In a stunning fossil discovery in Japan, paleontologists unearthed a nearly complete skeleton of a duck-billed dinosaur that lived approximately 72 million years ago. A nearly-complete skeleton of the duck-billed dinosaur Mukawaryu. Image credit: Hobetsu Musem / Hokkaido University Museum. Duck-billed dinosaurs, or hadrosaurids, are members of the family Hadrosauridae. …
Read More »Could Pluto’s Orbital Wobbles Create Its Mysterious Glacial Crazy-Paving?
Strange fields of polygons seen during New Horizons’ visit to Pluto could be explained by million year variations in the dwarf planet’s orbit caused by its ice giant neighbors, says a team from Taiwan’s Institute of Earth Sciences. Their conclusion, which challenges existing explanations of bottom-up heating of the glacier …
Read More »Enceladus May Have Tipped Over in Distant Past
While combing through data gathered by NASA’s Cassini spacecraft during flybys of Enceladus, the sixth-largest of Saturn’s moons, researchers have found the first evidence that the frozen moon’s axis has reoriented, possibly due to a collision with a smaller body. This enhanced-color view of Enceladus is largely of the southern …
Read More »Curiosity Data Suggests Ancient Martian Lake Could Have Harbored Life
Curiosity has been exploring Mars since 2012, and has already traveled further than any other rover in history. Curiosity isn’t done providing fascinating insights into the red planet, either. A new analysis of data from the rover indicates that its landing site in Gale Crater was once a lake that …
Read More »Researchers Sequence Genome of Mojave Desert Tortoise
An Arizona State University-led team of scientists has sequenced the genome of the Mojave desert tortoise (Gopherus agassizii), a long-lived species native to the Mojave Desert. The results could help the animal survive an increasing number of threats. The Mojave desert tortoise (Gopherus agassizii). Image credit: Sandra Leander, Arizona State …
Read More »Bionic Carbon Fiber Arm From Lamborghini? It Could Happen
Lamborghini’s expertise in carbon fiber may be just what the doctor ordered. The automaker known for go-fast cars will partner with Houston Methodist Research Institute to create live-better humans. They’ll collaborate on the development of carbon fiber composites that could be used for medical purposes. According to Automobili Lamborghini, the …
Read More »Omentum Performs Unique Immunological Functions
The omentum is an important immune organ that serves as a first line of defense against toxins and infection, according to a review paper published online this week in the journal Trends in Immunology. Structure of milky spots in the omentum. (A) schematic of whole omentum in mice; the omentum …
Read More »NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Finds New Evidence of Surface Water Ice on Moon
Researchers analyzing data from NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) have found evidence of surface frost near the Moon’s south pole. A view of the Moon’s south pole showing where reflectance and temperature data indicate the possible presence of surface water ice. Image credit: NASA’s Scientific Visualization Studio. “We found that …
Read More »Scientists Detect Gravitational Waves for Third Time
Scientists from the LIGO Scientific Collaboration and the Virgo Collaboration have made a third detection of gravitational waves, ripples in the fabric of space and time, first predicted by Albert Einstein more than a century ago. The research is published in the journal Physical Review Letters. Artist’s conception shows two …
Read More »Researchers Create Molecular Version of Black Hole
When a team of physicists focused the full intensity of SLAC’s Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS) Coherent X-ray Imaging instrument — the world’s most powerful X-ray laser with an intensity of 100 quadrillion kilowatts per sq.cm — on a small molecule, they got a surprise: a short laser pulse stripped …
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