Science News


Ultrasound Team Microbubbles Stingraybot Muscles Life Sciences
- 'Stingraybot' uses microbubble muscles controlled by ultrasound While it might sound like a weapon of oceanic destruction in the hands of Aquaman's arch enemies, the new "stingraybot" from a team at ETH Zurich (the Federal Institute of Technology ... [Read More]

Source: newatlas.com

Alexandria Tip Egypt Mohammed Ali Century Cathedral
- The 12 best things to do in Alexandria, Egypt - Lonely Planet . Alexander the Great spotted the potential of its deep harbor and founded his Egyptian capital here, creating a bridge between the land of the pharaohs and ancient Greece. In the end, ... [Read More]


Starliner Crew Nasa Space Board Spacecraft
- Reading time 3 minutes A NASA safety panel has criticized space agency officials for how they handled the busted Starliner mission that left two astronauts stranded on board the International Space Station (ISS). A new report highlights a wave of ... [Read More]

Source: gizmodo.com

Cells Implantation Embryo Vesicles Signals Ahr
- Follow Earth on Google An embryo doesn't just drift into place and hope for the best. Almost immediately, it starts talking to the uterus. In a new study from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem (HUJI), scientists watched this conversation unfold in ... [Read More]

Source: earth.com

Fomalhaut Dust Star System Collisions Objects
- Follow Earth on Google Young star systems, like nearby Fomalhaut, are messy places. Rocks slam together and icy bodies shatter. Dust fills the space where solid objects once moved quietly along. This chaos is how planets are built, but it usually plays out far from view and over very long stretches of time. That is why Fomalhaut has scientists buzzing. In just 20 years, astronomers have seen the dusty aftermath of two massive space collisions around this star. These events are rare, according to long-standing models. Seeing two impacts so close together raises a simple question: Are we very ... [Read More]

Source: earth.com

Coins Gold Stater Archaeology Department Archaeologists Celts
- Until around the middle of the third century BC, Celtic people mostly carried out their everyday transactions using a barter or payment-in-kind system. They exchanged items like grains, textiles, metalware, salt, small properties, gold rings, iron ... [Read More]


Species New Species Scientists Wiens Rate Plants
- According to a team of researchers from the University of Arizona, new species are being discovered at a faster rate than ever before, one that far exceeds extinction University of Arizona About 300 years ago, Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus set ... [Read More]


- Introduction: Understanding the MCP Landscape and Quantum Threat Okay, so picture this: your ai assistant suddenly starts spouting nonsense, or worse, starts leaking sensitive data. Sounds like a nightmare, right? That's kinda what we're trying to ... [Read More]


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]


Stones Water Vishaps Monuments Study Dragon
- These giant monuments are 1,000 years older than Stonehenge and share an interesting connection with water. Scattered across Armenia's highest mountains are giant carved stones that seem wildly out of place. Some stand taller than a two-storey building, yet none of these mysterious vishaps or dragon stones sit near known archaeological sites such as ancient villages.  Archaeologists have struggled to explain why, 6,000 years ago, people dragged these giant monuments into frozen, harsh, high-altitude terrain—often above 2,700 meters—where snow limits human activity to just a ... [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 ... [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 air, fluorescent lights, and almost nowhere to move (not to even mention the procedures themselves). This is the reality for laboratory mice in biomedical research . Unsurprisingly, their mind suffers terribly. Researchers thought anxiety was a permanent problem in this context. But when postdoctoral researcher Matthew Zipple took a cage of these ... [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 sanitation. But if you zoom in on their nasty business, a different reality squirms into view. Quite literally. Researchers recently did exactly that. They zoomed in on Roman poop and found a trio of intestinal miseries: roundworm, whipworm, and Giardia duodenalis . At the Roman fort of Vindolanda , just south of Hadrian's Wall, the Romans fought ... [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 on its social media. "Over the last several weeks, our animal care and medical teams have worked around the clock to closely monitor her declining health and as her condition worsened, the decision was made to prioritize her comfort and welfare." The post stated Katina was known for a habit of sticking her tongue out and enjoyed the "speed swim" ... [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 Argentina's Monte León National Park suggests this penguin-heavy diet is doing something else, too. It's making one of the most famously solitary big cats tolerate each other way more than expected, at least near the colony. This all comes with a backstory. Ranchers pushed pumas out of parts of Patagonia in the 20th century. Monte León ... [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 level since 1950. Warmer winters, which are linked to climate change, are thought to be responsible for the population spike, which is known as a "bloom". The charity's findings are backed up by official figures which show that more than 1,200 tonnes of octopus was caught by fishermen in UK waters in the summer of 2025. It's a dramatic increase on ... [Read More]

Source: bbc.com