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ScienceDaily: Fossils & Ruins News |
Newly described horned dinosaur from New Mexico was the earliest of its kind Posted: 11 May 2021 01:07 PM PDT With a frilled head and beaked face, Menefeeceratops sealeyi lived 82 million years ago, predating its relative, Triceratops. |
Posted: 11 May 2021 09:38 AM PDT Scientists describe a fossil skeleton of an ancient shark, which is assigned to a new, previously unknown genus and species. |
The Aqueduct of Constantinople: Managing the longest water channel of the ancient world Posted: 11 May 2021 05:11 AM PDT Aqueducts are very impressive examples of the art of construction in the Roman Empire. Even today, they still provide us with new insights into aesthetic, practical, and technical aspects of construction and use. Scientists investigated the longest aqueduct of the time, the 426-kilometer-long Aqueduct of Valens supplying Constantinople, and revealed new insights into how this structure was maintained back in time. |
Team 'reads minds' to understand human tool use Posted: 10 May 2021 10:32 AM PDT Researchers have made an astonishing new discovery about how our brains control our hands. The team used MRI data to study which parts of the brain are used when we handle tools. The findings could help shed light on the regions of the brain that evolved in humans and set us apart from primates, and could pave the way for the development of next-generation prosthetic limbs that tap into the brain's control center. |
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