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Deborah Bloomfield

Ghostly White Deep-Sea Shark With Leucism Caught Off Albanian Coast In World First

November 15, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

A rare deep-sea shark has been caught off the coast of Albania exhibiting an unusual skin pigment disorder that has turned it ghostly white. It is the first known case of this species of piggy-faced shark having leucism. The angular roughshark (Oxynotus centrina) is an odd sea beastie. They look like someone smashed the idea […]

Filed Under: News

Why Do Some People Grind Their Teeth In Their Sleep?

November 15, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

If you’ve ever shared a bed with someone who grinds their teeth in their sleep, you’ll be familiar with the unmistakable and unsettling sound of enamel on enamel. Alternatively, perhaps you’ve woken up with an aching jaw, only to be told by your partner that it was your grating dentition disturbing the peace in the […]

Filed Under: News

Death Of Baby Red Panda At Edinburgh Zoo Prompts Calls For Tougher Fireworks Restrictions

November 15, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

The recent death of a red panda kit at Edinburgh Zoo has prompted fresh calls for tighter restrictions on fireworks in the UK, after veterinary experts concluded that it was likely her death was due to stress caused by fireworks. Three-month-old kit Roxie had recently lost her mum, Ginger, but appeared to be doing well. […]

Filed Under: News

Imprints Of Entire 280-Million-Year-Old Ecosystem Found In Alps Predate The Dinosaurs

November 15, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

The fossilized remains of an entire prehistoric ecosystem, complete with footprints of extinct animals, have been discovered by accident in the Italian Alps. Dating to 280 million years ago, the creatures that created these vivid impressions were alive during the Permian period, a time long before dinosaurs emerged in the Triassic period. The stunning find […]

Filed Under: News

15 Species That Glow Under UV Light Identified, And You Could Help Scientists Find More

November 15, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Some animals have a curious way of emitting light that we humans can see when we shine a blacklight on them, a pastime that community science website Finding Fluorescence is no stranger to. They recently reported that they’d identified 15 new species that exhibit biofluorescence, providing new insights into its possible ecological functions. When light […]

Filed Under: News

How Do Snails Have Sex?

November 15, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Here at IFLScience, we like to answer all manner of questions about the world around us. Sometimes that means tackling the big stuff, and other times it means violating the purity of our internet history to find out how snails have sex. You’re welcome. Finding a partner The vast majority of land snails are hermaphroditic, […]

Filed Under: News

Couple Of Supermassive Black Holes Caught Sharing A Meal For The First Time

November 15, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Galaxy 2MASX J21240027+340911 has been known to have an active nucleus for a decade or so. At its core, a supermassive black hole was feeding on some interstellar material, gas or dust, that got too close. Recently, astronomers have discovered a repeating signal from this object, suggesting more complexity: It is not one but two […]

Filed Under: News

Global Measles Cases Surge By 20 Percent In A Single Year, WHO Reports

November 15, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Although it may sound like hyperbole, measles cases really have surged across the world in the last few years. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), around 10.3 million cases were reported in 2023, which represents a 20 percent increase since 2022. The organization has said that this rapid and widespread rise is due to […]

Filed Under: News

Uranus Is Windy, Saber-Toothed Baby, And Is Animal Testing Necessary?

November 15, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

This week on Break It Down: turns out the one time we saw Uranus it was having an uncharacteristically windy moment, new meanings behind the Amazon’s most incredible rock art, the world’s largest coral found lurking off the Solomon Islands, a ~35,000-year-old saber-toothed baby comes complete with fur, whiskers, and toe beans, and amber found […]

Filed Under: News

First Known Double Gravitational Lens Is A Cosmic Telescope Into The Distant Universe

November 15, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

A major realization of Einstein’s general relativity is the fact that massive objects warp space-time in a way that is similar to a lens, magnifying and shifting the light of background objects. This was a crucial test for relativity just four years after it was proposed, and it has been seen in countless examples. Today, […]

Filed Under: News

Aztec Death Whistles Have A Terrifying Effect On Listeners’ Brains

November 15, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

With a love of human sacrifice, warfare, and towers made out of human skulls, the ancient Aztecs certainly knew how to have fun. Just to add to the excitement, the pre-Columbian empire-builders may have conducted some of their favorite activities to the sound of skull-shaped whistles, which produced a horrifying “death scream” that sent chills […]

Filed Under: News

World First 35,000-Year-Old Saber-Toothed Kitten Found Mummified In Permafrost

November 15, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

For the first time, scientists have recovered the mummified, frozen body of a juvenile saber-toothed cat from the Arctic permafrost in Siberia. Despite being over 35,000 years old, the sub-zero temperatures have kept the specimen in a remarkable state of preservation, with its fur, head, torso, and limbs still intact. The frozen carcass of the […]

Filed Under: News

If The Sun’s Gravity Is So Strong, How Come All The Planets Are Moving Away From It?

November 15, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

The movements of the planets in the Solar System are pretty difficult to get your head around, even before we get started on the dark matter which seems to keep galaxies together and rotating with ridiculous speed. One common question people seem to have about the planets’ orbits is why the planets are drifting away […]

Filed Under: News

The LMC Just Made A Close Approach To Our Galaxy, And Hubble Saw The Aftermath

November 15, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

The Hubble Space Telescope has taken a look at the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), a nearby dwarf galaxy, being stripped of its gas by the far more massive Milky Way. The LMC is a dwarf galaxy, relatively close to the Earth (in galactic terms) at around 160,000 light years away. That may sound distant, but […]

Filed Under: News

Is Animal Testing Necessary – And Where Are We On Alternatives?

November 15, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Statistically speaking, you – yes, you, reading this right now – are probably not some kind of militant vegan. Chances are pretty much equally low, however, that you’re a complete psychopath – which means that you’ll probably get a bit uncomfortable if we inform you of how every year, thousands of mice, rats, cats, dogs, monkeys, and […]

Filed Under: News

New Tarantula Species From Cuba Is The Largest Of Its Kind – With The Hairiest Legs

November 15, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Islands play a distinct role in the evolution of the animal species that inhabit them, providing different ecological niches and cutting off populations from other individuals. These conditions give rise to a whole host of adaptations, some which are more unusual than others – and some of which lead to especially hairy legs.  The Viñales […]

Filed Under: News

Hypnic Jerks: Why Do You Jolt Awake Just As You’re Falling Asleep?

November 14, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

One minute you’re gently drifting off to sleep, and then the next, you’re suddenly jolted awake. No, you’ve not been betrayed by your cat leaping onto the bed or a particularly loud snore from your partner, but your own body. This is known as a hypnic jerk – but what exactly is it and why […]

Filed Under: News

The World’s First AI-Generated Game Is Playable By Anyone Online, And It Is Surreal

November 14, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

In news your 8-year-old kid probably knew about weeks ago somehow, a new Minecraft rip-off is available to play online. In a surprising twist on the genre, every frame in this one is entirely generated by artificial intelligence (AI). The game, Oasis, lets players explore a 3D world filled with square blocks, mine resources, and […]

Filed Under: News

What’s The Biggest Animal Gathering In The World?

November 14, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Across the globe great animal gatherings are taking place that make the footfall at a Taylor Swift concert look like a kid’s party. The motivations driving these mass gatherings can be the need to flee, feed, or… reproduce, and while the gatherings can be crucial for the survival of a species, there are some examples […]

Filed Under: News

The World’s Rarest Goose Only Lives Wild In One Part Of The US

November 14, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

The nēnē, or Hawaiian goose, is the world’s rarest goose, and can only be found living in the wild in one part of the planet: the Hawaiian Islands. There, the species was once on the brink of extinction – but it’s been making one hell of a comeback. The rarest goose Perhaps best known as […]

Filed Under: News

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Primary Sidebar

  • Titan Breaks A Key Chemistry Rule: What That Means For Alien Life
  • Scientists Studied “Chicago Rat Hole” – They Have Bad News, The South Atlantic’s Magnetic Field Weak Spot Is Growing, And Much More This Week
  • Could This Be The Real Reason Humans Survived And Neanderthals Died Out?
  • Newly Discovered Snail Species Named After Studio Ghibli Co-Founder Is A Hairy Beauty
  • 2025 SC79 Is The Second-Fastest Asteroid Ever Found – And Only The Second Within Venus’ Orbit
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  • New Nightmare Fuel Unlocked: Watch The First Known Capture Of A Shrew By A False Widow Spider
  • Peculiar Glow In The Milky Way Might Be Dark Matter Signature
  • “I Was Scared To Death”: Missouri’s Great Cobra Scare Of 1953 Was Eventually Solved After 35 Years
  • Two Spacecraft To Fly Through Comet 3I/ATLAS’s Ion Tail – Will They Be Able To Catch Something?
  • Pioneering Heavy Water Detection Suggests Earth’s Water Might Be Older Than The Sun
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