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Wreck of historic royal ship discovered off the English coast Posted: 09 Jun 2022 04:50 PM PDT A royal shipwreck has been discovered off the English coast. The wreck is of one of the most famous ships of the 17th century -- The Gloucester -- which sank 340 years ago while carrying the future King of England, James Stuart. Since running aground on a sandbank on May 6, 1682, the wreck has lain half-buried on the seabed, its exact whereabouts unknown. It has now been found. |
Growing 'mortality gap' detected between Democratic and Republican counties Posted: 09 Jun 2022 02:37 PM PDT Researchers examined mortality rates and federal and state election data for all counties in the U.S. from 2001 to 2019. The team found what they call a 'mortality gap' -- a widening difference between age-adjusted death rates in counties that had voted for a Democrat or a Republican in previous presidential and governor elections. |
Scientists discover new molecule that kills hard-to-treat cancers Posted: 09 Jun 2022 02:36 PM PDT A new molecule synthesized by a University of Texas at Dallas researcher kills a broad spectrum of hard-to-treat cancers, including triple-negative breast cancer, by exploiting a weakness in cells not previously targeted by other drugs. |
Learning and remembering movement Posted: 09 Jun 2022 02:36 PM PDT Researchers examining the brain at a single-neuron level found that computation happens not just in the interaction between neurons, but within each individual neuron. Each of these cells, it turns out, is not a simple switch, but a complicated calculating machine. This discovery promises changes not only to our understanding of how the brain works, but better understanding of conditions ranging from Parkinson's disease to autism. The findings are also expected to advance machine learning, offering inspiration for new architectures. |
New research gives insights into how organelles divide in cells Posted: 09 Jun 2022 01:03 PM PDT A pioneering study has shed new light on how subcellular organelles divide and multiply. |
Yellowstone's history of hydrothermal explosions over the past 14,000 years Posted: 09 Jun 2022 12:58 PM PDT While much of public attention on Yellowstone focuses on its potential to produce large supereruptions, the hazards that are much more likely to occur are smaller, violent hydrothermal explosions. Hydrothermal explosions occur when near-boiling water suddenly flashes into steam, releasing large amounts of energy. The energy release fractures the rock downward, often leaving behind a crater. The same sources that can produce these explosions are what give Yellowstone its well-known hot springs, geysers, and fumaroles. |
How 'viral dark matter' may help mitigate climate change Posted: 09 Jun 2022 12:58 PM PDT A deep dive into the 5,500 marine RNA virus species scientists recently identified has found that several may help drive carbon absorbed from the atmosphere to permanent storage on the ocean floor. |
As the ocean heats up hungrier predators take control Posted: 09 Jun 2022 12:58 PM PDT A hotter ocean is a hungrier ocean -- at least as far as fish predators are concerned. Scientists have discovered predator impacts in the Atlantic and Pacific peak at higher temperatures. The effects cascade down to transform other life in the ocean, potentially disrupting balances that have existed for millennia. |
Superworms capable of munching through plastic waste Posted: 09 Jun 2022 12:58 PM PDT Researchers have found a species of worm with an appetite for polystyrene could be the key to plastic recycling on a mass scale. |
Bioarchaeological evidence of very early Islamic burials in the Levant Posted: 09 Jun 2022 12:57 PM PDT A new study combining archaeological, historical and bioarchaeological data provides new insights into the early Islamic period in modern-day Syria. The research team was planning to focus on a much older time period but came across what they believe to be remains of early Muslims in the Syrian countryside. |
Why people don't view the world the same way others do Posted: 09 Jun 2022 10:20 AM PDT Why are we so sure that the way we see people, situations and politics is accurate, and the way other people see them is foolishly wrong? The answer, according to new research lies in a region of the brain he calls the 'gestalt cortex,' which helps people make sense of information that is ambiguous or incomplete -- and dismiss alternative interpretations. |
New study paves way to better understand and treat those suffering from long COVID Posted: 09 Jun 2022 10:20 AM PDT A new study links SARS-CoV-2 specific T cells to lung function and those who suffer from long-term COVID symptoms (PASC). |
Ground-breaking number of brown dwarfs discovered Posted: 09 Jun 2022 10:19 AM PDT Brown dwarfs, mysterious objects that straddle the line between stars and planets, are essential to our understanding of both stellar and planetary populations. However, only 40 brown dwarfs could be imaged around stars in almost three decades of searches. An international team has directly imaged a remarkable four new brown dwarfs thanks to a new innovative search method. |
Heavy drinkers four times more likely to smoke in England, study finds Posted: 09 Jun 2022 10:19 AM PDT Those who are among the heaviest drinkers in England are four times more likely to smoke than the general population and should be prioritized by the government in its plans to achieve 'smoke-free' status by 2030, experts say. |
Scientists craft living human skin for robots Posted: 09 Jun 2022 10:19 AM PDT From action heroes to villainous assassins, biohybrid robots made of both living and artificial materials have been at the center of many sci-fi fantasies, inspiring today's robotic innovations. It's still a long way until human-like robots walk among us in our daily lives, but scientists are bringing us one step closer by crafting living human skin on robots. The new method not only gave a robotic finger skin-like texture, but also water-repellent and self-healing functions. |
One-third of Greenlanders are at genetic risk for high cholesterol and cardiovascular disease Posted: 09 Jun 2022 10:19 AM PDT A genetic variant that is present in nearly 30% of Greenlanders is linked to high cholesterol and an increased risk of cardiovascular disease, according to a new study. |
Chromatin originated in ancient microbes one to two billion years ago Posted: 09 Jun 2022 10:19 AM PDT Researchers now reveal that nature's storage solution first evolved in ancient microbes living on Earth between one and two billion years ago. |
Pre-historic Wallacea: A melting pot of human genetic ancestries Posted: 09 Jun 2022 10:19 AM PDT The Wallacean islands of present-day Eastern Indonesia have a long history of occupation by modern humans. Notably, the maritime expansion of Austronesian speakers into Wallacea left archaeological traces of a Neolithic lifestyle and a genetic imprint still detectable in Eastern Indonesians today. To gain further insights into Wallacea's settlement history, scientists sequenced and analyzed sixteen ancient genomes from different islands of Wallacea, finding evidence for repeated genetic admixtures starting at least 3,000 years ago. |
'Fantastic giant tortoise,' believed extinct, confirmed alive in the Galápagos Posted: 09 Jun 2022 10:19 AM PDT A tortoise from a Galápagos species long believed extinct has been found alive. Fernanda, named after her Fernandina Island home, is the first of her species identified in more than a century. Geneticist successfully extracted DNA from a specimen collected from the same island more than a century ago and confirmed that Fernanda and the museum specimen are members of the same species and genetically distinct from all other Galápagos tortoises. |
Photosynthesis-inspired process makes commodity chemicals Posted: 09 Jun 2022 10:19 AM PDT A team used light and water to convert acetylene into ethylene, a widely used, highly valuable chemical that is a key ingredient in plastics. While this conversion typically requires high temperatures and pressures, flammable hydrogen and expensive metals to drive the reaction, a photosynthesis-like process is much less expensive and less energy intensive. Not only is the new process environmentally friendly, it also works incredibly well -- successfully converting nearly 100% of acetylene into ethylene with 99% selectivity. |
Posted: 09 Jun 2022 10:19 AM PDT The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency's Hayabusa2 mission returned uncontaminated primitive asteroid samples to Earth. A comprehensive analysis of 16 particles from the asteroid Ryugu revealed many insights into the processes that operated before, during and after the formation of the solar system, with some still shaping the surface of the present-day asteroid. Elemental and isotopic data revealed that Ryugu contains the most primitive pre-solar nebular (an ancient disk of gas and dust surrounding what would become the Sun) material yet identified and that some organic materials may have been inherited from before the solar system formed. |
Genetic study offers new insights into DCIS biology, progression Posted: 09 Jun 2022 10:19 AM PDT A new genetic study discovered that not all breast cancers that develop after DCIS arise from the original DCIS lesion. Roughly 1 in 5 are new cancers, genetically unrelated to the original DCIS. |
Recurring brain tumors shaped by genetic evolution and microenvironment Posted: 09 Jun 2022 10:18 AM PDT Researchers have discovered that infiltrating gliomas, a common brain and spinal cord tumor, are shaped by their genetic evolution and microenvironment, a finding that could lead to more targeted treatments. |
Artificial intelligence reveals a never-before described 3D structure in rotavirus spike protein Posted: 09 Jun 2022 10:18 AM PDT The tip of rotavirus B spike protein is not only totally different from the corresponding structure in rotavirus A and C, but also no other protein before had been reported to have this structure. |
Antarctic glaciers losing ice at fastest rate for 5,500 years Posted: 09 Jun 2022 10:18 AM PDT New evidence suggests that two major glaciers in the West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) are losing ice at the fastest rate for at least 5,500 years. |
New insights into how cyanobacteria regulate zinc uptake in the open ocean Posted: 09 Jun 2022 10:18 AM PDT An interdisciplinary research team has identified a remarkably efficient regulatory network that controls zinc accumulation in the open ocean cyanobacterium Synechococcus. |
Researchers discover new genetic eye disease Posted: 09 Jun 2022 10:18 AM PDT Researchers have identified a new disease that affects the macula, a small part of the light-sensing retina needed for sharp, central vision. |
Scientists determine structure of key factor in RNA quality control Posted: 09 Jun 2022 10:18 AM PDT In biology, getting rid of stuff can be just as important as making it. A buildup of cells, proteins, or other molecules that are no longer needed can cause problems, so living things have evolved several ways to clean house. |
Development of a user-friendly, hot-melt, wound-healing adhesive Posted: 09 Jun 2022 07:18 AM PDT Scientist have developed a hot-melt tissue adhesive (i.e., medical glue that is applied in a molten state) capable of healing operative wounds. This adhesive has excellent medical material properties in terms of its ease of use, adhesiveness to tissues, biocompatibility and ability to prevent postoperative complications. |
Posted: 09 Jun 2022 07:01 AM PDT The Colorado River is in an extremely severe drought and has been for the last 22 years. To better understand this drought, researchers looked at the drought history within the Colorado River Basin. Previous studies have gone back 1,200 years, but this paper goes back 2,000 years. The findings, using paleo hydrology, show that there was an even more severe drought in the Colorado River Basin in the second century. |
New research shows climate change impacts on whale habitat use in the warming Gulf of Maine Posted: 09 Jun 2022 07:00 AM PDT New research finds climate change is having an impact on how large whale species, including the critically endangered North Atlantic right whale, use habitats in the warming Gulf of Maine, showing that right whales' use of Cape Cod Bay has shifted significantly over the last 20 years. |
New species of alga named for poet Amanda Gorman Posted: 09 Jun 2022 05:45 AM PDT Researchers discovered a new species of alga in central New York and named it Gormaniella terricola, with the genus named after poet Amanda Gorman. The new species is quite interesting in that its chloroplast genome is highly repetitive and contains quite a bit of DNA from fungi and bacteria, meaning it was likely invaded multiple times from other species through a process called horizontal transfer. |
Europe's largest land predator unearthed on the Isle of Wight Posted: 09 Jun 2022 05:22 AM PDT Palaeontologists have identified the remains of one of Europe's largest ever land-based hunters: a dinosaur that measured over 10m long and lived around 125 million years ago. |
Posted: 09 Jun 2022 05:22 AM PDT A new study shows that unvaccinated children mount a rapid immune response to SARS-CoV-2 which may contribute to less severe symptoms, but which may also limit the development of an immune 'memory' response to ward off future infections. |
Paving the way for faster computers, longer-lasting batteries Posted: 09 Jun 2022 05:22 AM PDT Scientists have finally cracked a problem that's frustrated chemists and physicists for years, potentially leading to a new age of powerful, efficient, and environmentally friendly technologies. |
Phage therapy for mycobacterium infections: More than 50% success rate Posted: 09 Jun 2022 05:22 AM PDT The number of reported cases using viruses to treat deadly Mycobacterium infections just went up by a factor of five. Researchers report 20 new case studies on the use of the experimental treatment, showing the therapy's success in more than half of the patients. |
Researchers reveal add-on benefits of natural defenses against sea-level rise Posted: 09 Jun 2022 05:22 AM PDT Researchers modeled how investing in environmental conservation and protection can help San Mateo County adapt to rising seas. The findings provide incentives for policymakers to prioritize nature-based approaches when planning for sea-level rise. |
Health: Higher fish consumption may be associated with increased melanoma risk Posted: 09 Jun 2022 05:20 AM PDT Eating higher levels of fish, including tuna and non-fried fish, appears to be associated with a greater risk of malignant melanoma, suggests a large study of US adults. |
Posted: 08 Jun 2022 01:14 PM PDT An analysis of data from university COVID-19 screening programs reveals omicron arrived earlier and took over more quickly than experts predicted. Data from university screening programs helped researchers alert hospitals about an imminent surge of omicron cases. The findings suggest university screening programs could be a valuable tool for surveillance of future infectious diseases. |
Study identifies receptor that could alleviate need for chemo, radiation pre-T cell therapy Posted: 08 Jun 2022 01:14 PM PDT A research team has shown that a synthetic IL-9 receptor allows cancer-fighting T cells to do their work without the need for chemotherapy or radiation. |
Social isolation is directly associated with later dementia Posted: 08 Jun 2022 01:14 PM PDT Interdisciplinary study shows changes to brain structures associated with memory and cognitive function are directly linked to social isolation. The data shows that socially isolated people are 26% more likely to develop later dementia. The study has implications for health and social care policy, in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. |
High optimism linked with longer life and living past 90 in women across racial, ethnic groups Posted: 08 Jun 2022 01:14 PM PDT Higher levels of optimism were associated with longer lifespan and living beyond age 90 in women across racial and ethnic groups. |
Radio waves for the detection of hardware tampering Posted: 08 Jun 2022 01:14 PM PDT Up to now, protecting hardware against manipulation has been a laborious business: expensive, and only possible on a small scale. And yet, two simple antennas might do the trick. |
Faster computing results without fear of errors Posted: 08 Jun 2022 01:14 PM PDT A new technique can dramatically accelerate programs known as shell scripts, through a process called parallelization, while ensuring the programs return accurate results. |
Posted: 08 Jun 2022 01:14 PM PDT The fossil of a still-unnamed species provides the first known record of the abelisaurid group of theropods from a middle Cretaceous-aged (approximately 98 million years old) rock unit known as the Bahariya Formation, which is exposed in the Bahariya Oasis of the Western Desert of Egypt. |
The Southern Ocean as never seen before Posted: 08 Jun 2022 01:14 PM PDT With the second version of the International Bathymetric Chart of the Southern Ocean (IBCSO v2), an international group of researchers recently presented the best and most detailed seafloor map of the Southern Ocean, which plays a pivotal role in the Earth system. |
Bluetooth signals can be used to identify and track smartphones Posted: 08 Jun 2022 01:14 PM PDT A team of engineers has demonstrated for the first time that the Bluetooth signals emitted constantly by our mobile phones have a unique fingerprint that can be used to track individuals' movements. |
Nicotine-sired male offspring at risk of addiction behavior and memory impairments, study finds Posted: 08 Jun 2022 01:14 PM PDT In a new study, researchers have discovered that paternal nicotine taking is associated with addiction-like behaviors, cognitive deficits, and anxiety-like behaviors in male offspring. |
Walking towards healthier knees Posted: 08 Jun 2022 01:14 PM PDT A new study reveals that walking for exercise can reduce new frequent knee pain among people age 50 and older diagnosed with knee osteoarthritis, the most common form of arthritis. Additionally, findings from the study indicate that walking for exercise may be an effective treatment to slow the damage that occurs within the joint. |
Scientists observe effects of heat in materials with atomic resolution Posted: 08 Jun 2022 01:13 PM PDT Using cutting-edge electron microscopes and novel techniques, a team of researchers has found a way to map phonons -- vibrations in crystal lattices -- in atomic resolution, enabling deeper understanding of the way heat travels through quantum dots, engineered nanostructures in electronic components. |
Rapid-fire fast radio burst shows hot space between galaxies Posted: 08 Jun 2022 01:13 PM PDT A recently discovered, rare and persistent rapid-fire fast radio burst source -- sending out an occasional and informative cosmic ping from more than 3.5 billion light years away -- helps to reveal the secrets of the broiling hot space between the galaxies. |
The secret lives of Darwin's finches reveal daily commutes the equivalent of 30 soccer fields Posted: 08 Jun 2022 11:29 AM PDT Using radio transmitters, scientists have gained new insights into the behavior of medium ground finches in the Galapagos Islands. A study reveals daily movement patterns covering an area equivalent to the size of 30 soccer fields. |
Preventing adverse birth outcomes could boost education, income Posted: 08 Jun 2022 11:29 AM PDT Reducing the excess prevalence of low birthweight, preterm birth or small-for-gestational-age birth in low- and middle-income countries may lead to substantial long-term human capital gains when it comes to both long-term schooling and lifetime income gains, according to a new study. |
A new study shows benefits to dispatching mental health specialists in nonviolent 911 emergencies Posted: 08 Jun 2022 11:29 AM PDT As cities test different approaches to handling 911 calls, a new study shows dispatching mental health specialists for nonviolent emergencies can be beneficial. In Denver, it reduced reports of less serious crimes and lowered response costs. |
Particle accelerator region revealed inside a solar flare Posted: 08 Jun 2022 10:36 AM PDT A new study offers direct evidence showing where near-light speed particle acceleration occurs inside the largest explosion known in the solar system, the solar flare. |
COVID-19 vaccination during pregnancy could protect against SARS-CoV-2 infection in infants Posted: 08 Jun 2022 10:36 AM PDT New research offers evidence that getting a second or third dose of the COVID-19 vaccine in the final stages of pregnancy offers protection for infants against SARS-CoV-2 infection (the virus that causes COVID-19 illness). |
Protein discovery reinvigorates promising new therapeutic Posted: 08 Jun 2022 10:36 AM PDT Engineers have developed a therapeutic that they say avoids major allergic reactions that plagued previous versions while maintaining its therapeutic activity. The keys to the discovery were the use of a similar, membrane-bound version of stem cell factor delivered in engineered lipid nanocarriers. |
Climate change and human exploitation to blame for historic decline in Atlantic Salmon Posted: 08 Jun 2022 10:36 AM PDT Research has revealed that an abrupt change in climate conditions in the North Atlantic around 800 years ago played a role in a decline in Atlantic salmon populations returning to rivers. Subsequent human exploitation of salmon combined to reduce their populations still further. |
Amazon River freshwater fish show signs of overexploitation Posted: 08 Jun 2022 10:36 AM PDT As the cherished rainforest in South America's Amazon River region continues to shrink, the river itself now presents evidence of other dangers: the overexploitation of freshwater fish. |
New delivery method allows slow-release of broader array of peptide drugs in the body Posted: 08 Jun 2022 10:36 AM PDT A new study describes one of the first entirely new drug delivery microencapsulation approaches in decades. |
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