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Deborah Bloomfield

Primate Clitorises Come In More Shapes And Sizes Than We Ever Imagined

July 8, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

Step right up, as we take you on a voyage of discovery into the weird and wonderful world of the primate clitoris. Penises are so last year – it’s about time we turned our attention to the female of the species. That’s an opinion shared by the scientists behind new research that set out to […]

Filed Under: News

The Mystery Of Why Antarctica’s Blood Falls Oozes Red Has Been Revealed

July 8, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

When British geographer Thomas Griffith Taylor made his daring venture through East Antarctica in 1911, his expedition stumbled across a terrifying sight: the edge of a glacier appearing to ooze a stream of blood. After a century of speculation, the cause of the Blood Falls has been pinpointed.  Scientists in the US used powerful transmission […]

Filed Under: News

Massive Heat-Emitting Mass Discovered Buried Under The Surface Of The Moon

July 8, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

A large mass of granite that has been slowly releasing heat has been discovered buried underneath a crater on the Moon. This is not science fiction, it’s ancient volcanism. The Moon used to have lava fields and eruptions, but astronomers had never actually found a more traditional Earth-like volcano – until they looked at what […]

Filed Under: News

Internet Figures Out Which Muppets Are Predators And Which Are Prey Based On Their Eyes

July 7, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

A number of memes have caught our predator eyes lately, and got us thinking about the predator-prey relationship of various puppets and toys. “The Furby’s eyes are on the front of the head,” one iconic but now deleted tweet explains, “which implies that it’s a predator.” Another makes a similar observation, but about the Cookie […]

Filed Under: News

Tiny Extinct Penguin Was One Of The Smallest To Ever Walk The Earth

July 7, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

New Zealand is currently home to three of the world’s penguin species, including the smallest living penguin: the little penguin. A recent discovery of two fossilized skulls has found a potentially even smaller penguin species that might have been the ancestor to those living today. Meet Eudyptula wilsonae. The new fossil specimens were found in […]

Filed Under: News

Explosions And Implosions Generate Heat, But Could Either Vaporize A Human?

July 7, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

Both explosions and implosions create heat to some degree, and when things get really hot vaporization can occur, but only in the right circumstances. The phenomenon sees liquids transition to a gaseous state as enough energy is released to break the intermolecular forces keeping them together. Vaporization is a dramatic phase change that requires a […]

Filed Under: News

How Do Black Lights Make Things Glow?

July 7, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

The ability to glow is a mesmerizing trait – but some things can only do so under certain circumstances, for example, having a black light shone on them. So what is a black light, and how do they work? How do black lights work?  Black lights emit ultraviolet (UV) light, which has a shorter wavelength […]

Filed Under: News

The True Nature Of Dark Matter Might Be Found With Gravitational Waves

July 7, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

Dark matter is thought to make up 85 percent of all matter in the universe but so far we have no direct evidence it exists. There are plenty of good reasons to believe that there is indeed a substance that doesn’t interact with light only gravity, but until its properties are measured we need to […]

Filed Under: News

An Internal Ecological Crisis Is Unfolding Inside Our Guts

July 7, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

Global health is in a dramatic state of flux. As the world becomes ever-more globalized, we’re becoming buried by a tsunami of preventable diseases: obesity, cardiovascular disease, countless cancers, and allergies, to name but a few. While we might imagine that humans are the main character behind this change, the real star of the show […]

Filed Under: News

Spider Mites Mate Faster By Helping Females Out Of Their Dead Skin Suits

July 7, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

In the competitive and weird world of spider mite mating, there’s no time to waste as evidenced by the discovery that males will crack open the juvenile skin suits of developing females to speed things along. Not content to wait for the females to shed dead skin themselves, the males have evolved to spot the […]

Filed Under: News

A Deadly Neurotoxin Is Making Sea Lions Aggressive Towards People In California

July 7, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

Under normal circumstances, seeing a sea lion on the beaches of California would be a pleasant experience. These animals are social and gregarious and are the most abundant species of pinnipeds on this coast. However, beach goers are now being warned to keep an eye out for unusual behavior among these marine mammals as a […]

Filed Under: News

What’s Actually Beneath All The Polar Ice?

July 7, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

If you burrow deep enough, what lies beneath the polar ice sheets? Would you find mud, rock, water, more ice, an ancient mosiac, or just synthetic laminate flooring? Well, it depends on whether you’re hoping to delve under the North Pole or the South.  The Arctic in the Northern Hemisphere is simply an ice sheet […]

Filed Under: News

Earth’s Inner Core Has A Surprisingly Complex Texture

July 7, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

Seismic waves passing through the Earth’s solid inner core reveal it is textured, rather than homogenous. Little is known about the nature of these variations at this stage – simply discovering they exist is quite an achievement when you’re dealing with something shielded from our eyes by thousands of kilometers of rock. Most of the […]

Filed Under: News

Ancient Egyptians Measured The First Hour, And Changed How We Related To Time

July 7, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

Humanity’s relationship with telling time began before the first written word, making it a challenge today to investigate the origin of many timekeeping units. However, some time measurement units that derive from astronomical phenomena are quite easy to explain and likely were independently observed in many different cultures across the world. For example, measuring how […]

Filed Under: News

The Year Without Summer: In 1816 A Volcano Erupted That Blotted Out The Sun

July 7, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

In 1815, the volcano Mount Tambora in Indonesia exploded in what was probably the largest eruption of the last 1,500 years. The event caused millions of tons of ash, dust, and sulfur dioxide to be released into the atmosphere, casting a temporary chill across the planet as it blocked out the sunlight for months on […]

Filed Under: News

Strange Stone Age Pits Found In England Have Archaeologists Scratching Their Heads

July 7, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

Archaeologists have discovered 25 large pits dotted around the English countryside in what has become a nationally important prehistoric find.  The pits were discovered in Linmere, Bedfordshire, during two digs that took place in 2019 and 2021, respectively. According to radiocarbon dating, these odd features were created between 8,500 and 7,700 years ago – squarely […]

Filed Under: News

TWIS: Philosopher Wins 25-Year Bet On Consciousness Against A Neuroscientist, World’s Hottest Day Record Broken Twice In 3 Days, And Much More This Week

July 7, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

This week we spoke exclusively to the astronomers behind a curious phosphene detection deep in Venus’s atmosphere, archaeologists have uncovered a “passage to the underworld” beneath a church in Mexico, scientists are baffled by a 407-milllion-year-old fossilized plant that doesn’t follow the Fibonacci sequence, and we investigate how the very real Antikythera mechanism inspired Indiana […]

Filed Under: News

IFLScience The Big Questions: Why Is Space Junk Such A Big Deal?

July 7, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

Space junk is a problem and it’s only set to get worse. In 2018, there were over 2,000 satellites in orbit. Now, thanks to mega-constellations like Starlink, there are 9,000 satellites, and by the end of the decade, this number is expected to reach 60,000. A crowded space environment runs the risk of Kessler Syndrome, […]

Filed Under: News

Why Are So Many Climate Records Breaking All At Once?

July 7, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

In the past few weeks, climate records have shattered across the globe. July 4 was the hottest global average day on record, breaking the new record set the previous day. Average sea surface temperatures have been the highest ever recorded and Antarctic sea ice extent the lowest on record. Also on July 4, the World […]

Filed Under: News

Exclusive: More Phosphine Has Been Detected Even Deeper In Venus’s Atmosphere

July 7, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

Three years ago astronomers announced they had found the molecule phosphine in the clouds of Venus. On Earth, phosphine is linked to biological activity, aka life. Astronomers were not expecting it and its presence coudn’t be explained. What followed was a flurry of excitement and then debate on whether the molecule had really been found. […]

Filed Under: News

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Primary Sidebar

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