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Monthly Archives: July 2021

Metal artifacts in Southeast Asia challenge long-held archaeological theory

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According to the Penn Museum’s Joyce White and Elizabeth Hamilton, prehistoric communities, rather than the ruling elites, in Thailand were the deciders in how...

Bird brains left other dinosaurs behind

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Research on a newly discovered bird fossil led by The University of Texas at Austin found that a unique brain shape may be why...

Clays, not water, are likely source of Mars ‘lakes’

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Bright reflections that radar detected beneath the south pole of Mars may not be underground lakes as previously thought but deposits of clay instead, a new...

New exotic matter particle, a tetraquark, discovered

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Discovery of a new exotic hadron containing two charm quarks and an up and a down antiquark. Today, the LHCb experiment at CERN is presenting...

First detection of light from behind a black hole

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Fulfilling a prediction of Einstein’s theory of general relativity, researchers report the first-ever recordings of X-ray emissions from the far side of a black...

Exploring blood types of Neanderthal and Denisovan individuals

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Blood group analyses for three Neanderthals and one Denisovan by a team from the Anthropologie Bio-Culturelle, Droit, Éthique et Santé research unit (CNRS /...

Exploring quantum systems that don’t find equilibrium

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Some physical systems, especially in the quantum world, do not reach a stable equilibrium even after a long time. An ETH researcher has now...

Global project observes rare meteor showers and meteorite falls

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As billionaires battle it out in a space race that only a handful of the world's richest persons can play, a highly inclusive international...

Fermi spots a supernova’s ‘fizzled’ gamma-ray burst

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On Aug. 26, 2020, NASA's Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope detected a pulse of high-energy radiation that had been racing toward Earth for nearly half...

Earth’s interior is swallowing up more carbon than thought

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Scientists from Cambridge University and NTU Singapore have found that slow-motion collisions of tectonic plates drag more carbon into Earth's interior than previously thought. They...

Buzz about thermoelectrics heats up with promising new magnesium-based materials

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The landing of NASA's Perseverance rover was another leap forward not only for space exploration but also for the technology that's powering the craft...
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