


Bioluminescence Dr Quattrini Light Deep Sea Smithsonian National Museum Royal Society B
- A new study resets the timing for the emergence of bioluminescence back to millions of years earlier than previously thought. Bioluminescence is used throughout the animal kingdom, particularly in marine environments, to lure prey, startle predators and even act as camouflage in the surrounding light . "We always say it's light-limited in the deep sea, but there are a lot of organisms that produce their own light," said Andrea Quattrini , a zoologist at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History in Washington. The dazzling glow of bioluminescence is common in Octocorallia, also known ... [Read More]

Source: nytimes.com