- + Archaeology.org - News: 1,800-Year-Old Tombs Excavated in Eastern China—RIZHAO, CHINA— The Miami Herald reports that three tombs have been discovered inside a partially damaged burial mound near the coast of eastern Chi...
- + Archaeology.org - News: Hair Analysis Hints at Beethoven’s Health Status—BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS—According to a Live Science report, analysis of two hair samples attributed to Ludwig van Beethoven by a team of researchers...
- + Archaeology.org - News: New Thoughts on Decline of Roman Town in Egypt—ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN—According to a Newsweek report, Laura Motta of the University of Michigan and her colleagues radiocarbon dated plant remains r...
- + Archaeology.org - News: Endurance Running May Have Helped Prehistoric Hunters—ONTARIO, CANADA— Science Magazine reports that archaeologist Eugène Morin of Trent University, behavioral ecologist Bruce Winterhalder of Universit...
- + Ancient Origins - News: Why the Romans Couldn’t Conquer Ireland (Video)—The Romans' failure to conquer Ireland can be attributed to several factors. During its expansion, Rome primarily focused on territories closer to hom...
- + Ancient Origins - News: 50,000-Year-Old Neanderthal Remains Reveal Oldest Human Viruses—Analysis of Neanderthal skeleton remains from 50,000 years ago found 2 years ago in Russia’s Chagyrskaya cave has revealed fascinating genetic data. ...
- + Ancient Origins - News: Unveiling The Bloodiest Medieval Battles You’ve Never Heard Of (Video)—The annals of medieval warfare are replete with epic clashes often overshadowed by their more celebrated counterparts. Read more Section:&n...
- + Ancient Origins - News: Research Shows Egyptian Pyramids Were Built Along Lost Branch of the Nile—One of the more interesting mysteries about the Giza pyramids, the most famous and visited relics from ancient Egypt, is their location. Read more...
- + Ancient Origins - News: Archaeologists Excavate Medieval Timber Hall at Historic Skipsea Site—A team of archaeologists at the University of York have returned to Skipsea in East Yorkshire to excavate the remains of a medieval timber hall uncove...
- + Ancient Origins - News: The Cursed Search For King Tut's Tomb (Video)—The quest for King Tutankhamun's tomb stands as a pivotal moment in archaeological history, unraveling mysteries of an ancient civilization buried ben...
- + Ancient Origins - News: Victory Stele of Naram-Sin: A Mesopotamian Masterpiece —The Akkadian Empire rose as one of the first great powers in Ancient Mesopotamia, the cradle of civilization. Succeeding the venerable culture of Sume...
- + Ancient Origins - News: The Fateful Meeting of Atahualpa & Pizarro (with Prof. Tom Cummins, Harvard)—I was extraordinarily fortunate to meet the esteemed Dr. Tom Cummins nearly twenty years ago in Cusco, Peru - one of the great world centers, or axis ...
- + Ancient Origins - News: Origins of the British Royal Family Explained (Video)—The Windsors, the reigning royal family of the United Kingdom of Britain, have a rich and complex history rooted in the House of Saxony-Coburg and Got...
- + Science News: The heart plays a hidden role in our mental health—Deciphering the messages that the heart sends to the brain could lead to new anxiety treatments and even unlock the secrets of consciousness. [Categor...
- + Science News: Genetic analyses of the bird flu virus unveil its evolution and potential—The H5N1 outbreak in cattle is giving flashbacks to the COVID pandemic. But this time is different. [Category: Health & Medicine] [Link to media]
- + Science News: How smart was T. rex?—A debate over how to count neurons in dinosaurs is raising questions about how to understand extinct animals’ behavior. [Category: Neuroscience] [Link...
- + BBC - Science: Pacific squid flashes its huge attack 'headlights'—Watch video of the super-fast Dana squid as it flashes its immense light-emitting organs.
- + BBC - Science: Scientists solve mystery of ancient 'tree of life'—The iconic trees evolved on Madagascar 41 million years ago and later spread to other countries.
- + BBC - Science: UK's puffin protection laws at centre of post Brexit row—The endangered puffin - one of Britain’s most iconic seabirds - is at the centre of a battle over the UK’s post Brexit freedoms.
- + BBC - Science: The illicit trade with China fuelling Mozambique's insurgency—Illegal shipments of rosewood continue and some of the profit ends up with jihadists, research says.
- + BBC - Science: Untreated sewage illegally pumped into Windermere—Millions of litres of raw sewage was pumped into one of the UK's most famous lakes after a fault.
- + BBC - Science: Ancient trees reveal last summer hottest in 2,000 years—Clues hidden deep in their trunks shows just how unprecedented last year's heat was.
- + BBC - Science: UK farmers must grow more fruit and veg, warns PM—A new national food security report finds the UK is too reliant on imports of fruit and vegetables.
- + NASA Breaking News: NASA Earns Best Place to Work in Government for 12 Straight Years—2023 image capturing the Sun’s glint in between a cloudy stretch of the south Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Argentina. Credits: NASA ...
- + NASA Breaking News: NASA, European Space Agency Unite to Land Europe’s Rover on Mars—NASA’s Associate Administrator for the Science Mission Directorate Nicky Fox and ESA’s Director of Human and Robotic Exploration Daniel Neuenschwander...
- + NASA Breaking News: How NASA Tracked the Most Intense Solar Storm in Decades—5 Min Read How NASA Tracked the Most Intense Solar Storm in Decades NASA’s Solar ...
- + NASA Breaking News: FY2024 TEAM II NOFO Announcement—2 min read Preparations for Next Moonwalk Simulations Underway (and Underwater) Next Gen STEM’s Teams Engaging Affiliated Mu...
- + NASA Breaking News: NASA Recognizes 5 Early Career Planetary Scientists—3 min read NASA Recognizes 5 Early Career Planetary Scientists NASA has selected five early-career scientists for its 2023 Planetary Sc...
- + NASA Breaking News: Students Across US to Hear from NASA Astronaut Aboard Space Station—An image of NASA astronaut Jeanette Epps using the glovebox BioFabrication Facility in the Columbus European Laboratory during Expedition 71 on April ...
- + NASA Breaking News: Accounts Payable—6 Min Read Accounts Payable ...
- + NASA Breaking News: Expedition 70 Astronauts to Share Mission in NASA Welcome Home Event—May 15, 2024 MEDIA ADVISORY: J24-010 NASA astronauts Jasmin Moghbeli and Loral O’Hara along with JAXA astronuat Satos...
- + ScienceAlert - Latest: Scientists Warn Brain Diseases Are Getting Worse as Climate Change Intensifies—Too hot to handle. [Category: Health]
- + ScienceAlert - Latest: Eerie Personality Changes Sometimes Happen After Organ Transplants—Scientists can't figure it out. [Category: Health, MSFT Content]
- + ScienceAlert - Latest: Alzheimer's Could Be Caused by Brain Cells That Age Too Fast—It's different for men and women. [Category: Health, MSFT Content]
- + ScienceAlert - Latest: Unexpected Connection Between Menthol And Alzheimer's Discovered in Mice—Could inhaling menthol help fight the disease? [Category: Health, MSFT Content]
- + ScienceAlert - Latest: Great Mystery of How Ancient Egyptians Built The Pyramids Finally Appears Solved—A secret hidden for thousands of years. [Category: Humans]
- + ScienceAlert - Latest: Being Small Appears to Be The Secret to Evolutionary Success—This might be key to life beyond Earth? [Category: Nature]
- + ScienceAlert - Latest: Wild Discovery Suggests a Warp Drive Is Possible Within Known Physics—Interstellar space, here we come. [Category: Physics, MSFT Content]
- + ScienceAlert - Latest: Switching Off a Sense of Touch Could Put Some in World of Pain—A mysterious link emerges. [Category: Health, MSFT Content]
- + ScienceAlert - Latest: The Sun's Most Powerful Flare in Seven Years Just Erupted—It's not over yet! [Category: Space, MSFT Content]
- + ScienceAlert - Latest: AI Helps Unravel Mysteries of Viruses in Oceans And Our Guts—Vast, unknown, and rapidly evolving. [Category: Tech]
- + Scientific American - Global: Egypt’s Famed Pyramids Overlooked a Long-Lost Branch of the Nile—A former stretch of the Nile River, now buried beneath the Sahara Desert, may help scientists understand how Egyptians built the pyramids and adapted ...
- + Scientific American - Global: Device Decodes ‘Internal Speech’ in the Brain—Technology that enables researchers to interpret brain signals could one day allow people to talk using only their thoughts
- + Scientific American - Global: Do We Have Enough Bird Flu Vaccines for a Potential Pandemic?—The U.S. government has a stockpile of H5N1 vaccines, and several companies could make millions more if needed. But scaling up the supply could take t...
- + Scientific American - Global: Why Do We Sing? New Analysis of Folk Songs Finds Similarities around the World—Across the globe, singing traditions are vast and varied. Their commonalities may help explain how music evolved
- + Scientific American - Global: Spiderweb Thread Inspires Ultrasmall Microphones—Sound recording could take a cue from arachnid acoustics
- + Scientific American - Global: The Strongest Solar Storm in 20 Years Did Little Damage, but Worse Space Weather Is Coming—Years of careful planning helped safeguard against last weekend’s severe space weather, but we still don’t know how we’d cope with a...
- + Scientific American - Global: Mental Time Travel Helps Birds Remember Food Stashes—Eurasian Jays use something similar to humans’ episodic memory to remember where they stored their food
- + Scientific American - Global: How New Science Fiction Could Help Us Improve AI—We need to tell a new story about AI, and fiction has that power, humanities scholars say
- + Scientific American - Global: Does Quantum Physics Rule Out Free Will?—Everything in the universe may be preordained, according to physics
- + Scientific American - Global: Goose Bumps, Extra Nipples and Leftover Tails Remind Us of What We Once Were—Human’s evolutionary remnants show us the kinds of animals we used to be
- + DailyMail - Science & tech | Mail Online: Giant skull from 40-ton creature is discovered on North Carolina beach... do YOU know what it is?—A large, eerie skull fragment, with two rows of jagged, teeth-like edges, washed onto the shoreline of North Carolina's Outer Banks this week, said th...
- + DailyMail - Science & tech | Mail Online: Scientists have spotted 60 stars that appear to show signs of gigantic alien power plants—A survey of five million solar systems, aided by algorithms, has discovered 60 stars that appear to be partially covered by gigantic alien power plant...
- + DailyMail - Science & tech | Mail Online: Apple's iMessage fails to work for thousands of customers around the world—Apple's iMessage is down for multiple users across the world. Thousands of iPhone users are reporting outage all across social media. [Link to media]
- + DailyMail - Science & tech | Mail Online: I'm a therapist... here's why women are attracted to 'bad boys'—A marriage therapist reported women are drawn to the bad boy because evolution has told them they would be the most viable person to have strong child...
- + DailyMail - Science & tech | Mail Online: How just one horrible moment in your past could cause ALZHEIMER'S, according to new study—People who had stressful experiences in early childhood or midlife were found to have more markers indicative of Alzheimer's disease, according to a n...
- + DailyMail - Science & tech | Mail Online: Police issues warning about Facebook Marketplace after string of robberies in New York, Virginia and other US states ... here is how YOU can stay safe—Police are warning Americans about buying products on Facebook Marketplace. Marketplace crimes have surged across the US in states including Alaska, C...
- + DailyMail - Science & tech | Mail Online: New pinkish eyeless creature is discovered in an underwater cave in China - and it could solve mysteries about evolution—Seven specimens of a brand new species of eyeless cave fish - each with a golden stripe along its back - have been found swimming in China's subterran...
- + DailyMail - Science & tech | Mail Online: California is home to six of the 10 most polluted cities in the US—A new report has revealed the 2024 top 10 most polluted cities in America. The state home to America's 'climate warriors' has six locations on the lis...
- + DailyMail - Science & tech | Mail Online: Police issues warning about Facebook Marketplace after string of robberies across the US... here is how YOU can stay safe—Police are warning Americans about buying products on Facebook Marketplace. Marketplace crimes have surged across the US in states including Alaska, C...
- + DailyMail - Science & tech | Mail Online: Has the mystery of Egypt's pyramids finally been solved? 31 structures including the Giza complex may have been built along a long-lost branch of the river Nile, scientists say—Archaeologists have discovered that the famous structures could have been built along a long-lost branch of the river Nile. [Link to media]
- + Scientific American Content: Global: Egypt’s Famed Pyramids Overlooked a Long-Lost Branch of the Nile—A former stretch of the Nile River, now buried beneath the Sahara Desert, may help scientists understand how Egyptians built the pyramids and adapted ...
- + Scientific American Content: Global: Device Decodes ‘Internal Speech’ in the Brain—Technology that enables researchers to interpret brain signals could one day allow people to talk using only their thoughts
- + Scientific American Content: Global: Do We Have Enough Bird Flu Vaccines for a Potential Pandemic?—The U.S. government has a stockpile of H5N1 vaccines, and several companies could make millions more if needed. But scaling up the supply could take t...
- + Scientific American Content: Global: Why Do We Sing? New Analysis of Folk Songs Finds Similarities around the World—Across the globe, singing traditions are vast and varied. Their commonalities may help explain how music evolved
- + Scientific American Content: Global: Spiderweb Thread Inspires Ultrasmall Microphones—Sound recording could take a cue from arachnid acoustics
- + Scientific American Content: Global: The Strongest Solar Storm in 20 Years Did Little Damage, but Worse Space Weather Is Coming—Years of careful planning helped safeguard against last weekend’s severe space weather, but we still don’t know how we’d cope with a...
- + Scientific American Content: Global: Mental Time Travel Helps Birds Remember Food Stashes—Eurasian Jays use something similar to humans’ episodic memory to remember where they stored their food
- + Scientific American Content: Global: How New Science Fiction Could Help Us Improve AI—We need to tell a new story about AI, and fiction has that power, humanities scholars say
- + Scientific American Content: Global: Does Quantum Physics Rule Out Free Will?—Everything in the universe may be preordained, according to physics
- + Scientific American Content: Global: Goose Bumps, Extra Nipples and Leftover Tails Remind Us of What We Once Were—Human’s evolutionary remnants show us the kinds of animals we used to be
- + New Scientist: Tech firms claim nuclear will solve AI's power needs – they're wrong—Some AI firms think nuclear power can help meet the electricity demand from Silicon Valley’s data centres, but building new nuclear power stations tak...
- + New Scientist: Fragile quantum entanglement may survive chaos of chemical reactions—Strange quantum characteristics of molecules can weather the chaos of chemical reactions, which may benefit quantum technologies or unveil hidden natu...
- + New Scientist: AI noise-cancelling headphones let you focus on just one voice—You can blank out certain types of background noise and focus on just one conversation using prototype noise-cancelling headphones
- + New Scientist: Some brain injury patients would recover if life support weren't ended—After comparing people with brain injuries whose life support was continued with those who had it turned off, scientists calculated that around 40 per...
- + New Scientist: A lost branch of the river Nile flowed past the pyramids of Egypt—Soil core samples show an ancient riverbed under the desert near many Egyptian pyramids, revealing an ancient waterway that dried up thousands of year...
- + New Scientist: Genetic mutation gives cats a 'salty liquorice' coat colour—Researchers have discovered the gene variant responsible for a distinctive colour pattern seen in cats in Finland, named salmiak after a variety of li...
- + New Scientist: Virtual power plants could ease growing strain on US electric grid—Energy-saving networks that link smart devices, solar panels and batteries could regulate power demand and help avoid fossil fuel use at peak times
- + New Scientist: Surgeons can use AI chatbot to tell robots to help with suturing—A virtual assistant for surgeons translates text prompts into commands for a robot, offering a simple way to instruct machines to carry out small task...
- + New Scientist: Einstein was right about the way matter plunges into black holes—For the first time, astronomers have observed the area right at the edge of a black hole where matter stops orbiting and plunges straight in at near l...
- + New Scientist: Cameras inspired by insect eyes could give robots a wider view—Artificial compound eyes made without the need for expensive and precise lenses could provide cheap visual sensors for robots and driverless cars
- + Newswise - SCIENCE: Quantum experts review major techniques for isolating Majoranas—A team of researchers including a member of the Quantum Science Center at ORNL has published a review paper on the state of the field of Majorana rese...
- + Newswise - SCIENCE: Carbon-capture batteries developed to store renewable energy, help climate—.Researchers at the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory are developing battery technologies to fight climate change in two ways, by e...
- + Newswise - SCIENCE: Spooky States & Figure Eights: Stepping Into the Quantum Computing 'Ring'—An interdisciplinary team of scientists from Jefferson Lab, Old Dominion University and the DOE's Oak Ridge National Laboratory have developed a conce...
- + Newswise - SCIENCE: Biohybrid Robotic Hand Will Help Unravel Complex Sensation of Touch—Restoring motor control and sensation from an artificial hand in a natural way remains a scientific "holy grail." Researchers have developed a novel b...