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“Like Using The Force”: Neuralink Brain Chip Patient Demonstrates “Telepathy” In Livestream

March 21, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

A man fitted with a Neuralink brain implant participated in a livestream on X (formerly known as Twitter) yesterday, using the device to play a game of chess online. In May 2023, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) controversially gave permission for Neuralink to trial the company’s device in humans, following trials in monkeys, […]

Filed Under: News

Disgusting Memories Are Our Most Flavorful, Rich In Scent, Taste, And Touch

March 21, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Stepping in poop, eating rotten food, standing downwind from a garbage truck: we’ve all been there, and it seems the disgusting memories stay with us with good reason. Research has shown how disgusting experiences are remembered with more details about smells, tastes, and touches compared to scary or morally questionable ones.  While unpleasant on the […]

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270-Million-Year-Old “Kermit The Frog” Fossil Found Hiding In Museum Collection

March 21, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

An early amphibian has been named after the greatest living (sort of) frog: Kermit. The species, given the scientific title Kermitops gratus, preceded true frogs and is considered by the scientists who described it as a proto-amphibian important to the development of this important animal order. K. gratus was described from a fossil skull held […]

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What Is The Three-Body Problem?

March 21, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

With the release of Netflix’s 3 Body Problem, based on the acclaimed novel series by Liu Cixin, we have seen many people ask what exactly the three-body problem is. So join us on a trip into physics and math that started at the very beginning of modern science and continues to vex scientists and thinkers […]

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The Toba Supervolcano Potentially Almost Destroyed Humanity – But May Have Also Helped Us Spread

March 21, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

The eruption of the Toba supervolcano is thought to have been the largest in our species’ existence. Inevitably, it changed the climate of the planet for a period. Findings from Ethiopia have now led some anthropologists to think Toba could also be key to one of the great mysteries of human evolution: what caused our […]

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Turning A Human Corpse Into Black Gold: The Greenest Way To Go?

March 21, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Human composting has joined burial and cremation as one of the ways in which we can now dispose of our dead, taking a corpse and turning it into the black gold known as compost. It doesn’t require fuel, returns us to the nutrient cycle, and produces comparatively little in the way of emissions. So, is […]

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China Wants To Fire Astronauts Into Space Using An Electromagnetic Railgun

March 21, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Getting astronauts into space requires an incredible amount of fuel. The Saturn V rocket that launched the Apollo missions into space, for instance, carried 770,000 liters (203,400 gallons) of kerosene fuel, as well as liquid oxygen to allow combustion to take place. Scientists have dreamed of alternative methods of escaping our atmosphere, including concepts such […]

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New Slug-Inspired “Glue” Could Help Stick Brains Back Together After Surgery

March 21, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

If you want to perform surgery on the brain, first you need to get access to it. That means cutting through the protective membranes that surround it and keep all that watery stuff inside where it belongs. But how do you seal the membrane back up again? Scientists think they may have a solution that […]

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This Is The Face Of A “Vampire” From 16th-Century Italy

March 21, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

A 16th-century “vampire” who was buried with a stone brick in her mouth has been resurrected thanks to the work of a facial reconstruction expert. Discovered in a mass grave for plague victims, the long-dead woman may have been suspected of spreading the disease through her bloodthirst, hence the need to bung up her evil […]

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The World’s Rarest Fish Is Making A Comeback, One Ridiculous Baby At A Time

March 21, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Behold, the rarest fish in the world! The red handfish, Thymichthys politus, is known from just two small patches of reef off the coast of Tasmania, thought to be home to around 100 adults. Habitat degradation and climate change have threatened them with extinction, but thanks to a breeding program, they welcomed 21 hatchlings in […]

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Supercomputer Cracks How To Create Material Harder Than Diamond: The “Super Diamond”

March 21, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Diamonds are famous as the hardest substances in existence, a status that has recently met with some challenge. In theory, a variation in the way carbon atoms are arranged should make for something harder still, but so far no one has achieved the pressures required to make a so-called “super diamond”. That could be about […]

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Two Of The Oldest Building Blocks Of The Milky Way Have Just Been Found

March 21, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Galaxies grow by snagging material from intergalactic space as well as just gobbling up other galaxies. We see that happening in the universe and we know that it must have happened in the past with our own galaxy, the Milky Way. Thanks to the Gaia observatory, astronomers have now found two of the oldest mergers […]

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Study Claiming Humans Built A 25,000-Year-Old Pyramid In Indonesia Removed By Journal

March 20, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

The journal Archaeological Prospection has retracted a controversial study which claimed that humans had begun constructing a “pyramid” in Indonesia as far back as 25,000 years ago. In November 2023, the study garnered a lot of media attention (including from IFLScience) for its extraordinary claim that a mountain in Indonesia is actually the world’s oldest […]

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97% Of Countries Won’t Have High Enough Fertility Rates To Sustain Population Size By 2100

March 20, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

The next few decades will see a dramatic drop in the number of children being born in most parts of the world, sparking a “staggering social change” to the planet.  The slump in fertility rates will be so profound that over three-quarters of countries will not be able to sustain their population size by 2050. […]

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Europa’s Ocean Is Covered By An Icy Shell At Least 20 Kilometers Thick

March 20, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

The icy crust that protects Europa’s ocean from the cold of space is at least 20 kilometers (12 miles) thick, an analysis of data from the Galileo mission suggests. The conclusion sheds no light on the question of whether that ocean contains life, but indicates how hard it will be to find a conclusive answer. […]

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How Did Ancient People Gain Anatomical Knowledge?

March 20, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

When we think about anatomy today, various images come to mind. Perhaps you’re taken back to high school, when dissecting pig organs or a frog was your earliest window into the body’s interior. Or perhaps you envision a cold, sterile hospital environment where greying cadavers lay on chrome tables, waiting to be examined by eager […]

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Ancient Brains Discovered In 12,000-Year-Old Humans Are Last “Soft Tissues” Standing

March 20, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Our brains are the consistency of tofu, and gross as that may be to grapple with, it makes finding naturally preserved specimens that date back thousands of years all the more fascinating. Once thought to be incredibly rare, new research challenges the view that brains don’t preserve well, revealing we’ve found a great abundance of […]

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16-Million-Year-Old Skull Reveals Huge New Ancient Amazon River Dolphin

March 20, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Freshwater dolphins in the Amazon and South Asia have captured hearts around the world with their unusual pink skin and status as some of the world’s most threatened mammals. But how did these unusual creatures come to live there? New fossil evidence of a 16.5-million-year-old freshwater river dolphin has helped answer these questions. The skull […]

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7,000-Year-Old Neolithic Boats Were Incredibly Sophisticated And Surprisingly Modern

March 20, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

The Neolithic sailors of the Mediterranean traveled aboard sophisticated vessels that already contained many of the nautical solutions seen on modern boats. The quality and complexity of these prehistoric crafts indicate that several major advances in sailing were achieved during the late Stone Age, paving the way for the spread of the ancient world’s most […]

Filed Under: News

It’s Official! Swearing And Giving The Finger Can Be Good For You

March 20, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

If you want a quick and easy way of learning just how many curse words a person knows, try standing on their foot. Being in pain can do interesting things to our language, but could that volley of obscenities actually be helpful? New research suggests that both rude words and gestures could have a pain-reducing […]

Filed Under: News

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Primary Sidebar

  • One Of The World’s Rarest, Smallest Dolphins May Have Just Been Spotted Off New Zealand’s Coast
  • Gaming May Be Popular, But Can It Damage A Resume?
  • A Common Condition Makes The Surinam Toad Pure Nightmare Fuel For Some People
  • In 1815, The Largest Eruption In Recorded History Plunged Earth Into A Volcanic Winter
  • JWST Finds The Best Evidence Yet Of A Lava World With A Thick Atmosphere
  • Officially Gone: After 40 Years MIA, Australia’s Only Shrew Has Been Declared “Extinct”
  • Horrifically Disfigured Skeleton Known As “The Prince” Was Likely Mauled To Death By A Bear 27,000 Years Ago
  • Manumea, Dodo’s Closest Living Relative, Seen Alive After 5-Year Disappearance
  • “Globsters” Like The St Augustine Monster Have Been Washing Up For Centuries, But What Are They?
  • ADHD Meds Used By Millions Of Kids And Adults Don’t Work The Way We Thought They Did
  • Finding Diamonds Just Got A Whole Lot Easier Thanks To Science
  • Why Didn’t The World’s Largest Meteorite Leave An Impact Crater?
  • Why Do We Cry? Find Out More In Issue 42 Of CURIOUS – Out Now
  • How Many Senses Do Humans Have? It Could Be As Many As 33
  • 6 Astronomical Events To Look Forward To If You Live Long Enough
  • Atmospheric Rivers Have Shifted Toward Earth’s Poles Over The Past 40 Years, Bringing Big Weather Changes
  • Is It Time To Introduce “Category 6” Hurricanes?
  • At The Peak Of The Ice Age, Humans Built Survival Shelters Out Of Mammoth Bones
  • The World’s Longest Continuously Erupting Volcano Has Been Spewing Lava For At Least 2,000 Years
  • Rare Flat-Headed Cat Rediscovered In Thailand Following First Confirmed Sighting In Almost 30 Years
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