Science News


West Coast Cyclone Bomb Bomb Cyclone Weather Pacific Northwest
- A powerful storm is bearing down on the West Coast and bringing with it a scary-sounding weather term - bomb cyclone. Bomb cyclone is a term used by weather enthusiasts to describe a process that meteorologists usually call bombogenesis. It's the ... [Read More]

Source: apnews.com

Child Officials Bird Flu Bird Flu Alameda County
- California health officials on Tuesday reported a possible case of bird flu in a child with mild symptoms. The child lives in Alameda County, part of the San Francisco Bay Area, and tested positive for the virus despite having no known contact ... [Read More]

Source: nbcnews.com

Citta Della Pieve Tomb World News Mr Cantone Perugia Chief Raffaele Cantone
- Authorities bugged the suspects' phones, conducted stakeouts and used drones before making the arrests. Ancient artefacts worth at least €8m (£6.7m) have been recovered after being stolen by "tomb raiders" who accidentally found them on ... [Read More]

Source: news.sky.com

Footprints Ecosystem Statement Researchers Fossils Imprints
- A woman hiking in the Italian Alps discovered a fragment of a 280 million-year-old ecosystem, complete with footprints, plant fossils and even the imprints of raindrops, researchers have confirmed. Claudia Steffensen was walking behind her husband ... [Read More]


Mount Gerizim Sotheby's Tablet Y Kaplan David Michaels Cnn's Georgia
- The  oldest-known stone tablet featuring an inscription of the Ten Commandments is going to auction, where experts think it could sell for between $1 million and $2 million. The  1,500-year-old marble slab was discovered in 1913 during a railway excavation along the southern coast of what is now Israel. Dating to between 300 and 500 C.E., it was unearthed near the locations of early synagogues, mosques and churches. On December 18, Sotheby's will sell the tablet, which features 20 lines of Paleo-Hebrew script. It stands about two feet tall and weighs 115 pounds. This is the first ... [Read More]


Lottery Arts Pound Fabian Society Funding Heritage
- National Lottery players raise more than £30m every week and fund over 700,000 projects across the UK—but when it comes to funding the arts, some say the scheme is in need of an overhaul Thirty years ago today, millions across the UK ... [Read More]


Quantum Computers Quantum Computers Quantum Entanglement Krysta Svore Step
- The largest number of logical qubits has been linked through quantum entanglement, which is a key step towards quantum computers that can detect and correct errors Useful quantum computers are one step closer. Microsoft and Atom Computing announced ... [Read More]


Quantum Qubits Atom Microsoft Logical Qubits System
- Microsoft and Atom Computing say they've reached a new milestone in their effort to build fault-tolerant quantum computers that can show an advantage over classical computers. Microsoft says it will start delivering the computers' quantum ... [Read More]

Source: geekwire.com

Demsas Matranga Years Hunter Food Year
- Should we be jealous of our hunter-gatherer ancestors? Illustration by The Atlantic. Source: Per Breiehagen / Getty. Save Listen - 1.0x + 0:00 44:27 Subscribe here: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | YouTube | Overcast | Pocket Casts After 200,000 years of ... [Read More]


Pterosaur Fossil Pterosaurs Pterodactyloids Lauer Foundation Skiphosoura
- A nearly perfect fossil has been waiting patiently to rewrite the story of flight. In a quarry in southern Germany, encased in limestone, a nearly perfect fossil has been waiting patiently to rewrite the story of flight. The fossil, a pterosaur with a stiff, sword-like tail, is a new species described today in the journal Current Biology . This remarkable discovery, made by an international team of scientists led by Dr. David Hone of Queen Mary University of London, sheds light on a longstanding mystery about how these enigmatic reptiles evolved into the airborne giants of the Mesozoic era. ... [Read More]


Uranus Voyager Magnetosphere Voyager 2 Data 8203
- Uranus has long captivated scientists with its mysteries, particularly those that remain hidden within our solar system. Decades-old data from Voyager 2, a NASA spacecraft, has now breathed new life into our understanding of this distant, enigmatic ... [Read More]

Source: earth.com

Google Quantum Quantum Quantum Computing Quantum Computing's Release Platform
- Google Quantum AI is using the Nvidia CUDA-Q platform and the Nvidia Eos supercomputer to help develop its next-generation quantum computing devices. The firm is using the platform to simulate the physics of its quantum processors as it works to ... [Read More]

Source: pymnts.com

Color Light Colors Science Ad Free Ad
- Nautilus Members enjoy an ad-free experience. . science and culture for people who love beautiful writing. A few years back, artist and botanist, and self-described explorer Tyler Thrasher became obsessed with a photograph of an opalized crab claw ... [Read More]

Source: nautil.us

Cub Cat Mummy Cats Lopatin Cub's
- A mummified Ice Age cub from Siberia is the first known mummy of a saber-toothed cat, and its discovery is generating ripples of excitement among paleontologists. The mummy's exceptional preservation provided the first view of what saber-toothed ... [Read More]

Source: wpbf.com

Sotheby's Tablet Sale Mount Gerizim Year Mr Kaplan
- A timeless piece of human history is heading to auction this December at Sotheby's. On December 18, the oldest inscribed stone tablet of the Ten Commandments will take center stage as a single-lot sale as part of the Books and Manuscripts auction with an estimate of $1-2 million. Dating back to the Late Roman-Byzantine period (ca. 300–800 CE) and weighing a hefty 115 pounds, this 1,500-year-old stone tablet stands about two feet tall and is considered the only complete example of its kind from this era. Inscribed in Paleo-Hebrew, its version of the commandments features a unique twist: ... [Read More]

Source: observer.com

Sierra Nevada Frogs Lakes Amphibian Chytrid Fungus Species
- After nearly disappearing for good, Sierra Nevada yellow-legged frogs are once again hopping happily around California's alpine lakes. Scientists are celebrating the comeback of the amphibians ( Rana sierrae ) in Yosemite National Park. Though they're still endangered, Sierra Nevada yellow-legged frogs have made a "remarkably successful" recovery from the deadly amphibian chytrid fungus , researchers report this month in the journal Nature Communications . "The lakes are alive again, completely transformed," says study co-author Roland Knapp , a biologist at the University of California, ... [Read More]


Gev Ii Nahal Ein Spindle People Whorls Wheel
- To invent the wheel, did people first have to invent the spindle? The physics of spinning objects may have seeded concepts key to the wheel. Twelve-thousand years ago, people in a coastal village in the Levant used stone weights on their spindles to spin thread faster and more evenly—and, some archeologists are arguing, in the process they pioneered the basic mechanics that eventually made cart wheels possible. Archaeologists found hundreds of perforated, roundish, flattish pebbles in the 12,000-year-old village of Nahal Ein-Gev II, all with neat holes drilled in their centers. Based ... [Read More]


Energy Professor Okeyoshi Photosynthesis Hydrogen Hydrogels Hydrogel
- In an era characterized by rapid technological development and growing environmental concerns, photosynthesis stands as a remarkable example of nature's enduring efficiency and sustainability. This fundamental process, which has powered life on Earth for billions of years, exemplifies a balance that modern science strives to emulate. Consequently, the need for innovative and sustainable solutions has become more pressing than ever, driven by the urgency to combat climate change and reduce our reliance on finite resources. One potential answer lies in harnessing and replicating the natural ... [Read More]

Source: earth.com

Amber Trees Resin West Antarctica South Pole Antarctica
- Amber, the fossilized "blood" of ancient coniferous trees, holds the key to an extraordinary chapter of Earth's history. Imagine stepping into a time machine capable of transporting you back to the era of the dinosaurs. Suddenly, you're immersed in a dense, swampy forest, surrounded by buzzing insects, blooming flowers, ferns, and conifers. Strikingly, this lush habitat is where snowy West Antarctica currently stands. Recently, scientists from top universities in Germany and the UK have unearthed amber in this desolate landscape for the first time. These discoveries reveal that between 83 ... [Read More]

Source: earth.com

Galaxies Galaxy Hole Holes Black Holes Jets
- The active galaxy Centaurus A, with jets emanating from the central black hole. ESO/WFI (Optical); MPIfR/ESO/APEX/A.Weiss et al. (Submillimetre); NASA/CXC/CfA/R.Kraft et al. (X-ray), CC BY Black holes don't have many identifying features. They come in one color (black) and one shape (spherical). The main difference between black holes is mass: some weigh about as much as a star like our Sun, while others weigh around a million times more. Stellar-mass black holes can be found anywhere in a galaxy, but the really big ones (known as supermassive black holes) are found in the cores of galaxies. ... [Read More]

Source: rawstory.com