A team of researchers from the Universities of Exeter, Brighton and Oxford has rejuvenated senescent cells to be functionally younger. This discovery builds on earlier findings from the team that showed that genes called splicing factors are progressively switched off as we age, and has the potential to lead to …
Read More »Scientists Identify ‘Missing Link’ in Life’s Chemical Origins
Before biological evolution could take off and produce the incredible variety of plants and animals we have today, there was some chemical process that gave rise to life. Scientists around the world are probing the secrets of chemical evolution, hoping to discover the reactions that produced the first self-replicating molecules. …
Read More »Archaeologists Find Unique Minoan Sealstone in Greece
An international group of archaeologists led by the University of Cincinnati has found a Minoan sealstone in the treasure-laden tomb of a Bronze Age Greek warrior in southwest Greece. The Pylos Combat Agate. Image credit: University of Cincinnati. In 2015, University of Cincinnati (UC) archaeologists Professor Jack Davis and Dr. …
Read More »Nocturnal Mammal Ancestors Switched to Daytime Activity after Extinction of Non-Avian Dinosaurs
A long-standing theory holds that the common ancestor to all mammals was nocturnal, but new research from Tel Aviv University (TAU) and University College London (UCL) reveals when mammals started living in the daytime for the first time and provides insight into which species changed behavior first. Early mammal. Image …
Read More »Scientists Sequence Genome of Common Liverwort
An international team of researchers has mapped and analyzed the genome of the liverwort Marchantia polymorpha, a species of land plant found around the human habitat in temperate regions. The findings are published in the journal Cell. Marchantia polymorpha. Image credit: Holger Casselmann / CC BY-SA 3.0. Marchantia polymorpha, sometimes …
Read More »Tiny Enceladus Maintains Liquid Ocean Thanks to Porous, Muddy Core
Of all Cassini’s discoveries in the 13 years it spent in orbit around Saturn, the oceanic vents of Enceladus rank among the best. Voyager 2’s flyby in 1981 had shown that some of the features on the moon might have been the result of cryovolcanoes (literally, volcanoes that shoot water, …
Read More »The Human Brain Can Create Structures in Approximately 11 Measurements
Neuroscientists have used a traditional branch of maths in an absolutely brand-new way to peer into the structure of our brains. What they have actually discovered is that the brain has plenty of multi-dimensional geometrical structures operating in as lots of as 11 dimensions.We’re used to thinking of the world …
Read More »6 Awesomely Crazy Science Experiments You Can Do Today
Science is the exacting approach by which man has wrested control of the elements from the terrible clutches of deep space. Now it’s time to abuse our power for stupidly enjoyable functions. Read More
Read More »Breakthrough Could Lead to More Effective Treatments for Colon Cancer, Other Gut Diseases
Colon cancer, Crohn’s disease, and other gut diseases could be better treated — or even prevented — thanks to a newly-discovered link between a cellular process called autophagy and inflammation. The findings of a research team at the University of Warwick are published in the journal Nature Communications. Tusco et …
Read More »NASA’s Juno Orbiter Completes Ninth Jupiter Flyby
NASA’s Juno spacecraft successfully made its ninth (eighth science) flyby over Jupiter’s mysterious cloud tops on October 24, 2017. This illustration depicts Juno soaring over the south pole of Jupiter. Image credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech. “Data returned October 31 indicate that Juno completed its eighth science flyby over Jupiter’s cloud …
Read More »
#Bizwhiznetwork.com Innovation ΛI |Technology News