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Science & Technology

Explore the fascinating world of science and cutting-edge technology. Discover innovations, scientific discoveries, space exploration, artificial intelligence, and tools shaping the future.

    Science & Technology

    3,000-Year-Old Fortress Found on Egypt’s Way of Horus Reignites Exodus Debate

    Some researchers believe that the mysterious ruins found in North Sinai may be linked to the biblical story of Moses.
    T…

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  • Science & Technology

    If Antarctic ice shelves collapse, sea levels could rise 10 meters by 2300

    If by the year 2300 sea levels rise by 10 meters due to the collapse of Antarctica’s ice shelves, many cities and villages around the world would be submerged. This…

  • Science & Technology

    When Sleep Steals Your Focus: Why Your Brain Flushes Out Fluid During Micro-Naps

    Research conducted by scientists at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Boston has shed light on the changes that occur in the brain due to fatigue. According to the team’s…

  • Science & Technology

    1,500-Year-Old Roman Mosaic Hidden in Turkish Garden Recovered from Smugglers

    During an operation by the anti-smuggling and organized crime unit in the southeastern province of Mardin, authorities uncovered a 1,500-year-old mosaic featuring vibrant animal imagery. This late Roman floor mosaic,…

  • Science & Technology

    Why a Sahara Caldera Looks Like a Giant Skull from Space

    What resembles a skull is located in northern Chad, at the bottom of the Tru-o-Natron volcano, also called Dun-Orey: a volcanic caldera, or crater, measuring 1,000 meters across. NASA Earth…

  • Science & Technology

    Emotional Intelligence, Not IQ: The Real Superpower for Work and Life

    When a person learns to understand the impact of their words and actions on others, they can consciously build harmonious relationships, effectively resolve conflicts, and even prevent them from arising,…

  • Science & Technology

    Greenland Is Warping and Drifting Northwest as Its Ice Melts

    Greenland, the world’s largest island and an autonomous territory within the Kingdom of Denmark, is changing shape — compressing in some areas and expanding in others. Moreover, it is drifting…

  • Science & Technology

    Why Some Spiders Weave Zigzags into Their Webs

    Spider silk is one of nature’s most beautiful wonders. Sometimes, within these intricate webs, you can spot zigzag formations known as stabilimenta. They aren’t garlands or streamers spiders put up…

  • Science & Technology

    Why dogs in Chernobyl turned blue

    Volunteers who encountered dogs with blue fur in Chernobyl believe that the coloration of these stray animals changed not because of some bizarre mutation from decades of radiation exposure, but…

  • Science & Technology

    DNA from a mass grave shows infections helped wipe out Napoleon’s 1812 army

    French and Estonian researchers have examined genetic material taken from a mass grave of Napoleon’s soldiers in Vilnius, Lithuania. Construction workers discovered the burial site in 2001. The scientists sequenced…

  • Science & Technology

    It Rains on the Sun—But It’s Superhot Plasma, Not Water

    Believe it or not, it rains on the Sun — though not like on Earth. This rain, made of superheated plasma, is called coronal rain because it forms in the…

  • Science & Technology

    How the Fats You Eat Can Trick Your Internal Clock and Cause Weight Gain

    The amount of fat we eat can signal the season to our bodies. A new study from a UCSF team found that meals high in saturated fat can trick the…

  • Science & Technology

    Not Lions or Leopards — African Wildlife Fears Humans Most

    In Africa, wildlife fears one thing more than any other. Certainly, lions—with powerful paws, muscular builds, sharp eyesight, lightning-fast reflexes, and devastating fangs—are predators no animal wants to face. They…

  • Science & Technology

    Roman Hippodrome Unearthed Beneath an Old Turkish Landfill

    In the city of Kayseri, where a popular open-air market now thrives, there once lay a landfill. Turkish researchers have made a remarkable discovery. Utilizing ancient maps and aerial photographs,…

  • Science & Technology

    Mysterious Roman stone ring found in Bavaria may be a family cenotaph

    The discovery stunned those who came to inspect the site. Researchers believe it is the foundation of a burial — a family memorial. This finding sheds new light on the…

  • Science & Technology

    Running Shoes Built for Men Are Holding Women Back

    Researchers from Simon Fraser University in British Columbia, Canada, have uncovered critical design flaws in women’s running shoes. The findings are alarming: this footwear has compromised female runners’ comfort for…

  • Science & Technology

    Lion-headed spout reveals an ancient wine and olive-oil workshop in Turkey

    Among the ruins of the ancient Greek port of Batonea, archaeologists uncovered a stone spout shaped like a lion’s head. It had been preserved for centuries in a late-antique workshop…

  • Science & Technology

    Why Some Goats Dramatically Collapse When They’re Startled

    If you suddenly spot a goat that has stiffened and fallen on its side, don’t jump to conclusions. It’s likely not dead; instead, it has reacted in an unusual way…

  • Science & Technology

    A bear-sized ‘snow sloth’ roamed Ice Age North America

    This late-Pleistocene giant adapted to life in extreme cold. Known as Jefferson’s sloth (Megalonyx jeffersonii), it was named after Thomas Jefferson, the third President of the United States and a…

  • Science & Technology

    Burning Space Debris Lands Near Australian Mining Town

    Experts from the Australian Space Agency have suggested this could be a fragment of a Chinese rocket. It landed as space debris in a desolate area near the mining town…

  • Science & Technology

    Why a deep sigh feels good — and how it actually resets your lungs

    A study in Science Advances found that deep sighs help restore the fluid that coats the lungs — pulmonary surfactants. This refers to a group of phospholipids and proteins on…

  • Science & Technology

    CO2 Hits Record Highs in 2024 — Oceans and Land Are Struggling to Absorb It

    Experts from the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) have confirmed that in 2024, the level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere reached record highs. According to an analysis of observations from…

  • Science & Technology

    Your Brain Often Peaks at 55–60 — Not in Your 20s

    As youth begins to fade, many people start to fear cognitive decline. But a new study published in the journal Intelligence says there’s no need for alarm. For many of…

  • Science & Technology

    How your brain wakes up in stages — and why mornings feel groggy

    The thing is, our brain doesn’t wake up immediately when the alarm goes off. Waking up is a gradual, coordinated process. As Aurelie Stephan, a sleep researcher from the University…

  • Science & Technology

    How Psychedelic Beer Helped Wari Rulers Consolidate Power

    Researchers from the Royal Ontario Museum in Canada analyzed remnants of substances found in ceramic vessels in the lands of the pre-Incan Wari Empire. The scientists suggested that beer with…

  • Science & Technology

    Why some dogs get obsessed with balls — and how to handle it

    A team of researchers has published the results of their latest study in the journal Nature Scientific Reports. The findings reveal that some dogs behave similarly to people who suffer…

  • Science & Technology

    How the Moon’s Biggest Crater Explains Its Two Very Different Sides

    The far side of the Moon is dominated by the vast South Pole-Aitken Basin. Stretching over 1,930 kilometers from north to south and 1,600 kilometers from east to west, it…

  • Science & Technology

    How Easter Island’s Stone Giants ‘Walked’ Across the Island

    Physics has helped explain how the massive stone statues were moved across the volcanic island of Rapa Nui (Easter Island). This groundbreaking research was conducted by a team led by…

  • Science & Technology

    Why women live longer than men — clues from 1,000 animal species

    Throughout human history, men’s lives have been shorter than women’s. On average, women live 5.4 years longer than their male counterparts. To uncover the reasons behind this pattern, a team…

  • Science & Technology

    Fisherman Digging for Worms Finds 20,000 Medieval Silver Coins

    While digging for worms near his summer home outside Stockholm, a fisherman stumbled on the biggest catch of his life. He uncovered a colossal hoard — around 20,000 silver coins…

  • Science & Technology

    Why songs get stuck in your head — and how a 40-second clip can stop them

    Over 90 percent of the world’s population suffers from the phenomenon known as an earworm. Researchers have proposed various theories about why this occurs in our brains and how to…

  • Science & Technology

    Coral reefs are the first climate tipping point — and they’re dying fast

    The planet’s temperature is no longer suitable for the life and flourishing of coral reefs. In the report “Global Tipping Points 2025,” 160 leading scientists from 23 countries warned that…

  • Science & Technology

    NASA Confirms 6,000 Exoplanets — and the Search Is Just Beginning

    The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) has confirmed the discovery of 6,000 exoplanets, planets that exist outside our Solar System. Researchers say the search for these distant worlds will…

  • Science & Technology

    Archaeologists Uncover 2,000-Year-Old Fortified Settlement Near Lübeck

    A team led by researchers from Kiel University has uncovered a fortified settlement dating to around 2,000 years ago near the port city of Lübeck in the German state of…

  • Science & Technology

    Tiny, big‑eyed marsupial discovered in Peru’s cloud forest

    Scientists have named a miniature marsupial with large eyes Marmosa chachapoya, in honor of the ancient Chachapoya people who inhabited northern Peru before the Incas. Live Science reports it’s a…

  • Science & Technology

    Amazon Trees Are Getting Thicker as They Soak Up More CO2

    Every decade, the trunks of trees in the tropical forests of the Amazon grow thicker by 3.3 percent. This is because plants are absorbing more carbon dioxide (CO2). What exactly…

  • Science & Technology

    Earth Is Making the Moon Rust

    A team of scientists from the University of Science and Technology of Macau (China) says that leakage of oxygen from Earth is likely responsible for transforming iron into hematite (oxidized…

  • Science & Technology

    1,400-Year-Old Byzantine Gold Hoard Found Near the Sea of Galilee

    Research team member Edi Lipsman discovered the treasure when his metal detector went off as he passed a large stone and two ancient walls in Susita National Park, near the…

  • Science & Technology

    A modified glue gun can 3D-print custom bone grafts during surgery

    Researchers from Sungkyunkwan University and Harvard have modified a standard glue gun to extrude a bone-like material. This device could allow surgeons to repair fractures during operations by printing custom…

  • Science & Technology

    How ‘Impossible’ Compounds Ended Up Inside South African Diamonds

    In a South African mine, miners unearthed two diamonds that contain controversial chemical compounds. The discovery could shed new light on how diamonds form. These samples, which formed hundreds of…

  • Science & Technology

    Why the Moon Is Slowly Drifting Away From Earth — and What It Means for Our Days

    Our planet’s faithful companion has existed for 4.5 billion years. But like everything in the universe, it isn’t static. Dr. Steven Dickey, an astrophysicist at the University of Michigan, says…

  • Science & Technology

    A deep, ancient brain area may be the real driver of consciousness

    For decades, scientists believed that consciousness arises in the newest areas of the brain. However, neuroscientist Peter Coppola now claims that it is primarily governed by the oldest, most primitive…

  • Science & Technology

    A 1-Million-Year-Old Skull Pushes Back the Origin of Homo sapiens by 400,000 Years

    Until recently, anthropologists believed that Homo sapiens and Neanderthals diverged from their common ancestor about 600,000 years ago. However, the prehistoric skull known as Yunxian 2 has cast doubt on…

  • Science & Technology

    Beards Boost Male Magnetism — Here’s Why

    Brad Pitt, Prince William, and Boris Johnson all look better with facial hair, don’t you think? It’s not just personal preference; there’s a scientific reason people find facial hair appealing.…

  • Science & Technology

    How Oxytocin Creates the Warm Bond Between Cats and Humans

    Oxytocin is the same hormone the brain produces when a mother rocks her baby or when loved ones embrace. Research has shown that oxytocin is also crucial for forming the…

  • Science & Technology

    Perseverance’s PIXL data show Jezero Crater hosted habitable environments multiple times

    Scientists from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) examined geochemical maps of rock formations created by the Perseverance rover in Jezero Crater using the X-ray lithochemistry instrument known as…

  • Science & Technology

    A 4,500-Year-Old Gold Brooch — One of Only Three in the World — Was Found at Troy

    Recent excavations at Troy, a UNESCO World Heritage site, turned up an astonishing discovery. Among the rare artifacts unearthed by archaeologists are a gold ring-shaped brooch, jade, and a bronze…

  • Science & Technology

    Octopus Tentacles Work Like Arms and Legs — Without a Dominant Limb

    How do they use their tentacles? Are all of them involved in daily activities? And how do these cephalopods distribute tasks among their limbs? Researchers at the Marine Biological Laboratory…

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Spring Baking: Young Cabbage Pie with Sour Cream
Spicy Food Makes People Reach for Brighter Colors
Math Shows Why Fashion Returns Every 20 Years
Why Spring Is the Best Time to Reinvent Your Life
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