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الجمعة، 11 أبريل 2014

THREE SENTENCE SCIENCE The latest intelligence


Today, Apr 10
Galactic Archeology Made Easy
  


Galactic Archeology Made Easy

Light and sound waves from stars help astronomers chart stars' history more accurately. A new survey of 1,000 stars combines stars’ dimensions with information about their metal content and effective temperatures. Part of the Strömgren Survey for Asteroseismoloy and Galactic Archaeology, these 1,000 stars are the first images  taken from the Kepler telescope data to be dated in this way.  Arxiv

Tracing our Sun's origin through the history of our galaxy.
Can Google Glass Help Parkinson's?
  


Can Google Glass Help Parkinson's?

Parkinson’s Disease, which is marked by a deterioration in cognitive ability over time, commonly has symptoms like tremors and forgetfulness. A group of Parkinson’s sufferers given a set of Google Glass (which function much like a wearable, hands-free smartphone) said they thought the devices could help them retain some independence. The glasses displayed discreet reminders, like when to take medication, or to swallow instead of drooling, providing a less invasive care management system. YouTube

Wearable technology could be the future of medicine, and human interaction.
A Stellar Diamond Ring
  


A Stellar Diamond Ring

The European Space Organization’s Very Large Telescope captured this photo of a planetary nebula, Abell 33, at a fortuitous moment. The nebula is a glowing gas cloud that surrounds a small star (much like our Sun) that is on its way to becoming a white dwarf. Abell 33’s nebula is unusually circular: The star at the edge of the nebula is HD83535, giving the nebula the appearance of a diamond ring even though HD83535 is actually millions of light years in the foreground between Abell 33 and Earth. ESO Gems|ESO Images

Astronomy depends on having just the right amount of light.

Yesterday, Apr 9
Ukraine’s Shifting National Border Puts Wildlife in Danger
  


Ukraine’s Shifting National Border Puts Wildlife in Danger

Nature reserves on the Crimean coast and the Ukraine and Crimea border are home to various endemic and endangered species of flora and fauna. But as political tensions rise and Crimea’s status as a part of Ukraine becomes more uncertain, so does the preservation of its wildlife. Russia and Ukraine use different standards to determine which species are on the “red” or endangered lists, meaning their management could change dramatically if Crimea were to separate from Ukraine. Nature

When man and nature collide, hybrid ecologies can be born.
State of World's Oceans Revealed by Hunt for Flight MH370
  


State of World's Oceans Revealed by Hunt for Flight MH370

Each day, new objects are spotted floating in the Indian Ocean, but not one has turned out to be a piece of debris from missing Malaysian airlines plane Flight 370. Inadvertently, the search for the plane appears to be turning people’s attention to the garbage throughout our oceans, some of which collects together because of the current and forms “patches.” The Indian Ocean’s patch gathers on a current known as the Indian Ocean gyre, but very little is known about how big or precisely where it can be found. National Geographic

Oceanographer Sylvia Earle tells Nautilus what "waste" means in oceanography.
Old Italian Violins Playing Ability a Myth
  


Old Italian Violins Playing Ability a Myth

The Old Italian violins made by renowned 17th and 18th century makers, such as Stradivari or Guarneri “del Gesu,” are supposedly superior to all new violins. In a blind test of six new and six Old Italian violins, ten renowned violin soloists had an hour to play and choose their favorite instrument. Six chose a new violin as the best, illustrating how music can be influenced by cultural perceptions.  PNAS

There may be little point in putting our faith in past precedence—everything changes eventually.

Copper Awl Dates Southeast Mediterranean Copper Age
  


Copper Awl Dates Southeast Mediterranean Copper Age

A copper awl discovered in the southeastern Mediterranean coast suggests that the Copper Age arrived there as early as 7,000 years ago. Archaeologists discovered the elongated metal pin at a burial site in Tel Tsaf in the central Jordan Valley in Israel. The artifact predates all known metals in the region by several centuries, indicating that metallurgy probably spread to the region through trade with southeast Europe far earlier than thought.  PLOS One

The search for mankind's mark on Earth is on.

April 8
High-Flying Geese Run on Little Oxygen
  


High-Flying Geese Run on Little Oxygen

Bar-headed geese are the highest-flying birds in the world, soaring across the Himalayas at up to 23,917 feet as part of their annual migration. Geese were made to run on a treadmill while the oxygen level in the air was reduced to test how well the geese ran with a greatly reduced oxygen supply. The geese were able to keep running at their top speed with only 7% oxygen, far below the 21% oxygen level that we breathe at sea level. YouTube

Following the Northern Bald Ibis as it makes its own migration over the Alps.
Brain Area Linked to Problem Gambling
  


Brain Area Linked to Problem Gambling

When playing slot machines, players tend to attach undue importance to so-called “near misses,” like when two in a row of three symbols are the same—a loss that is spatially close to the jackpot.  By comparing both healthy people and those with various brain injuries, researchers found that people with damage to the insula area of the brain were unique in the desire to stop playing after a near miss. Reducing the insula’s function could be a key to treating problem gambling. PNAS

The world is your casino, but bettors beware—the house always wins.
Gold Nanorods Could Reduce Bladder Cancer
  


Gold Nanorods Could Reduce Bladder Cancer

Bladder cancer cells make too much of a protein called EGFR, which drives uncontrolled cell division and acts as a biomarker for the cancer cells. Scientists made gold nanoparticles that attach to proteins targeting EGFR. Next, they heated the gold with a laser, which destroyed EGFR and decreased the number of cancer cells in 13 mice. Science Codex

Nanotechnology is helping us straight to the site of disease.

Ancient Grains Map Early Silk Road
  


Ancient Grains Map Early Silk Road

Ancient grains discovered in present-day Kazakhstan place the earliest interaction between traders from southwest Asia and ancient China at nearly 5,000 years ago. Archaeologists excavating campsites of Bronze Age nomads found domesticated crops like bread wheat, from southwest Asia, and broomcorn millet, from China, intermingled in central Eurasia by 2700-2500 B.C. Previously, archaeologists believed the crops didn’t come into contact until a couple thousand years later. Washington University in St Louis

From ancient to modern trade: How shipping containers made the world a smaller place.

April 7
The Biological Toll of Poverty
  


The Biological Toll of Poverty

Telomeres, structures at the ends of chromosomes that protect cells from damage, are influenced by social disparity, according to a new report. In a study including 40 boys, researchers found that boys from disadvantaged backgrounds—like those whose mothers never graduated high school, for example—had 19% shorter telomeres compared to boys who came from more advantaged families. Shorter telomeres have been linked with cell damage and higher instances of chronic disease. PNAS

The human body has changed over time as we respond to our environment.
Want to Design Your Own Space Mission? Now You Can
  


Want to Design Your Own Space Mission? Now You Can

NASA will release more than 1,000 software codes to the public as part of a free online software catalogue. The technologies featured in the catalogue range from project management systems to life support designs, and aeronautics to robot and autonomous systems, representing NASA’s best solutions to a wide array of complex mission requirements. When the catalogue goes online Thursday 10th April, it will be found hereNASA|NASA Technology

Do we have any technology that could transport us to the stars?
IBM's Revolutionary Mainframe Turns Fifty
  


IBM's Revolutionary Mainframe Turns Fifty

Fifty years ago today, IBM unveiled its first mainframe computer: the System/360. It cost IBM more than $5 billion, which at the time was equivalent to two years' profit for the company—but the gamble paid off. Then-IBM chairman Thomas J Watson Jr said, "System/360 represents a sharp departure from concepts of the past in designing and building computers...This is the beginning of a new generation—not only of computers—but of their application in business, science and government." IBM

As mainframes become smaller and more powerful, so do they become cleaner.

Cereal Boxes are Designed to Hypnotize You
  


Cereal Boxes are Designed to Hypnotize You

Cereal boxes are specially designed so that the mascot makes eye contact with the consumer. In a study of 65 cereals and 86 mascots, researchers found that while all mascots stared at a focal point four feet away, kids’ mascots’ eyes looked down at a 9.6 degree angle—perfect for making eye contact with a small child—and adults’ mascots looked straight ahead. The strategy works: Consumers were 16% more likely to trust a cereal brand when its mascot made eye contact.Cornell

A boy's irresistible urge for Kellogg's brand cereal changes his life forever.
Clicking Green: Is Your IT Company Dirty or Not?
  


Clicking Green: Is Your IT Company Dirty or Not?

By 2017, half the world population is expected to be online, and by 2020, Internet users’ electricity demand will increase by 60% from current levels. In a new report from Greenpeace, 19 global IT companies and their data centers were ranked according to how clean their electricity was. The lowest was eBay, which uses 6% clean energy, while Apple was the greenest, with 100% of its electricity coming from renewable sources. Greenpeace

Find out how Facebook is cleaning up its energy consumption, with Nautilus.

April 6
Slow Marine Animals' Secret Life, Caught on Camera
  


Slow Marine Animals' Secret Life, Caught on Camera

Corals and sponges aren’t thought of as dynamic creatures, but in this time-lapse clip from photographer Daniel Stoupin, they come to life. Stoupin took more than 150,000 extremely close-up shots of different corals and sponges found along the Great Barrier Reef. This kind of macrophotography has a very shallow depth of field, so to create shots that were fully in focus Stoupin layered 3-12 shots together, merging the different areas of focus to create a composite image. Vimeo

How to photograph time, through time.
Updating a Dead Language's Dictionary
  


Updating a Dead Language's Dictionary

Queen’s University professor Gregory Toner is to spend the next five years scouring through old Irish texts, from poems to letters, searching for lost words to add to a new Old Irish dictionary. The Dictionary of the Irish Language concerns itself with words from the 7th and 17th century, and is freely available online. Surprisingly, Toner has already found translations for the modern words, “alcohol-free,” “pampering,” and “trap,” enriching our understanding of this unique language.  Irish Dictionary|Irish News

In modern language, ultra-preserved words can reveal how our ancestors may once have spoken.
Sibylla Merian and the Metamorphosis of Butterflies
  


Sibylla Merian and the Metamorphosis of Butterflies

One of many overlooked women in science, 17th-century German entomologist Sibylla Merian changed the way we think about butterflies. In 1699 she traveled to Dutch Guiana (now Surinam) to document butterflies—a subject she became interested when South American specimens started arriving in Germany for the first time. Her opus, Metamorphosis Insectorium Surinamensiu, published in 1705, features 60 beautiful copperplate engravings, some of which can be viewed here.  Brainpickings.org

Speak, butterfly: How butterflies wove art and science together for Vladimir Nabokov.

Gravitational Waves May Give Glimpse of Pre-Big Bang
  


Gravitational Waves May Give Glimpse of Pre-Big Bang

“The ‘bang’ in people’s mind is the idea that there had to be a beginning,” says theoretical physicist Gabriele Veneziano, “But we don’t know, really, what preceded inflation.” When people think about cosmic inflation, apparently confirmed by the discovery of gravitational waves by BICEP2, they think of it occurring after a defined beginning of time. In this interview with George Musser, Veneziano explains why gravitational waves offer a glimpse of the universe before the big bang. Scientific American

Alan Guth, one of the first proponents of cosmic inflation theory, talks initial conditions with Nautilus.

April 5
Franco's Ghosts Live On in Spain
  


Franco's Ghosts Live On in Spain

In 1936, General Francisco Franco led a fascist military coup against the democratic Spanish Republic, and Spain erupted in civil war. During and after the conflict, Franco’s forces killed some 120,000 people, burying them in mass graves along roadsides and fields across Spain. Now, forensic scientists with the Association for the Recuperation of Historical Memory are beginning to recover victims’ bodies, analyzing their bones in order to confirm their identities and return them to relatives. Narrative.ly

DNA testing is putting faces on the missing victims of the Bosnian War.
Trilobites Are Alive and Well, as Beetles
  


Trilobites Are Alive and Well, as Beetles

Bearing more than a passing resemblance to their famous fossil namesake’s, trilobite beetles are a diverse group of beetles found throughout Southeast Asia and India. The female of the species has a brightly colored long, armored body, while the male is relatively tiny (5 mm to the female’s 6 cm) and nondescript. In fact, the males look so similar to each other, that trilobite beetles are hard to classify without using genetic testing.  Scientific American

Peter Ward talks to Nautilus about a "living fossil": the nautilus, our namesake.
Deep-Sky Objects: Music on an Intergalactic Scale
  


Deep-Sky Objects: Music on an Intergalactic Scale

Sebastian Currier, artist-in-residence at the Institute for Advanced Studies, composed “Deep-Sky Objects,” a cycle of songs for soprano, ensemble and electronics, bringing music and astrophysics together. Set in the distant future, the cycle features two lovers’ longing for each other, though entire galaxies separate them. Recently performed by the Argento Ensemble, Currier joins the Ensemble’s director for a conversation about the cycle, and about “spectral music”, in this videoIAS

Science and art collide: Challenging our understanding of separation, and what it means to be home.

Bank Voles are Universally Susceptible to Prion Disease
  


Bank Voles are Universally Susceptible to Prion Disease

Prion disease is caused by the misfolded protein PrP, or prion, which infects a healthy body, converting normal proteins into toxic prions, causing tissue damage and cell death. Mice that had been bred with bank vole PrP instead of mouse PrP were exposed to eight different species’ toxic prions and all eight caused the disease. Usually, prion disease is spread within one species and not species to species, but bank voles are an exception.  PLOS One

Why do creatures evolve with seemingly useless or potentially life-threatening traits?

April 4
Damaged Nerve Endings Regenerate in Mice
  


Damaged Nerve Endings Regenerate in Mice

A protein called PCAF triggers genes that regenerate 65% of damaged nerves after spinal cord injury in mice, opening the door to new therapies for spinal cord injury. Mice were injected with a virus carrying PCAF, which normally turns "on" regeneration genes only in the peripheral nervous system (nerves outside the brain and spinal cord). However, when virally-driven, PCAF triggered nerve regrowth in the injured spinal cord, despite the fact that the central nervous system doesn't normally regenerate after nerve damage. Nature Communications

For people with permanent nerve damage, brain-computer interfaces could help restore functionality using robots.
Weighing
  


Weighing "El Gordo," the Most Massive Cluster Known

Nicknamed “El Gordo,” or “The Fat One,” galaxy cluster ACT-CLJ0102-4915 is far more massive than first thought, clocking in at about 3 million billion times the mass of our sun. Using images collected by the Hubble telescope, astronomers measured the warping effect of El Gordo’s gravity on the stars they could see beyond the cluster. This allowed them to determine its mass, confirming that El Gordo is the most massive known galaxy cluster. Arxiv

What can two galaxies merging reveal about our Universe, and our future?
Wild Salmon Crowds Out Seabirds in North Pacific
  


Wild Salmon Crowds Out Seabirds in North Pacific

Wild Pacific salmon life cycles negatively impact marine birds’ nesting habits in the North Pacific Ocean off the coast of Alaska, as both compete for the same food resources. The salmon live for two years and tend to mature on odd-numbered years, leading to an influx in adult salmon every odd year. Conversely, the birds produce fewer eggs at later dates as the salmon population booms, but in even-numbered years when there is less adult salmon, the birds have up to 15% higher breeding success.  PNAS

Clash of the tiny: Squirrels and the turf war for L.A.

Homeless Ten Times More Likely Problem Gamblers
  


Homeless Ten Times More Likely Problem Gamblers

A survey of 456 homeless people living in shelters and hostels in London has revealed that a much higher percentage of them are problem gamblers than the U.K. gambling population as a whole. Homeless people were asked a series of questions about their gambling, rating each response on a scale of 0 to 4 points, with a score higher than 8 signifying problem gambling. The British Gambling Prevalence Survey says 0.7% of gamblers in the UK have a problem, while for the homeless it is 11.6%. Journal of Gambling Studies

Why do we keep playing the lottery even if we know the odds aren't in our favor?

April 3
A Heartbeat in Your Legs
  


A Heartbeat in Your Legs

Tissue engineers have designed a “mini-heart” out of a cuff made from cardiac muscle cells that helps return blood to the heart when veins fail. Normally, blood makes the return trip from the legs to the heart through skeletal muscle contractions in the calves, which squeeze the blood upward, and valves in veins, which prevent the blood from flowing back down. Wrapped around a damaged vein segment in a leg, the mini-pump is designed to push blood upward with each throb.  JCPT|YouTube

Engineering the human body has been our forte for millennia.
Here Kitty! Early Humans and Saber Tooth Cats Met
  


Here Kitty! Early Humans and Saber Tooth Cats Met

Several bones, including tooth bones, of a saber tooth cat were discovered in a German coalmine at the same depth as human spears had previously been found. Both finds come from the same layer of ground, which would have been exposed to the elements 300,000 years ago. The find shows that early hominids and saber tooth cats must have competed for food and territory, revealing more about how homo sapiens’ ancestor lived in Paleolithic Europe.  Phys.org

If we want to understand how early humans lived, we need to let go of our preconceptions.
Reconstructing a Dino Run in 3D
  


Reconstructing a Dino Run in 3D

The preserved footprints of a carnivorous theropod dinosaur chasing a herbivorous sauropod have been digitally reconstructed in 3-D. Known as the Paluxy River tracks, the 45 meter-long trail of prints were excavated in 1940 in Texas, but some portions no longer remain. To reconstruct the site researchers scanned 17 photos of the site, developed a digital model, and compared it to maps drawn by the original excavators, creating an three dimensional representation that can be seen, here.  PLOS One

Theropods like T.Rex may not look much like a bird's ancestor, but their feathers tell a different story.

Oxygen is Running Low in the Baltic Sea
  


Oxygen is Running Low in the Baltic Sea

The Baltic Sea is one of the largest oxygen-starved, or hypoxic, areas in the world. Researchers analyzed the amount of oxygen in the water and the changing level of salt over time to reconstruct the different oxygen levels over the last 115 years. In that time, there has been a tenfold increase in the level of oxygen deprivation, which mirrors the rising temperatures as warm water carries less oxygen.  PNAS

Despite its salinity, the Dead Sea is teeming with microbial life.

April 2
My Father, My Captain: A Refugee's Tale
  


My Father, My Captain: A Refugee's Tale

When he was just a child, Pha Le’s father made the decision to escape from a life of persecution in Communist Vietnam. In exchange for agreeing to pilot a boat out of Vietnam, Le’s father got passage for only three people, forcing him to leave Le’s two younger brothers behind with a promise to send for them. In this audio recording, Le recounts his family’s escape and how deliverance can come in many different forms. The Moth

One woman's deliverance comes in a form that goes against her religion, family, and life experience.
Oxytocin May Make Us Lie
  


Oxytocin May Make Us Lie

Humans often tell “white” lies or bend the truth to help themselves or others in their group. Sixty volunteers were given oxytocin, a hormone associated with social interaction, and then asked to toss a coin, with one outcome ending in financial reward. When on oxytocin, volunteers would lie about the coin toss more if it benefited the group, but not if it only benefitted themselves, demonstrating that oxytocin may shift an individuals’ interests to the group’s, even in the face of moral convention. PNAS

Is it possible for something to be neither true or false?
How Do Squid Shine?
  


How Do Squid Shine?

Squid control their body’s shine using a skin element called structural iridophores, which are highly reflective pigment cells. This skin element is partly controlled by something called the stelate ganglion, which is a collection of nerve endings outside the brain that help the squid react to its environment. If the wiring between the stellate ganglion and the brain is cut, the iridophores become transparent, dulling the squid’s iridescent skin.  Journal of Experimental Biology

We now know how squid shine, but how do they see?

Roe Deer Don't Keep Up With Climate Change
  


Roe Deer Don't Keep Up With Climate Change

Roe deer in the Champagne region of France have given birth at the same time each year for 27 years, despite warming climates. Spring now comes about two weeks before it did in 1985, but fawns are still born at the same time as they were back then. Researchers find that fawn survival rates are falling, and they suspect it might be because the fawns have less food during the briefer springtime, leading them to be undernourished.   PLOS Biology

Is there such a thing as hybrid ecologies, where man's industry and nature can intersect?

April 1
Blind Visualize Numbers from Right to Left
  


Blind Visualize Numbers from Right to Left

Researchers asked a group of congenitally blind people, people who had gone blind later in life, and sighted people wearing a blindfold to say aloud the numbers one to ten. At the same time, they had to move their head, left and right, depending on how they saw the number order. People with visual experience all counted from left to right, while congenitally blind people went the opposite way, demonstrating that our tendency to visualize numbers from left to right is socially learned.  Behavioral Brain Research

Losing his sight, a scientist illuminates the path to a cure for a deadly disease.
Remining Metal-Rich Soils
  


Remining Metal-Rich Soils

Phytomining consists of growing certain kinds of plants on metal-rich soil, like old minefields, allowing them to absorb metal through their roots and concentrate it in their leaves. They can then be harvested and burned, and their ashes processed in a smelter to collect the metal. About 400 known “hyperaccumulators”—plants that absorb metals like nickel and gold—exist, with the most efficient being yellow alyssums, which can become 9% metal through absorption.  New Scientist

Nearly everyone and everything is partially made of discarded atomic elements.
How to Keep the BICEP Telescope Cold
  


How to Keep the BICEP Telescope Cold

Earlier this month, the BICEP telescope at the South Pole detected what appeared to be gravitational waves left over from the Big Bang. Scientists kept BICEP at 4 kelvin (-452.47 F) by pouring liquid helium into the telescope’s casing, making the detectors sensitive to tiny amounts of energy. In this interview, electrical engineer Steffen Richter, the man who keeps BICEP cold, explains what life is like at the South Pole, and why the aurora makes the isolation all worth while. Science

Alan Guth, who first proposed the theory of cosmic inflation, and Sean Carroll talk time for Nautilus.

A Window to Muscle Engineering in Mice
  


A Window to Muscle Engineering in Mice

Researchers at Duke University are testing a new bioengineered muscle by inserting it into a chamber with a glass “window” placed on the backs of living mice. The glass chamber provides the researchers with a window to check the muscle’s progress in the mice. The muscle’s fibers are genetically modified to produce fluorescent flashes during calcium spikes, which cause the muscle to contract and which will become brighter as the muscle grows stronger. PNAS

Without a direct window, we have to use other creative strategies to monitor complex biological processes.

March 31
Computer Recognizes 21 Distinct Facial Expressions
  


Computer Recognizes 21 Distinct Facial Expressions

Researchers photographed 230 people and mapped their facial muscles as they responded to verbal cues, such as, “You have unexpected good news. Most people expressed each emotion in the same way, with facial expressions interpreted to mean, for example, “happily surprised,” for 93% of the time. By plotting each emotion’s features into a computer program, researchers can use this tool to analyze the relationship between visible emotional responses and brain function. PNAS

Understanding and displaying human emotion, on the machine level.
Unraveling the Mystery of the Dracula Ant
  


Unraveling the Mystery of the Dracula Ant

Six new Dracula ant species have been identified in Madagascar using a novel technique that compares the ants’ behavior instead of their anatomy. Dracula ant species are very difficult to identify: Some species have queens that are smaller than workers, or large individuals that look like workers, but behave like queens. A queen in one species can look almost indistinguishable from a worker from another species; often confounding researchers’ attempts to catalogue them by looks alone. ZooKeys

Meet the fire ant: traveler extraordinaire.
Book on Human Soul, Bound in Human Skin
  


Book on Human Soul, Bound in Human Skin

In the Harvard rare book collection, there is a small French philosophical volume, “Des destinées de l’ame,” by essayist Arsène Houssaye. Houssaye gave the volume to a friend, Dr Boulard, in the 1880s, which Boulard had rebound in human skin because, according to a note included in the book, “a book on the human soul merited that it was given human skin.” Harvard’s collection contains three books bound in skin, a technique known as anthropodermic bibliopegy.  The Crimson

What it means to be human is defined by the metaphors we use to describe our world.

The Beauty of the Periodic Table
  


The Beauty of the Periodic Table

Arranged in a sequential spiral, this beautiful rendering of the periodic table as it was in 1949 attempts to use art to explain the chemical similarities between elements. Elements are arranged in order of number of electrons, from the simplest – Hydrogen – at the center to the most complex – the as yet unknown Rutherfordium (atomic number 104). Elements that behave in similar ways are grouped together and colored with different shades of the same color.  LIFE

Some elements we take for granted, like carbon, are actually made of waste.

March 30
Going Blind In Space
  


Going Blind In Space

When Commander Chris Hadfield embarked on his first space shuttle flight, the odds of catastrophic disaster were one in 38. “You realize by the end of the day you’re either going to be floating effortlessly, gloriously in space,” he told the audience at TED2014 this month, “or you’ll be dead.” Watch his TED talk to learn how he kept calm when he went blind during a spacewalk—and to hear him perform 'Space Oddity'by David Bowie. TED

Alexander Kumar describes the feeling of coming home from the deep emptiness of space.
The Ten Best Sentences
  


The Ten Best Sentences

“I go to encounter for the millionth time the reality of experience and to forge in the smithy of my soul the uncreated conscience of my race.” This sentence, from James Joyce’s A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man is one of ten great sentences from English language literature chosen by The American Scholar. It captures the great uncertainty of the creative process, the moment where the artist attempts to make sense of their world and to understand what the world means to those around them. American Scholar

If we are to truly discover our world, we must come to terms with uncertainty.
The Opposition of Mars
  


The Opposition of Mars

The distance between Mars and the Earth shrinks by about 300 km every minute as the planets orbit’s align at their closest point,, reaching a peak minimum distance of 92 million km between the planets on April 14th. At this position known as an “opposition of Mars,” Mars and the sun sit directly opposite one another on either side of the Earth. April 14th is also a full lunar eclipse, so if it is a clear night both the moon and Mars should be visible red bodies in the sky. Phys.org

An astronomer explains why we need to fall back in love with the dark.

Tracking Humans' Evolution, Now
  


Tracking Humans' Evolution, Now

Since 1948, the residents of Framingham, Massachusetts, have been subject to the longest running cardiovascular study ever: the Framingham Heart Study. Now in its third generation of participants, the study offers unique insights into the effect of modern medicine and lifestyle on the changing trends in physical health and lifespan. In a lecture at the Harvard Museum of Natural History, evolutionary biologist Stephen Stearns uses this data to explore how natural selection shapes contemporary man. Harvard

As we learn more about our universe, our view of ourselves and our future is changing, too.

March 29
Fancy a Fossil Pint?
  


Fancy a Fossil Pint?

Non-profit paleontology organization PaleoQuest has teamed up with Lost Rhino Brewing Company to create Bone Dusters Paleo Ale: a beer brewed with yeast from fossil whale bones. Brewers collected the yeast (a subspecies of modern brewer’s yeast) from samples of a 14 million year old whale skull, which was a member of the Protocetidae family of ancient cetaceans. The first 650-gallon batch will soon be on sale at the Lost Rhino Brewing Company’s taproom in Virginia. Scientific American

Beer could be the secret to human civilization.
Seeing is Believing: Medical Data Visualizations
  


Seeing is Believing: Medical Data Visualizations

In the 1850s, Florence Nightingale drew one of the most famous medical data visualizations of all time, demonstrating that in the Crimean War (1853-56), more British soldiers died of poor sanitation than in combat. Her visualization demonstrated the value of improving hospital hygiene, her life’s great work. It is now on display as part of the British Library in London’s new exhibition, Beautiful Science: Picturing Data, Inspiring Insight.  British Library

For preventing disease, big data is the new drugs.
Crows Understand Cause and Effect
  


Crows Understand Cause and Effect

In Aesop’s tale ‘The Crow and the Pitcher,’ a crow drops stones into a water jug until the water level rises to a level it can drink from. This may not be pure fiction: Researchers recently challenged six New Caledonia crows to choose from various kinds of stones to displace water in tubes for a food reward. All of the crows picked solid and sinking objects rather than floating or hollow ones, indicating that they had basic understanding of the causes of water displacement.  PLOS ONE

Understanding cause and effect is a human tendency, one of many we actually share with animals.

March 28
Pulling Back the Veil on Audobon's Aviary
  


Pulling Back the Veil on Audobon's Aviary

Ornithologist John James Audobon’s Birds of Americais a collection of 435 life-size, hand-colored plates depicting a range of bird species. This weekend, the exhibit Audobon’s Aviary: Parts Unknown opens at theNew York Historical Society. It highlights the watercolor studies done by Audobon in preparation for the book, in which he illustrated the birds he had collected, stuffed, and arranged using wires to replicate “natural” poses.  New York Historical Society

Protecting the cathedral of biology in the Galapagos, beginning with a yellow warbler.
Mini Planet with Rings Found
  


Mini Planet with Rings Found

A dwarf planet less than 250 km in diameter with two rings has been spotted among a collection of objects, called Centaur, between Saturn and Uranus. Known as Chariklo, the planetoid was identified by the European Space Organization at La Silla Observatory in Chile after it passed in front of a star. Made up of water ice and rocky matter much like it’s far larger neighbor’s rings, Chariklo’s rings are only 3-7 km wide, and no more than a few hundred meters thick.  Nature

An exciting discovery, but what happens when new planets turn out to be fakes?
Finding the Root of Gulf War Illness
  

Finding the Root of Gulf War Illness


Veterans with so-called ‘Gulf War Illness’ can suffer from fatigue and muscle repair problems, but doctors don’t know what causes it. Levels of phosphocreatine, a molecule that regulates energy metabolism in muscles, was compared before and after an exercise test in seven affected veterans and matched controls. Sufferers of the disease didn't recover as quickly as the controls after the test: They had severely depleted phosphocreatine, which could be used as a diagnostic marker for the disease. PLOS ONE

The trauma of war could be partially resolved with the help of technology.

American Cattle Tell Tales of Immigration
  


American Cattle Tell Tales of Immigration

An American cattle breed, the Texas longhorn, descended from two breeds brought to the United States by colonialists and immigrants. By reconstructing the genetic history of 134 cattle breeds from around the world, researchers found that the Texas longhorn is descended from Spanish cattle brought to America in the 1600s. These were then bred with Zebu cattle, a kind of Indian cattle that was introduced to the U.S. from Brazil on a new wave of immigration to the States in the 1800s.  PLOS Genetics

Human migration can help plot our own evolutionary history, too.

March 27
Redefining the Edge of the Solar System
  


Redefining the Edge of the Solar System

A new dwarf planet, called 2012 VP113, has been found beyond the edge of the known Solar System. Thought to be part of the hypothesized inner Oort cloud (a cloud of icy objects about one light year from the Sun), the planet is 80 times further from the Sun than is the Earth. Previously, the dwarf planet Sedna, at 76 times the distance of Earth to the Sun, was considered the edge of the Solar System, but 2012 VP113’s discovery has expanded our horizons even further.Nature

Our place in the universe is constantly shifting, rocking out of control.
Self-destructing Cells Signal Others to Survive
  


Self-destructing Cells Signal Others to Survive

Scientists directed radiation at fruit fly larvae, damaging their cells' DNA and causing most of the cells to self-destruct. But before the cells died, they turned on a protein that activates a gene regulator named bantam, which has been linked to cell proliferation and maintenance. Surviving cells became increasingly less likely to self-destruct when exposed to further damage, despite the continued DNA damage. GSA

Can we engineer bacterial cells to kill one another?
Increasing GDP Has Little Affect on Child Growth Problems
  


Increasing GDP Has Little Affect on Child Growth Problems

A new study of children under three in 36 developing countries found that increasing per person Gross Domestic Product (GDP) had little affect on bringing down nutrition-related growth defects. The research measured the affect of a 5% increase of per person GDP on incidences of stunting, wasting, and being underweight. On average, the odds of being stunted fell by 0.4 %, underweight by 1.1%, and wasted by 1.7%, suggesting that increasing GDP does not mean equally improved health outcomes. The Lancet

Why the current food aid policies may not be the best solution to world hunger.

New Snails Discovered as They Go Extinct
  


New Snails Discovered as They Go Extinct

Ten species of tiny snails of the genus Plectostomahave been discovered in West Malaysia, Sumatra, and Thailand. Researchers used a micro-CT scanner to get 3-D X-rays of shells, identifying each species by shell shape, distribution, and genetic similarity. One of these, Plectostoma sciaphilum is already extinct and more are endangered as the limestone hills the snails live on are rare and isolated, making them a popular target for mining companies who want to use the limestone to make concrete. ZooKeys

Nature is inconstant, but can we ever know this until it is too late?

March 26
Ancient Ocean Predator Fed Like Modern Whale
  


Ancient Ocean Predator Fed Like Modern Whale

A new fossil reveals that not all anomalocarids, an extinct group of marine predators, grasped prey with spiky appendages near their mouths. The discovery of the anomalocarid Tamisiocaris reveals that it may have instead eaten as whales do., Rather than appendages,Tamisiocaris had a filtering apparatus that could be swept through the water like a net, trapping small crustaceans and other creatures. Nature

What modern birds and an infamous Jurassic predator have in common.
Two Halves of the Same Bone, Reunited After 162 Years
  


Two Halves of the Same Bone, Reunited After 162 Years

Paleontologists discovered this year that the lower half of a fossilized turtle’s humerus, the largest upper arm bone, uncovered on a New Jersey beach formed the missing piece of a partial turtle bone previously housed in the Academy of Natural Sciences archives in Philadelphia. The 70-75 million year old bone is from ancient turtle Atlantuchelys mortonis. Having a complete humerus has revealed that the animal was about 10 feet from tip to tail, making it one of the largest sea turtles recorded. YouTube

It took paleontologists years to work out what our most famous dinosaurs really looked like.
Old Masters' Sunsets Reveal Air Pollution
  


Old Masters' Sunsets Reveal Air Pollution

The colors of the sunset in old paintings may show how much pollution from volcanic activity was in the air at the time of their creation. Researchers analyzed landscapes painted in the last 500 years and found that for a few years following a large volcanic eruption, red sunsets became popular features in European paintings. Large volcanic eruptions fill the atmosphere with ash and gas, which can travel for thousands of miles and scatter sunlight, making sunsets red across the globe.  Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics

If we want to preserve art for the future, we have to rely on science.

March 25
Deep Horizon Oil Threat to Fish Stocks
  


Deep Horizon Oil Threat to Fish Stocks

A new study of bluefin tune, yellowfin tuna, and amberjack embryos has revealed that crude oil leaked from the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill can cause serious heart defects in all three species. The fish embryos were exposed to crude oil collected from surface water and the damaged wellhead in the Gulf of Mexico. Because the spill occurred during these fish’s spawning season, the finding implies that the numbers of fish reaching maturity in the years following the spill will dip significantly. PNAS

Is there ever any good to be had from waste in our oceans? For some creatures, it's home.
Shock Absorber in the Bones
  


Shock Absorber in the Bones

Citrate, a derivative of citric acid, is a natural by-product of cell metabolism that helps deliver calcium to bones. Researchers found that when citrate mixes with water, the viscous mix becomes trapped between the nano-scale mineral crystals within bones. This fluid allows enough movement between the crystals to make bones slightly flexible and less likely to shatter under pressure.  PNAS

The body's natural resilience is amazing, but over time we have engineered them to become even better.
 Neck Ribs Expose Woolly Mammoths Decline
  


Neck Ribs Expose Woolly Mammoths Decline

Most mammals have seven neck vertebrae that can, in certain conditions, sprout a rib. Researchers compared modern elephant specimens with woolly mammoth remains from the late Pleistocene and found that they were 10 times more likely to have a neck rib than their modern relatives. In elephants, a neck rib is associated with inbreeding and a harsh environment during pregnancy, suggesting that mammoths may have suffered from a particularly adverse environment in the years leading up to their extinction. PeerJ

Monsters and marvels are the genesis of science.

 Mathematical Proofs Become Art
  


Mathematical Proofs Become Art

In 1829, Harvard University student Joel Giles produced his thesis “Solar and Lunar Eclipse,” a collection of illustrated proofs of the mathematics behind the two different kinds of eclipse. It is one of 406 digitized theses collected by the university’s archivists, produced during the 1780s up to the 1830s. The thesis is now one of many curious archive items on exhibit at the university as part of the ‘From Code Books to a ‘Love Story’’ exhibit, as a piece of art as much as science. Harvard

Wander through the Nautilus cabinet of curiosities.

March 24
Living Nanowires Created
  


Living Nanowires Created

Escherichia coli bacteria naturally produce biofilms made up long chains of proteins called CsgA, which help the bacteria stick to things. Scientists genetically engineered E. coli that produce biofilms tagged with clusters made up of the amino acid histidine, a building block of protein, but only when certain other molecules were present. The histidine tags latch onto gold nanoparticles, forming rows that can be used as nanowires— which could be used to develop living materials . Nature Materials

Re-engineering bacteria can make it its own worst enemy.
Tuberculosis, On the Rise and Spreading
  


Tuberculosis, On the Rise and Spreading

Drug resistant tuberculosis (TB) appears to be spreading, with 450,000 patients suffering from the illness in 2012. In honor of World TB Day, tomorrow a documentary by PBS's Frontline draws attention to the danger of virulent drug-resistant TB strains, and the need for better medicines. Luckily, drug developers have a new tool at their disposal: 3D printed petri dishes. PBS

Zach Zorich investigates how 3-D gelatin models could help find new therapies for TB.
Volcanoes Pushed Out of Place
  


Volcanoes Pushed Out of Place

Volcanoes occasionally form in unexpected places, 100s of kilometers from the nearest rift valley, which are depressions in the Earth’s crust created by moving tectonic plates. In narrow, deep rift valleys, there are fewer large pockets between the crust and mantle that magma coming up from the mantle can pool into and then escape vertically through the ground. Instead, it is pushed horizontally away from the rift until it can find a point under less pressure to break the surface.  Nature Geoscience

In the Earth's crust, jewels are forming.

How a Glasshead Barreleye Fish Sees its World
  


How a Glasshead Barreleye Fish Sees its World

The glasshead barreleye fish has a cylindrical eye pointing upward, allowing it to see other creatures above silhouetted in sunlight. But to see what lurks behind it and at its sides, the fish uses a mirror-like membrane on its eye that is lined with guanine crystals. This reflects the light given off by bioluminescent creatures and other reflective surfaces around the fish on to its retina, allowing it see the rest of its environment even though it is constantly looking up. Proc. Royal Soc. B

How animals see their world.
Giving Away Your Voice
  


Giving Away Your Voice

Scientists at Boston’s Northeastern University are developing an app called VocaliD that will let users donate their voice to those who can’t use their own. Software  strips thousands of words spoken by a donor down to the tiny units of individual sounds. This is then blended with whatever sounds the recipient can make, matching both voices to create a personalized blend and convincing synthetic voice.  VocaliD

A computer that can not only read for us, but which could be better at it, too.

March 23
Gunshot Gives Away North Atlantic Right Whales
  


Gunshot Gives Away North Atlantic Right Whales

North Atlantic right whales can be tracked using a telltale “gunshot” sound produced by adult males, according to new research. Scientists proved they could track the whales using the sounds by placing remote acoustic monitors at two whale breeding grounds for two years. They found that the timing of the sounds corresponded with the right whale breeding season in the late fall indicating that it’s used during courtship or to ward off competing males.PLOS ONE

More seductive sounds the male of the species makes to find a mate.
Wearing Your Cancer Cells on Your Sleeve
  


Wearing Your Cancer Cells on Your Sleeve

Pink ribbons are a subtle way to show support for breast cancer, but a new collection of ball gowns inspired by the disease is quite the fashion statement. Each dress is decorated with cell patterns taken from images captured by researchers at the Naus Lab for cellular and physiological sciences at University of British Columbia. The collection, titled Fashioning Cancer: The Correlation between Destruction and Beauty, can be found hereUBC|Flickr

High heels become a symbol of rebellion in one woman's struggle for freedom.
Life Caught in a Bubble
  


Life Caught in a Bubble

Samsam Bubbleman is an artist with an unusual medium: soap and water. He is a record-breaking professional bubble blower, which are created when two layers of soap molecules sandwich water molecules between them, blown up with exhaled carbon dioxide. In this short film, he explains how blowing bubbles can entertain, fascinate, and awaken childhood nostalgia in even the most adult of audiences. Aeon

In art, we can find moments of brief and unexpected beauty.

Reading the Brain with Deep Brain Stimulation
  


Reading the Brain with Deep Brain Stimulation

In the latest generation of Deep Brain Stimulator devices, two wires with four electrode contacts weave through the motor area of the brain, the subthalamic nucleus. The wires connect to a radio-controlled pulse-generating implant in the patient’s chest, which sends programed electrical pulses that quiet involuntary movements, like tremors. The implant records any abnormal neural patterns that may correlate with the tremors, something previously possible only when the brain was exposed during surgery. Nature

Brain-machine interfaces are becoming increasingly sensitive, unlocking its secrets.

March 22
One Way Ticket to Mars
  


One Way Ticket to Mars

In 2024, Mars One hopes to successfully land four volunteers on Mars to establish the first extraterrestrial human colony. A historic mission, but there is a condition: there will be no way to return to Earth. In this short film, five Americans explain their motivations for entering Mars One’s competition to find four suitable candidates, and why going to Mars is worth never coming home.  The Atlantic

When Alexander Kumar returned from Mars, he found his concept of home altered.
Thought-Forms and Spiritual Synesthesia
  


Thought-Forms and Spiritual Synesthesia

Written in 1901, Thought-Forms by theosophists Annie Besant and Charles Leadbeater features a sequence of beautifully colored images illustrating the book's central argument: that emotions, sounds, ideas, and events manifest themselves as visual auras. These auras are, the authors say, visible only to a gifted few. In this article, critic Benjamin Breen argues that Besant and Leadbeater believed they had a kind of spiritual synesthesia—a collision of the senses with the spiritual world.  The Public Domain Review

There may be a little synesthesia in all of us.
Diversity of Praying Mantises Discovered
  


Diversity of Praying Mantises Discovered

The curator of invertebrate zoology at the The Cleveland Museum of Natural History has discovered nineteen new species of praying mantis found in tropical forests in Central and South America, and in international museum collections. All the species are bark mantises, which live on the branches and trunks of trees and have flat bodies to mimic moss and bark  These mantises are fast runners, gliding swiftly from one side of the tree to the other to avoid detection by predators.  ZooKeys

Dedicating your life to the study of one animal can lead to greater discovery.

Searching for the Elusive Tree Kangaroo
  


Searching for the Elusive Tree Kangaroo

On an expedition in New Britain, an island near Papua New Guinea, American geologist John Lane happened upon a tree kangaroo for sale at the side of the road. He posted photos of it online, prompting calls from biologists asking if Lane knew where the tree kangaroo, which wasn’t thought to be found on New Britain, had come from. So began Lane’s epic search for the rare and strange marsupial, as told by this article at The Atavist.  The Atavist

The tree kangaroo could be an introduced species gone native, like these Galapagos plants.

March 21
You in the Universe, By the Power of 10
  


You in the Universe, By the Power of 10

The 1968 short film Powers of Ten by Charles and Ray Eames is a lesson in mankind’s relative unimportance on the cosmos’ vast scale. We begin with a man having a picnic on the grass in Chicago: Seconds later, our view has zoomed out 10 feet, then a 100, then a 1,000. At the same time, we are told the relative distance a man, a cheetah, and an airplane can travel in 10 seconds, the film’s perspective constantly expanding by a factor of 10 until we find ourselves 100 million light years away. Youtube

Science fiction films seek to disorientate us, taking us further from home.
The Rise of the Robot Journalist
  


The Rise of the Robot Journalist

The rise of digital journalism has blurred the line between real life journalists and software generated content, according to a new study. Readers were given a mix of articles written by journalists and machines and asked to rate their credibility, quality, and objectivity, as well as whether a human wrote it or machine. The machine-produced articles were perceived as more informative and trustworthy than those written by journalists, but they were judged as more boring and less pleasant to read. Journalism Practice

If we have competent artificial writers, will there soon be artificial readers, too?
Modeling a Supernova's Demise, in 3-D
  


Modeling a Supernova's Demise, in 3-D

Astrophysicist David Arnett has been modeling stars’ physical processes with computers for years—a subject he became fascinated with after he saw a supernova in 1987. For decades after, most computer models were in 2-D only, showing the supernova as a fluid process with one stage in its demise seamlessly leading to the next. Now, Arnett has developed a new model of a supernova’s collapse in 3-D, allowing researchers to far better recreate the turbulence and dynamism of a star’s final moments. AIP Advance

Spotting supernovas may soon be a thing of the past, as the dark becomes a rare commodity.

Ancient Stick Insect Mimicked Leaves of Plants Around It
  


Ancient Stick Insect Mimicked Leaves of Plants Around It

Three fossil stick insects from the early Cretaceous period (about 126 million years ago) have been found in Inner Mongolia. Parallel dark lines line the insects’ wings, and tongue-like shields protect their abdomens . These designs correspond to fossils found in the same region, from a relative of the gingko plant, which has tongue-shaped leaves with multiple, parallel lines.PLOS ONE

Stick insects and other animals reveal the wandering path of evolution.

March 20
Milkweed Throws Off Competition for Pollination
  


Milkweed Throws Off Competition for Pollination

A tropical milkweed has weaponized pollinia, the sacs of pollen that attach to pollinators like bees and birds to be distributed elsewhere. The pollinia have an unusual horn-like that appears to physically prevent the sacs from becoming entangled with other parent plants’ pollinia once they are attached to a pollinator. The horn effectively bars other plants’ pollinia from attaching to a pollinator, giving the original plant a better chance of successful pollination over its competitors. New Phytologist

Secrets of seduction from the animal kingdom.
Blobby Loblolly Genome
  


Blobby Loblolly Genome

At almost 7 times larger than the human genome, the loblolly pine genome has approximately 20.1 billion base pairs (humans have about 3.2 billion). A large proportion of the genome consists of repetitive sequences of DNA. The main form of these repeats is called a retrotransposon: a chunk of DNA that appears to have little purpose other than to copy itself and then become re-inserted elsewhere in the genome without seeming to affect the trees’ evolutionary adaptability. Genome Biology

Evolution is not so straight forward as we like to think it is.
The Science of Smiling
  


The Science of Smiling

To smile, according to health and well being entrepreneur Ron Gutman, is to be human. Smiling expresses joy and happiness, but it according to various studies done over the last fifty years it can also help you live longer, influence the outcome of your relationships, and boost your academic success. In thisTED talk, Gutman reviews some of the more unusual and profound of these studies, demonstrating how simply smiling could change our lives for the better. TED

The science of happiness: Expressing gratitude can boost your health.

Staying Faithful: Owl Monkeys' Total Monogamy
  


Staying Faithful: Owl Monkeys' Total Monogamy

Researchers studying a group of Azara’s owl monkeys in Argentina for more than 18 years have confirmed that they are completely faithful to their mates by examining their DNA. They examined 14 areas of the genome in 35 offspring from 17 sets of parents, and found all of them only had genes from their parents, with no instances of cheating. Coyotes, sea horses and a kind of mouse are also known to be similarly faithful to their mates. Proc. Royal Society B

Our capacity for love is a mark of human uniqueness, one that apes may share.
An Invasive Species, Or Reintroduced?
  


An Invasive Species, Or Reintroduced?

Bighorn sheep were deliberately introduced in 1975 to Tiburón Island in the Gulf of California as part of a strategy to repopulate the endangered mainland population. For nearly 40 years they’ve been considered invasive, but now, researchers have found 1,500-year-old dung that matches scat made by bighorn sheep in Tiburón. This was confirmed by sequencing the dung’s mitochondrial DNA, raising questions about whether the modern sheep are an invasive or a reintroduced species.   PLOS ONE

In the American South, an invasive species has made itself at home.

March 19
Paleontologists Announce Discovery of Anzu Wyliei Dinosaur
  


Paleontologists Announce Discovery of Anzu Wyliei Dinosaur

A dinosaur called Anzu wyliei has been described for the first time from three specimens found in 66 million year old rocks at the Hell Creek Formation in North and South Dakota. Thought to be feathered like the species’ closest relatives, Anzu was 11 feet long, 5 feet tall at the hip, beaked, and had long, thin legs and neck like an ostrich. But the resemblance ends there: its forelimbs were tipped with large, sharp claws and it had a long, strong tail. PLOS ONE

T Rex, Anzu's relative, was less bird-like but similarly feathered.
Sleep Deprivation Kills Neurons in Mice
  


Sleep Deprivation Kills Neurons in Mice

A new study has found that chronic or repeated sleep deprivation in mice leads to neuron damage and permanent loss. When mice were sleep deprived for a short time, the locus coeruleus brain cells, essential for optimal cognition, produced more of protein called sirtuin type 3 (SirT3), which protects brain cells from metabolic injury. After longer periods of sleep deprivation, the SirT3 response halted, and within several days the mice lost 25% of these neurons.  Journal of Neuroscience

Maintaining our circadian rhythm could be the secret to happiness.
Visible Light and Paint Whitener Can Purify Water
  


Visible Light and Paint Whitener Can Purify Water

A common titanium compound used to whiten paint, food, and toothpaste becomes a photocatalyst when exposed to light. Thin titanium dioxide nanotubes were laid over a graphene sheet in order to trap impurities in water as it is passed over the two materials. Sunlight catalyzed the tubes, which causes them to oxidize and break down some of the impurities in the water, while the rest of the impurities remain trapped in the graphene to be removed later.   American Chemical Society

Our water is teeming with pharmaceuticals, but is it harmful?

Ability to Drink Milk Coincides with History
  


Ability to Drink Milk Coincides with History

A new study of lactose tolerance—the ability to drink milk—in various African populations has found a link to the domestication of cattle and other milk-producing animals. A variant for the gene that expresses for lactose tolerance commonly found in Europeans, called T-13910, was also found in central and North African pastoralist groups. The mutation arose between 5,000 and 12,000 years ago, coinciding with the development of cattle farming in the Middle East and North Africa. American Journal of Human Genetics

It wasn't pastoralism, but beer, that domesticated man.

March 18
Repair Patches for the Heart
  


Repair Patches for the Heart

Protein hydrogels are used as scaffolds for cultivating organ cells like repair patches, but like gelatin, the gels fall apart easily, making them unsuitable for growing heart cells which need a strong foundation to withstand the heart’s beat. A new hydrogel developed from the protein tropoelastin has the elasticity and strength to give the cells proper support. 3-D printing patterns into the gel makes cells grow in a coherent pattern, creating robust colonies that can be used as repair patches in the heart. Nanowerk

Sometimes, medical advancements come in unlikely forms.
Venus' First Glory
  


Venus' First Glory

A rare kind of rainbow called a glory was spotted in Venus’ atmosphere by the European Space Agency’s Venus Express spacecraft. Like all rainbows, a glory is caused by sunlight filtering through cloud droplets, but glories can only be seen from above, and they look like colored concentric circles. According to the data collected, clouds of sulphuric acid droplets that were either coated with elemental sulphur or mixed with ferric chloride probably created the glory, but further research is needed. Icarus|ESA

Peering at planets would be impossible without telescopes like Hubble.
A Model Immune System in Mice
  


A Model Immune System in Mice

Researchers transplanted human stem cells into mice bearing humangenes. The genes encoded immune system proteins, which transformed thestem cells into white blood cells, lending the mice a human-like immune response. They learned that the mouse's system was indeed similar to human's when they grafted a tumor onto the mouse, and foundthat its immune cells attacked the invader in much the same way asthey would in a human body. Nature Biotech.

Without test subjects, medicine would never advance.

Shale Could Solve Another Energy Issue
  


Shale Could Solve Another Energy Issue

Low-pressure pockets in subterranean shale rock could provide the perfect dumping ground for the nuclear waste from power plants. Glaciers squeezed the water from the rocks, and as they retreated, the rock sprang back into its original shape faster than water could seep back in, making them practically impermeable to water. This unique physical property means that the waste would have no opportunity to leak into the groundwater—the biggest argument against burying nuclear waste underground.  ACS

Our nuclear waste is a gold mine, but can we use it?

March 17
Possible Proof of Cosmic Inflation Theory Found
  


Possible Proof of Cosmic Inflation Theory Found

The BICEP2 radio telescope on the South Pole has, if confirmed, found the most direct evidence of gravitational waves—ripples in the fabric of spacetime that travel outward from a source point as predicted by Albert Einstein in 1916. Detected in the Cosmic Microwave Background, the waves appear to have been created by the rapid inflation of the universe moments after the Big Bang. If proven, physicist Alan Guth's theory of cosmic inflation, proposed in 1980, will finally be validated. Nature|New York Times

Sean Carroll and Alan Guth talk to Nautilus about trying to trace time's arrow in the cosmos.
How to Find a Four Leaf Clover
  


How to Find a Four Leaf Clover

A symbol of good luck, the four leaf clover is a rare find. Most commonly found on plants of the Trifolium repens, or white clover, variety, it is thought that a four leaf clover occurs once in every 10,000 clover shoots. This video explains how statistical analysis and other tactics can help you find the supposedly lucky charm.  Scientific American

Know your chances, with the help of math.
Is Musical Talent All in the Genes?
  


Is Musical Talent All in the Genes?

Genes that determine the architecture of the inner ear may influence musical aptitude. Scientists sequenced 767 peoples’ genomes and tested their ability to differentiate between pitches and musical patterns. Genetic variations most strongly associated with high scores in the audio tests were found near the GATA2 gene, which is associated with the inner ear and inferior colliculus, the part of the brain that processes the ear’s signals into sound.  Nature

A musical genius' talent for code has given us one of our greatest mysteries.

So You Want to Hunt Asteroids?
  


So You Want to Hunt Asteroids?

NASA launches the first of its Asteroid Grand Challenge competitions today, asking wannabe asteroid hunters to produce an algorithm that can spot asteroids in images collected by on-the-ground telescopes. The algorithm needs to increase asteroid detection sensitivity, minimize the number of false positives, and ignore imperfections in the data. Sign up here to get involved, and find out how your work could be in the running for $35,000 worth of awards from NASA. Top Coder

Mark your target, and begin your journey into space.

March 16
Geothermal Energy Gave Refuge to Life in Antarctica
  

Geothermal Energy Gave Refuge to Life in Antarctica


Geoothermal sites like volcano craters, hot springs, and steam-carved caves provided refuge to Antarctic plants, fungi, and invertebrates during the last glacial period. The heat would have enabled the organisms to survive the cold, before diversifying and spreading across Antarctica. A new study has revealed that species continue to be most diverse and concentrated at these sites, highlighting the importance of heat to survival. PNAS

Life in Antarctica, alone in the wilderness.
Bending Light and Black Holes with Carl Sagan
  


Bending Light and Black Holes with Carl Sagan

As we settle in to watch the second episode of the revival of Carl Sagan’s epic series Cosmos with Neil deGrasse Tyson, we cast an eye back to episode 9 from the original. In this segment from “The Lives of Stars, ” Sagan used the analogy of Alice’s fall into Wonderland to illustrate the distortion surrounding strong gravitational fields like black holes. When light enters, it bends towards the center of gravity, distorting the surrounding space.  Youtube

Is it possible to fall in love with the night sky?
The Fabulous History of Formosa
  


The Fabulous History of Formosa

Conman George Psalmanazar beguiled the 18th Century European elite with his 1704 book, The History of Formosa, about an exotic island where priests sacrificed children and criminals were killed and eaten. He was eventually discredited after explorers started traveling to Formosa, modern day Taiwan. Until then, Psalmanazar was the foremost authority on the place, even constructing a fictitious alphabet and dictionary, which you can read here.Cambridge

Is home where the heart is? Or is it a fiction we tell ourselves?

Armored Spiders Emerge From The Dark
  


Armored Spiders Emerge From The Dark

Five new species of armored spider have been discovered in South East China. The armored spiders, so named for their complex plate pattern covering their abdomen, were found in caves in South East China’s Karst region. Two of the species had only 4 eyes (spiders have 8 on average), a possible result of their development in the dark cave environment. ZooKeys

Evolution can take an unusual path depending on the environment.

March 15
The 'Selfish Gene' Up For Debate
  


The 'Selfish Gene' Up For Debate

This week, Aeon magazine published a discussion of science writer David Dobbs' essay, 'Die, Selfish Gene, Die,' which challenges the gene-centric explanation of evolution in Richard Dawkins' The Selfish Gene.Biologist Karen James reminisces about the enlightening effect Dawkins' text had on her younger self, while primatologist Robert Sapolsky laments the popular obsession with genes and DNA as the "Code of Code." As he told Nautilus, environment counts for more in our development than we think.  Aeon

Our immediate environment can chart the course of our development.
Molecular Music: Hearing a Molecule Behave
  


Molecular Music: Hearing a Molecule Behave

By taking data from their studies in molecular biology, biochemists, computer scientists, and music technologists have come together to produce a new installation at the Kibbee Gallery in Atlanta, GA. CalledMolecular Music, the installation is designed to help the audience enhance their understanding of how molecules behave by hearing them as well as seeing them in action. The installation is part of the Atlanta Science Festival, which runs between March 22nd and March 29th throughout the city. Molecular Music

Music can hijack our perception, changing how we experience the world around us.
Name ESA's New Mission to the International Space Station
  


Name ESA's New Mission to the International Space Station

Tim Peake, a European Space Agency astronaut, is to embark on his journey to the International Space Station next year and the agency is taking suggestions for his mission's name. The first British astronaut to go to the International Space Station with ESA, Peake's mission will last for six months as part of Expedition 46/47. Enter the competition here for your chance to win the privilege of naming the mission and a mission patch signed by Peake.  ESA

We can all shoot for the stars, we just need to pick a way to get there.

Personal Risk Can Lead to Discovery
  


Personal Risk Can Lead to Discovery

In the early 1980s, Barry J. Marshall started drinkingHelicobacter pylori in order to find out whether the bacteria cause peptic ulcers. In 2005, he was rewarded with the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his selfless work. In this podcast, Marshall explains why risk-taking should lie at the heart of science experimentation, and why future generations will be better for it.  Nobel

Putting your family into genetic limbo for the sake of science.

March 14
Happy Pi Day, From NASA's Cassini
  


Happy Pi Day, From NASA's Cassini

This striking composite image, taken by NASA's Cassini spacecraft in 2007, wouldn't have been possible without using a "Pi Transfer" to navigate a path around Saturn. As Cassini orbits Saturn, it flies by Saturn's largest moon, Titan, at opposite sides of its orbit, with Titan's orbital position differing by pi radians between the two flybys. When it flies by, Cassini uses Titan's gravity to change its perspective on Saturn, enabling it to take various images of the planet and its rings. NASA

Navigating our way through space requires a craft, but we have to choose it first.
A New Mother Species
  


A New Mother Species

A new fossilized species of ostracod, a class of crustaceans that includes shrimp, has been discovered in New York State.  Measuring between 2-3 millimeters, the 450 million year old fossils were so well preserved that their eggs were still intact underneath them, providing evidence of ancient reproductive and brood care strategies. Researchers have named the ostracod Luprisca incuba, after Lucina, the Roman goddess of childbirth. Current Biology

Mother's love, compassion, empathy—this animal has it all.
Killing Top Predator Upsets Australian Ecosystem
  


Killing Top Predator Upsets Australian Ecosystem

Dingo baiting to preserve livestock is having a deleterious affect on small native Australian mammals, according to a new study. Researchers compared unregulated sites in conservation reserves with those that had been setting out poison traps for dingoes, which threaten livestock. Removing dingoes meant the population sizes of their competition, foxes, and the large herbivores they preyed upon like kangaroos, increased, while small mammals, such as bandicoots, that the foxes ate were in decline.  Proc. of Royal Society B

In a hybrid ecology, nature is no longer held separate from man.

March 13
Dining in the Dark
  


Dining in the Dark

Light pollution puts seed-dispersing fruit bats in the Amazon rainforest off foraging for their food, according to new research. A cage filled with fruit was divided into one dark compartment and one lit with a common kind of street lamp demonstrated that the bats would fly into the dark compartment twice as much as the lighted one. Once in the compartments, bats in the dark compartment ate almost twice as much fruit as bats in the light compartment.  Journal of Applied Ecology|Youtube

Our addiction to light may be about to overwhelm us.
How Life on Mars was Made Famous
  


How Life on Mars was Made Famous

On this day in 1855, astronomer Dr Percival Lowell was born. After studying the drawings of Italian astronomer Giovanni Schiaparelli of canals on Mars he devoted much of his work to noting unnatural features on the surface of the Red Planet, which he claimed were markers of not only water, but of complex life. Although NASA's Mariner missions disproved the existence of canals in the 1960s, the question of whether there is life on Mars still fascinates.  New York Times|NASA

Life in space may have been carried there by us.
Do Androids Dream of Electric Fish?
  


Do Androids Dream of Electric Fish?

With a snap of its tail, a blue, rubbery-looking fish darts away in a stream of bubbles. But this is no fish, it is a robot: Carbon dioxide released from a canister in the fish's tail bends it quickly in the opposite direction, mimicking a real fish's fast escape maneuver. This short video from MIT demonstrates the advance in so-called soft robots: self-contained, autonomous, robots with soft exteriors and powered by fluid pumped through flexible channels.  Youtube|MIT

Video: Robot animals could take control of real-life nature.

Crowdsourcing Hurricane Sandy's Evolution
  


Crowdsourcing Hurricane Sandy's Evolution

Scientists have mapped the evolution of Hurricane Sandy with the help of volunteers who collected 685 rainwater samples from sites ranging from North Carolina to New Brunswick, Canada. Oxygen and hydrogen isotope levels recovered from the water revealed when the storm met other weather systems. Over the mid-East Coast, levels of a hydrogen isotope increased as the storm collided with a continental cold front and picked up evaporation from the Atlantic, causing intense rain over the North East of America.Utah |PLOS One

Never mind hurricanes - how can we insure against a rainy day?

March 12
Twitter's Opinion Making Formula
  


Twitter's Opinion Making Formula

Twitter may seem like a cacophony of different voices and opinions, but new research shows that dominant majority opinions evolve quickly and are difficult to change once established. An analysis of 6 million tweets collected at random from the first 6 months of 2011 were sorted by topic to reveal the authors’ underlying sentiment as they developed over time. Opinions became established if increasingly large institutions endorsed them over time, demonstrating that social media is not free of market forces.CHAOS

If a story is compelling enough, will we believe it even if the evidence says otherwise?
The Complex Language of Bacteria
  


The Complex Language of Bacteria

Bacteria communicate with one another using chemical signals called quorum sensing. Researchers studied the function of quorum sensing inPseudomonas aeruginosa, finding that like humans and other animals with complex communication patterns, bacteria pass different combinations of signals to each other that depend on their social and physical context. That means the bacteria can change the function of these chemical signals as needed, letting them respond intelligently to their environment.  PNAS

Bacteria don't just communicate like humans: they live with us, too.
Happy Birthday, World Wide Web
  


Happy Birthday, World Wide Web

Twenty five years ago today, computer scientist Sir Tim Berners-Lee created the World Wide Web while working at CERN, bringing "www." into existence and fundamentally altering the way we share information. As it celebrates its silver anniversary, the Pew Research Center reports that 87% of Americans now use the Internet, up from a mere 14% when they were first surveyed in 1995. But while 76% of Americans think the Internet is good for society, 15% think it is outright bad for society. Pew Research Center

Hackers rewrote the rules of the Internet, all from the comfort of an IRC chatroom.

March 11
String Theory's Constant Surprises
  


String Theory's Constant Surprises

In August 1984, theoretical physicists Michael Green and John Schwarz brought string theory into the mainstream of theoretical physics. Twenty years on, Green says that the outcomes of their research are still impossible to predict: In the meantime, he says, string theory "provides a constant stream of unexpected surprises." Watch this video to find out what was so surprising about Green and Schwarz's breakthrough, and why it made many physicists take string theory seriously. Phys.org

As we seek to understand the universe, we must be comfortable with total uncertainty.
Out of Body, Out of Mind
  


Out of Body, Out of Mind

In a new study in Sweden, a group of 84 volunteers were interviewed while wearing virtual reality goggles and headphones, once with the ability to perceive their body, and once without the ability to perceive their body. In a memory test a week later, participants recalling the “out of body” experience had very poor memories of the event. Follow-up fMRI scans showed that when people tried to recall the “out of body” event there was a lack of activity in the hippocampus, the part of the brain linked to episodic memory.PNAS

There is a constant search in the brain for the heart of what makes humans unique.
Bold Baboons Ape Each Other
  


Bold Baboons Ape Each Other

Research at the Tsaobis Baboon Project in Namibia has found that baboons copy  other baboons’ demonstrations if they have bold personalities. Shy baboons watched a task demonstration for the same length of time as bold baboons, but when it came to completing the task themselves they were unable, or unwilling to do it. This could be because of the strict social hierarchy baboons have to abide by—one that Robert Sapolsky believes informs the human social hierarchy, too.  PeerJ

Primates are the source of our obsession with celebrity.

March 10
Mongol Hordes, Brought to You By Climate Change
  


Mongol Hordes, Brought to You By Climate Change

The Mongol Empire, begun by Genghis Khan in the early 12th century, may have risen on the back of unusually good weather. Tree rings in ancient Siberian pine trees growing on Mongolia’s Khangi Mountains show that between 1211-1225 AD there was significantly more rain and warmer weather than was normal. The good weather brought fertile pastures with it: enough grass, one presumes, to support an army’s worth of warhorses.  PNAS

Seeds can sow a revolution, in culture and science.
A Little Rock to Remember You By
  


A Little Rock to Remember You By

Until 1900, visitors to Stonehenge could remember their trip by taking a bit of the stone home with them. Visitors had been allowed to use chisels to chip off some of the 5,000 year old World Heritage Site, until the landowner decided to put a stop to the damage. Some didn’t pay heed to the new rules: Six years ago, conservationists noticed that one stone had been chiseled once more.  Smithsonian

Sometimes the closest we come to fame is in a place, not people.
Diamonds Can Reveal Magnetic Fields
  


Diamonds Can Reveal Magnetic Fields

Diamonds that have been bombarded with nitrogen atoms can be used to detect the tiny magnetic fields produced by high temperature superconductors, materials that when kept at -280 F (-173 C) have almost no resistance to electricity. The nitrogen atoms pair with vacant spaces in the diamond to create so-called nitrogen-vacancy centers. The light emitted by these centers is highly sensitive to magnetic fields, allowing the superconductor’s miniscule field to be read using laser spectroscopy.Physical Review B

Diamonds: the ancient relic with a violent history.

March 7
The Sun's Crowded Neighborhood
  


The Sun's Crowded Neighborhood

New data from NASA's Wide-Field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE), a satellite that took more than 750 million images of our solar system and its immediate surroundings, shows that our sun lives in a crowded neighborhood. Astronomers identified 3,525 new stars and brown dwarfs within 500 light years of our own sun. WISE was retired in 2011, but the satellite was brought back to life in late 2013 to help hunt for potentially hazardous near-Earth objects. NASA

Tracking down our sun's first home.
Banana's Toxic Roots Fight Pests
  


Banana's Toxic Roots Fight Pests

Bananas are plagued by round worms, which burrow into their roots, sap them of nutrients and moisture, and eventually cause the plant to fall over. Researchers compared the popular export banana, Grande Naine, with the Yangambi km 5 banana, which suffers less worm damage. They found that though both bananas have metabolites that can kill worms, the Yangambi variety has almost twice the load of the most potent, called anigorufone, than the more popular variety.  Phys.org

Once harvested, the banana's journey from tree to fruit bowl relies on science.
To Conserve Ancient Woodland, Track Trees
  


To Conserve Ancient Woodland, Track Trees

Researchers at the University of Edinburgh are calling for volunteers across the UK to adopt a tree this spring to help track how climate change is altering natural processes. Once you pick your tree, you can log its basic information at TrackATree.org.uk along with information about the plants living beneath its canopy, like bluebells, updating as the season progresses. Researchers recommend a weekly pilgrimage from before it buds all the way to leafing.   Track a Tree

If we want to save endangered species, we need to start tracking them.

March 6
Fish Fins Disrupt Evolution's Path
  


Fish Fins Disrupt Evolution's Path

Adipose fins, seemingly useless fins located between the dorsal fin and the tail, are found in more than 6,000 species of fish. Researchers took the genetic information of more than 600 species of both living and fossil fish and reconstructed their evolutionary tree to pinpoint when and in what species these fins evolved, expecting to find that they had evolved in early fish but had lost their significance. Instead, adipose fins arise independently and repeatedly throughout the evolutionary tree. Royal Society

Evolution's weave defies our understanding.
Putting Life Back in the Passenger Pigeon
  


Putting Life Back in the Passenger Pigeon

Revive and Restore, a U.S.-wide project, wants to bring back the passenger pigeon, hunted to extinction in 1914. By sequencing the genomes of passenger pigeon specimens and their still-living relative, the band-tailed pigeon, researchers hope to pinpoint the genes in the passenger pigeon that give it its unique characteristics. Band-tailed pigeons could then be bred together to amplify the genes that are key to passenger pigeon traits, eventually bringing the passenger pigeon back from the dead.  Revive and Restore

We are becoming less and less tied to the rhythms of natural time.
Beetles Reveal Ancient Landscape
  


Beetles Reveal Ancient Landscape

By examining the abundance of dung and tree beetle fossils from the Last Interglacial (132-110,000 years ago) and the early Holocene (10-5,000 years ago), paleontologists have constructed a picture of early environments. In the Last Interglacial, 55% of fossil beetles were dung beetles, suggesting that there was lots of open pasture for large ancient herbivores to graze on, while depositing their dung. Meanwhile, in the early Holocene, 57% were tree-associated, suggesting an increase in woodland.  PNAS

The amazing cosmic capabilities of dung beetles.

March 5
A New, Cleaner Catalyst for Methanol
  


A New, Cleaner Catalyst for Methanol

A new nickel-gallium catalyst converts hydrogen and carbon dioxide into methanol, which we use to make different kinds of fuel, more efficiently than a conventional copper-zinc-aluminum catalyst. The new catalyst was found by comparing the chemical properties of the conventional catalyst with a database of 100s of compounds. At 200 C, nickel-gallium produced more methanol from the same amount of natural gas than the original catalyst, and less carbon monoxide byproduct.  Nature Chemistry

Advances like this help to explain why the combustion engine just won't die.
The Life Aquatic
  


The Life Aquatic

Like a modern day Jacques Cousteau, marine architect Jacques Rougerie has created a fantastic floating marine research lab that will allow scientists to observe our oceans uninterrupted for months at a time. In blueprints, the Sea Orbiter stretches 27 m into the air and 31 m into the sea, uses solar and wind power for energy and a mini model has already been tested for durability in storms. Rougerie’s dream could become reality: it reached its $444,632 goal on crowdfund site Kiss Kiss Bank Bank. Sea Orbiter

Peter Ward's wonderful and dangerous life, under the sea.
Measuring the Milky Way, Your Way
  


Measuring the Milky Way, Your Way

The Milky Way Project wants citizen scientists to help analyze thousands of photographs of the Milky Way collected by the Spitzer Space Telescope. Users are given photos to mark if they see bubbles (dark gaps in a dust cloud), star clusters, Extended Green Objects (young stars with green-looking outflows), and galaxies. This narrows down the images that astronomers then study.   Milky Way Project

Starless planets could be fantastic rarities, or common as muck.

March 4
Did Drought Spell Doom for the Indus?
  


Did Drought Spell Doom for the Indus?

Oxygen isotopes preserved in snail shells embedded in a lakebed in Haryana, India, reveal a 200 year long drought about 4,100 years ago. The delta-18oxygen isotope value increases when evaporation exceeds rainfall, and 4,100 years ago the concentration of the oxygen isotope went up by more than four percent. Archaeologists suggest that the Indus civilization, spanning South Asia, began to deurbanize at the same time, possibly due to the devastation of rain-dependent crops. Geology

Insuring your company against rain comes at a price.
Eyewire: A Game to Map the Brain
  


Eyewire: A Game to Map the Brain

Sebastian Seung’s neuroscience lab at MIT has created a game where players score points by correctly coloring in the connection pathways between retinal neurons in 3D cube simulations of tiny chunks of the brain. So far, players have colored in more than 2 million of the 3D cubes, allowing the lab to map the connections in 90 brain cells. The researchers hope that by mapping the connections in retinal cells, they may uncover the connections essential to motion perception and other visual perception.  Eyewire

How eating a bar of chocolate unlocked one woman's neural sound system.
Invasive Flatworm Found in France
  


Invasive Flatworm Found in France

A New Guinea flatworm, one of the world’s 100 worst invasive species, has been found in a greenhouse in Caen, France. The worm is very flat, about 5 cm long, and a dark olive-black with a clear stripe running down its length, and a white belly. This is the first sighting of the worm in Europe, but conservationists are already worried: In Britain, the related New Zealand flatworm has already invaded and devastated the native earthworm population. PeerJ

Are ants the ultimate invaders?

March 3
Why Does a Bumblebee Buzz?
  


Why Does a Bumblebee Buzz?

Bumblebees buzz when foraging; they vibrate flower stamens to dislodge pollen. Scientists at Stirling University recorded 1,289 buzzes of female worker bees from various common British bumblebee families and found that each family has its own buzzing style. For example, bee Bombus pascuorum buzzes at 213 Herz (about an A note) for a second when foraging pollen, while Bombus terrestis buzzes for a mere ¾ seconds at 280 Herz (a solid D).  Naturwissenschaften

Hidden in Elgar's music, there are unbreakable codes waiting to be broken.
Work Those Thighs, Chickens!
  


Work Those Thighs, Chickens!

To try and recreate how a bipedal dinosaur may have walked, scientists turned to their distant descendant: the chicken. Chickens with wooden tails weighted at 15% of their bodyweight strapped onto them developed a distinctive walk from their free roaming counterparts who tend to walk using just the section of leg below the knee. With wooden tails, their weight was thrust forward, and they used their thighs for movement, causing them to have big, heavy strides—like a dinosaur. PLOS One

Behind every famous dinosaur, there are unsung heroes.

February 28
The Search for High Altitude Ice Crystals
  


The Search for High Altitude Ice Crystals

In Darwin, Australia, climate scientists are flying into icy weather in order to find out how high altitude ice crystals form in clouds, mostly at altitudes above 22,000 feet. When flying through ice crystal clouds, the crystals get into airplanes' engines, slowly cooling them so that ice accumulates in the engine and makes it lose power temporarily. Pilots don't have onboard weather sensors that can detect the ice crystals, leaving it up to scientists on the ground to predict the weather for them.  NASA|Youtube

Getting up close and personal with winter storms for science.
Molecular Switch Could Help Fight Metabolic Disease
  


Molecular Switch Could Help Fight Metabolic Disease

To protect against bad bacteria, our intestines are lined with mucus secreted by cells in the intestine lining. Scientists found that by inhibiting a molecular switch, called NLRP6 inflammasome, in mice, their intestinal wall’s cells don’t produce the mucus, leading to infection and inflammation from bad gut bacteria linked to obesity and metabolic diseases. If NLRP6 also guards against infections in humans, then inflammasome may become the target of new therapies for diseases influenced by gut bacteria like diabetes. Yale

What if obesity really is nobody's fault?
The Night of the Witches
  


The Night of the Witches

In 1970, a local brujo, or wizard, in Catemaco, Mexico hosted a witchcraft convention. Since then, Noche de Brujas, The Night of the Witches, has grown to a mass cleansing ceremony, held on the side of Cerro Mono Blanco hill. The festival is held on the first Friday of March: a mere 100 pesos can buy a limpia, or cleansing.  Lonely Planet

Superstition and intuition have always been the frontiers of science.

February 27
Asthma Drug Speeds Up Allergy Cure
  


Asthma Drug Speeds Up Allergy Cure

Patients with multiple food allergies may build up a tolerance to the food by ingesting tiny, increasing doses of it for several months. In a clinical trial, doctors found that injecting asthma drug Omalizumab, used to treat allergy-triggered asthma, for 8 weeks before starting food therapy and for the first 8 weeks of treatment sped the desensitization process up from 85 weeks to 18. By week 18, most patients could eat 4 grams of the different foods they were allergic to safely, the equivalent of 2 peanut M&Ms. Yale

Five more unlikely breakthroughs in medical science today.
Planet Bonanza from Kepler
  


Planet Bonanza from Kepler

NASA’s Kepler mission has confirmed 715 new planets, 94 % of which are smaller than Neptune, bringing the total number of confirmed exoplanets—planets outside our Solar System—to nearly 1,700. Four of them 2.5 times smaller than the Earth. The multi-planet systems, all with flat, circular orbits, resemble our own Solar System's, indicating that this pattern is commonplace throughout the Milky Way.  NASA

The trials and tribulations of exoplanet hunting.
A Virtual Game, But a Real Life Athlete
  


A Virtual Game, But a Real Life Athlete

The U.S. government recognizes players of the online game, League of Legends, as professional athletes, meaning they can travel to the US with P1-A visas for their extraordinary ability in sports. Each day, 27 million players battle on League of Legends. The championship finals, screened live in California in October 2013, attracted a crowd of more than 10,000 spectators.  US Gamer

Do we make gods of gamers?

February 26
Experimental Diabetes Drug Reverse Lung Damage
  


Experimental Diabetes Drug Reverse Lung Damage

Treating smoke-exposed mice with diabetes drug ciglitazone reversed damage caused by early-stage emphysema, chronic lung inflammation that increases the lung’s volume and makes it difficult to breath. Mice were exposed to cigarette smoke for 3 months, giving them early-stage emphysema, and then treated with the drug twice a week for 2 months, while continuing to be exposed to smoke. After 5 months of smoke, untreated mice had almost 450 mm^3 lung volume, while treated mice had 350 mm^3 lung volume—the same as when the trial began. Journal of Clinical Investigation

Can the body learn to fight its biggest health threats alone?
Kellogg's and Cooperation
  


Kellogg's and Cooperation

Cornflakes inventor and surgeon John Harvey Kellogg is oft quoted, “You cannot work with men who won’t work with you.” Children often think this of their parents, choosing instead to follow their immediate desires—like buying up boxes of Frosted Flakes—even if they know it could land them in trouble. In this piece by B.J. Novak, one boy finds out that his instincts to work against his parents may have been worth sugary cereal, after all. New York Times

A box of Frosties could change your life.
A living Fossil's Sacrifice for Medical Science
  


A living Fossil's Sacrifice for Medical Science

Horseshoe crabs are the sole source of Limulus Amebocyte Lysate (LAL), a blood extract that is used to detect pathogen contaminators in drugs and medical devices that could cause hemorrhagic strokes and other severe complications. Pharmaceutical companies drain up to 30% of blood from several hundred thousand crabs each year. The cost of LAL is high for these living fossils: a new study into their survival rates found 10-30% of crabs died after bleeding.  Biology Bulletin

Modern medicine and its dramatic impact on our fish.

February 25
Elastic Lattice Keeps Nerve Cells Healthy
  


Elastic Lattice Keeps Nerve Cells Healthy

Spectrin is a protein that helps form elastic lattices under the surface of red blood cells, helping them flex as they travel through the circulatory system. In a study of roundworms, scientists found that worms with impaired spectrin also suffered nerve cell damage and a disrupted sense of touch.  The result indicates that the protein builds the same elastic lattices around these nerve cells.  Nature Cell Biology

Why lasered Jell-O is the perfect shell for pathogens.
The Heart of Social Memory Found
  


The Heart of Social Memory Found

Scientists have identified the section of the brain in the hippocampus that allows animals to recognize another member of the same species. Mice tend to be naturally curious and spend more time investigating a new mouse than one they have met before, but if the brain section (called CA2) is nonfunctioning, they show no preference for novel or previously encountered mice. CA2 has high levels of a receptor protein for the hormone vasopressin, which is linked to social bonding in animals.  Nature

The intricacies of neuroscience, and what Robert Burton thinks it reveals about ourselves.

February 24
Martian Dune Fields Spotted by NASA
  


Martian Dune Fields Spotted by NASA

Sand dunes form when individual grains of sand accumulate through wind transportation, a process called saltation. Individual granules form ripples perpendicular to the wind's direction, eventually growing into sand dunes. This picture from NASAshows a Martian dune field in a crater near Mawrth Vallis: The dune's shape and spacing is determined by the size of the sand particles, wind speed, and ground topography.  NASA

The treasures that lie beneath the Earth's surface.
Round the World in a Hawaiian Canoe
  


Round the World in a Hawaiian Canoe

The Polynesian Voyaging Society plans to sail around the world in a 62”x20’ storied Hawaiian canoe, called Hōkūle’a. The canoe will be navigated almost entirely using “wayfinding,” which is a traditional Polynesian method of navigation relying on natural markers like the sun, stars, and waves. It will take about five years to complete the 47,000 nautical mile journey, with the first leg from Hawaii to New Zealand to be completed by the end of this year. National Geographic

Man can journey round the Earth and far beyond it.
New Tick-Borne Illness Causes Problems in California
  


New Tick-Borne Illness Causes Problems in California

The western black-legged tick, carried on the backs of the western grey squirrel, harbors a new species of the Borellia bacteria that has researchers worried. Out of  1,180 tick samples from San Francisco parks, researchers found 43 ticks with Borellia burgdorferi, the bacteria that causes Lyme disease, and the new strain Borellia miyamoti. People infected with B. miyamoti appear to suffer similar symptoms to Lyme disease, but it is still not known whether the bacteria cause long-term health problems. CDC

Uncertainty in medicine may be on the brink of resolution.

February 21
Pomegranate-Inspired Battery Design
  


Pomegranate-Inspired Battery Design

Pomegranates have inspired a new silicon anode, which stores charge in a rechargeable electrolyte battery. Silicon nanoparticles are coated in a layer of carbon, and then grouped into larger clusters, which are then coated a second time. This protects the silicon from damage by a battery’s electrolyte fluid. The fruity-design results in batteries that retain 97% charge even after 1,000 cycles of charging and discharging energy. Nature

The natural world could be our best resource for energy efficiency.
Bio-Wires, the New Green Technology?
  


Bio-Wires, the New Green Technology?

Using a lettuce seedling attached to two aluminum electrodes, scientists have created a bio-wire: a plant used in place of a wire to transfer electricity from one point to another. The lettuce tended to have a lower output voltage than input, with 12 Volts in and 10 Volts out, but this fluctuated. Scientists believe the fluctuations are caused by the plant’s cytoplasmic flow, which is the delivery system of nutrients and fluids keeping the plant alive.  Arxiv

Plants already have a fully fledged communication network.
Vaccine That Doesn’t Need Cold Storage a Success
  


Vaccine That Doesn’t Need Cold Storage a Success

Many vaccines must be stored at 35 to 45 F, but MenAfriVac, a new meningitis A vaccine, is still viable at temperatures of 102 F or less, and can be kept out of a fridge for up to four days. If the vaccine heats beyond 102 F, a heat sensor label changes color to warn doctors that the vaccine is too hot. After vaccinating 155,000 people in Benin with either the normal meningitis A vaccine or MenAfriVac, doctors reported that there were no cases of meningitis A in Benin in 2013, including the areas were MenAfriVac was used. MenAfriVac|Vaccine

Keeping things cold in transit can be hard, especially when they are time sensitive.

February 20
Science Fiction Becomes Science Fact
  


Science Fiction Becomes Science Fact

Science fiction author Ray Bradbury said that he wasn’t predicting the future in his work, but trying to prevent it by exposing its flaws ahead of time. But science fiction authors actually have a good track record for predictions come true: Isaac Asimov predicted online education, Arthur C. Clarke predicted tablet computing, and Douglas Adams predicted eBooks. Watch this PBS episode to find out more about how science fiction told readers about their future selves. Youtube

The time machine: where literature and science meet.
Thousands of People are Playing Pokemon Right Now
  


Thousands of People are Playing Pokemon Right Now

Twitch Plays Pokemon is an online multiplayer game of Pokémon Red, originally released in the 1990s for Nintendo Gameboys. The game was set up a mere five days ago, but already has 80,000 players all vying for control of the hapless central character, Ash, as he navigates his way through the Pokémon universe. Follow this link to play, or to watch the chaos unfold as thousands of people try to play a single player game. Twitch|Kotaku

Online sabotage can have dramatic consequences, on and off line.
Archaeologists and Physicists Tug-of-War
  


Archaeologists and Physicists Tug-of-War

Old lead is more pure, dense and less radioactive than the freshly mined metal, which means it is the ideal shielding material for sensitive physics experiments. But it is also of historical importance: Romans made pipes, coins, weapons and other everyday objects from lead, providing physicists with a large and easily accessible supply. Melting these down destroys the information they can give us about our past, but they could be the key to unlocking some of the secrets of our future, too.  Scientific American

One person's waste is another's goldmine.

February 19
Stick Insects Don't Stick When Walking Upright
  


Stick Insects Don't Stick When Walking Upright

Stick insects have two separate pads on their feet, one sticky and one not, which they switch between depending on the direction of travel and terrain. When moving up a surface, stick insects don’t stick: instead they use the non-sticky pad, which is covered in lots of tiny hairs. The hairs generate massive amounts of friction with the surface the insect is climbing, allowing it to move upwards without having to unglue itself with every step. Royal Society|Phys.org

Some more amazing animals who travel in strange and wonderful ways.
Shockwaves Ripped Star Apart
  


Shockwaves Ripped Star Apart

NASA’s Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array (NuSTAR) is designed to pick out radioactive X-ray signals radiated from dying stars and their subsequent supernova. By training it on the supernova Cassiopeia A, astronomers found patterns of titanium-44, an element created when star’s explode, in the heart of the supernova, suggesting that when the star died it didn’t blow up uniformly. Instead, successive shockwaves probably ripped the star apart, leaving the titanium in random clumps near the center.NASA|Youtube

We are all made of the remnants of an exploding star.
Can We Trust Computers to be Right?
  


Can We Trust Computers to be Right?

A new proof of part of the Erdös discrepancy problem, which tries to find patterns in an infinite list of the numbers “1” and “-1”, by University of Liverpool mathematicians took up 13 gigabytes of memory. The proof is two gigabytes larger than the whole of Wikipedia, making it too large to actually go through and check. The proof begs the question: Can a computer be trusted to prove a math problem once and for all? Arxiv

David Deutsch reminds us that for the truth to set us free, we have to challenge it.

February 18
The Consolation of Elephants
  

The Consolation of Elephants


Just as humans embrace and offer consoling words in times of sadness or stress, elephants appear to touch and vocalize in order to calm distressed elephants. Now, scientists have found empirical evidence for these consolations, by observing 26 captive Asian elephants for nearly a year. Elephants touched one another’s face, made high-pitched chirping sounds, and even put their trunk in the stressed elephant’s mouth in order to calm it after being spooked by a dog, and other stressful events.

Elephants are not the only animal with empathy, apes have it too.
A Forgotten Einstein Paper Translated
  


A Forgotten Einstein Paper Translated

A forgotten model of the universe has been brought out of obscurity by the first English translation of a little-known paper by Albert Einstein. Written in 1931, “On the cosmological problem of the general theory of relativity” features a universe that expands and then contracts back towards a singularity or end point, like a reverse Big Bang. The paper was published only a year before the widely accepted Einstein-de Sitter model, in which the universe constantly expands.Springer

Another of Einstein's lost hypotheses.
Protein Helps E.coli Keep its Shape
  


Protein Helps E.coli Keep its Shape

MreB, a protein found in bacteria, appears to be the key to how rod-shaped bacteria cells keep their unusual shape. The bacteria Escherichria coli (E.coli) cells have a rod-like shape, maintained by targeted bursts of MreB release along the longer, straight sides of the cell that build up the cell’s wall. Conversely, if MreB is inhibited, the cell loses its rod-like appearance and morphs into a spherical shape.  PNAS

Everyone knows E.coli, but these molecules are truly famous.

February 17
To Run Well We Need to Feel the Road
  


To Run Well We Need to Feel the Road

Scientists have found a correlation between haptic feedback, which is information we get by touching things, and being able to move our bodies in a rhythmic and stable way. Using a virtual paddle and table tennis ball, researchers found that people performed far better juggling the ball if they felt it hit the paddle in their hand rather than just being able to see it. This improved a person’s timing, making them more able to repeat a movement successfully and with the right rhythm.  Physiology

Finding the right rhythm can be an algorithmic headache for transporters.
Taking Earth Out of the Center of the Universe
  


Taking Earth Out of the Center of the Universe

In the early 1500s, Polish-born astronomer Nicolaus Copernicus adopted the heliocentric theory of the universe, which stated that the planets revolved around the Sun at a speed that was relative to the distance they were from it. His first writing on the subject, Commentariolus, was sent only to other philosophers, who discouraged him from continuing his work. Copernicus disagreed with the Bible’s model of the universe that placed Earth at its center, rupturing the marriage of religious dogma to science.Stanford|Commentariolus

Searching for our own place in the universe is as challenging as ever.

February 14
Strokes Rise and Fall as Weather Changes
  


Strokes Rise and Fall as Weather Changes

Hospitalizations for strokes correlate with sharp changes in temperature. Doctors collected 157,130 discharge notes for stroke sufferers and the corresponding local temperature and dew point level for the year 2010-2011. Each 5-Fahrenheit change in temperature coincided with a 6% increased risk of hospitalization, but more research is needed to find out what role meteorological factors play in the risk of having a stroke.  Live Science

A chance correlation can yield more than a coincidence.
Curling Hair with Physics
  


Curling Hair with Physics

Scientists at MIT wound flexible rubber tubes around a variety of column sizes, and then measured how the rods’ weight, length, stiffness and thickness varied their natural curvature. Based on their findings, they designed a computer algorithm that can take any of these variables and find the curvature of anything with a curl. Computer animators tend to avoid curls because the math involved is too difficult, but reducing them to a scalable algorithm could help bring more curly-haired characters to the big screen.MIT

What braids can tell us about spacetime.
Whiskerpatrol Wants Your Photos of Sea Lions
  


Whiskerpatrol Wants Your Photos of Sea Lions

There is no way to identify individual Australian sea lions without invasive techniques like microchipping or branding. To find a new method, researchers in Western Australia set up Whiskerpatrol.org to see whether people might tell sea lions apart lies based on their whisker spots, which is the markings made by the whiskers coming out of the sealion’s muzzle fur. Amateur photographers can upload photos of sea lions to help create a catalogue of identified individuals that can be tracked easily for further research.WhiskerPatrol

Tracking endangered species, like honeybees, is essential for their survival.

February 13
Brazil's Hybrid Turtles
  


Brazil's Hybrid Turtles

In Bahia state, Brazil, loggerhead turtles and hawksbill turtles congregate on the coast to lay eggs and find a mate, and a number of hybrid turtles result from the mix. Researchers charted the progress of 157 immature hawksbill turtles over a year, finding four hybrids that looked like hawksbills, but behaved like loggerheads. There is almost triple the number of loggerheads than hawksbill turtles known to nest along Bahia’s coast, the hybrids’ behavior reflecting the dominant population’s. PeerJ

Organismal mergers and the symbiosis of species.
Americans, Out of Asia
  


Americans, Out of Asia

America’s first settlers may have been Asian, according to the genome of a boy that died 12,600 years ago in Montana. A member of the Clovis people that came to America 15,000 years ago, the boy’s skeleton is the oldest known human remains in the Americas. His DNA had strong similarities to DNA found in Asian Siberia, and to modern Native American DNA. Youtube|Cambridge

Is it possible to trace our distant ancestors' first, human, home?
Can We Build in Space?
  


Can We Build in Space?

If we want to build structures in space, we need to bring our own resources with us. Researchers at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Cal. welded a fragment of Arizona’s Canyon Diablo meteorite with an electron beam in a vacuum to mimic space. But the electron beam wasn’t innovative enough to weld the metal: the phosphorus and carbon impurities made the iron crack, putting our extraterrestrial building plans on hold.  Sci. Tech. of Welding and Joining|Nature

To build in space, we have to get there first.

February 12
Prehistoric Pigments Help Shield Solar Probe
  


Prehistoric Pigments Help Shield Solar Probe

The European Space Agency plans to protect its Solar Orbiter spacecraft with a Stone Age painting technique—using crushed burnt bone as black pigment. Launching in 2017, the probe will orbit the Sun at about a quarter of the distance to Earth, experiencing temperatures of 1000 Fahrenheit and 13 times the intensity of sunlight as on Earth. To protect the probe, it will have a titanium heat shield coated in Solar Black, a type of black calcium phosphate, which is made from burnt bone charcoal. ESA

We examine stars with bone, but stars made our bodies.
Pumping Iron: Good for the Body, and the Brain
  


Pumping Iron: Good for the Body, and the Brain

Scientists have identified one way that exercise may influence our mental health. Lactate is generated when we use our muscles, and it triggers astrocytes—non-neuronal cells in the brain—to release the chemical transmitters used by neurons to signal hormone release. Researchers now report that astrocytes use lactate (lactic acid) in one part of the brain to stimulate the release of norepinephrine, a hormone essential for mammals’ alertness, appetite, respiration, emotion, and sleep/wake cycle. Nature Communications

The never-ending search for human uniqueness, hidden in the brain.
Is This Drug Vegetarian?
  


Is This Drug Vegetarian?

It is easy to follow a strict vegetarian or vegan diet, but the same can’t be said of our medications. By listing the ingredients of the top 100 most-prescribed drugs in the UK, doctors found evidence of 3 animal-derived products—gelatin, magnesium stearate (produced from rendered animal or vegetable fat), and lactose—in 73 of them. Listen to this podcast to find out more about the study. Podcast|BMJ

Pushing the boundaries of medicine is a gamble, but for some it pays off.

February 11
Do Machines Have Prejudice?
  


Do Machines Have Prejudice?

Computer algorithms can solve problems by learning from past experience. But machine learning isn’t autonomous: each algorithm uses human-set protocols that prioritize one thing over another, like popular sites topping Google searches. Nicholas Diakopoulos at Columbia’s Tow Center for Digital Journalism argues that when it comes to an algorithm’s decisions, we need to recognize that machines have human bias, too. Tow Center

Machine learning could be a new well of human creativity.
Robots That Help Stroke Victims
  


Robots That Help Stroke Victims

A robot arm called MIT-Manus is used for physical therapy for people who have had a stroke and been left with motor skills damage or weakened muscles. Patients control the arm while playing a video game, which measures the patient’s arm speed, movement smoothness, and aim. As with all neural illness and injury, predicting long-term health outcomes can be difficult, but by measuring the minute changes in a person’s motor skills, doctors can judge the efficacy of stroke treatments more accurately. MIT

Combining robotics with human awareness can take our level of perception to new heights.

February 10
Cricket and Colonialism
  


Cricket and Colonialism

In 1976, American filmmaker Jerry W. Leach releasedTrobriand Cricket, hailed as one of the most “interesting ethnographic films” by the Journal of American Anthropology. The film documents how cricket in the Trobriand Islands of Papua New Guinea became a unique expression of Trobriand cultural identity. British missionaries taught islanders how to play in the 19th century, but it evolved to become a very different spectacle from the British original: watch the film’s trailer, here, to see why. YouTube

Adopting British standards affected more than sport: we measure time by them, too.

February 9
Is Distraction the Seat of Genius?
  


Is Distraction the Seat of Genius?

To call one’s self a genius, said poet Gertrude Stein, required long stints of sitting around and doing absolutely nothing. Only then could attention be entirely devoted to conscious and deliberate thought. In this article for Nautilus, Greg Beato disagrees: He demonstrates that in order to reach your creative potential, giving in to distractions and procrastination is the secret to success. Smithsonian

Distraction and procrastination can help us reach our highest potential.
Metastatic Microchipping
  


Metastatic Microchipping

By replicating the spread of breast cancer into bone cells on a 3-D microchip, scientists have uncovered a molecule in bones that appears to attract cancer cells. Researchers injected the protein binder molecule CXCL5, which is secreted by bone cells, into collagen-gel on the chip. The cancer cells invaded the collagen as if it were bone to bind with CXCL5, highlighting its potential role in why advanced breast cancers spread into the bones before other organs in nearly 70% of patients. Biomaterials|MIT

Our cells' genetic codes are taking on a life of their own, out of our control.

February 8
Iron Fingerprint Reveals Methuselah Star
  


Iron Fingerprint Reveals Methuselah Star

Astronomers have discovered a star dubbed SM0313 that could be the oldest star ever recorded. A star’s approximate age can be judged by its iron content: when the universe first formed, the only elements were hydrogen and helium, but as early stars exploded and generated new stars, they became more chemically complex with each generation. SM0313 contains no iron, which means it was among the first few generations of stars, formed just 200 million years after the Big Bang. Nature

Can we measure anything before the Big Bang?
Sensitivity to Light Without Sight
  


Sensitivity to Light Without Sight

By using state-of-the-art computer simulations, researchers have discovered that melanopsin, a pigment in the retina that discerns minute changes in our environment’s ambient light, doesn’t help our vision. In contrast with retina visual pigments, melanopsin acts like an interface between physical light and the different physiological responses we have to light as it changes through the day. It is essential for regulating our circadian rhythm, optimizing our body’s response to day and night.PNAS

Time and space are the secret of happiness.
An Antibody Purification System
  


An Antibody Purification System

Researchers at the Scripps Research Institute discovered that Mycoplasma genitalium, bacteria that infects the genitals and respiratory tracts, appears to have a unique structure that lets it bind to any bacteria-killing antibody it encounters in the body. Once bound to the antibody, the bacterium effectively blocks it from reaching its target bacteria or virus. Researchers think this helps other bacteria and viruses evade the immune system’s response and thrive, establishing long-term infections. Science

Your body has a microscopic purification system of its own.

February 7
Learning to Live Without Air on the Tibetan Plateau
  


Learning to Live Without Air on the Tibetan Plateau

Within three thousand years, natural selection has accelerated the process of evolution, giving Tibetans a higher expression of gene EPAS1 than their lowland Han Chinese neighbors, recalibrating the body to live in a high altitude, low oxygen environment. Despite having low hemoglobin levels, EPAS1 allows Tibetans to tolerate hypoxia to an extent that others would fall ill. The extremity of the unique environment of the Tibetan Plateau works in harmony with gene selection to create a unique physiology. Science|Guardian

Human uniqueness lies in the homes we choose.
Hear, Speak, See No Weevil
  


Hear, Speak, See No Weevil

Exposed on a leaf or stem sits what looks like a flesh fly: It has the coral red eyes, filmic wings, and striped body, and it is making the same tell-tale jittery and skittish movements. But the timorus sarcophagoides is not a fly at all: it is a weevil. Red spots on its thorax mimic the eyes, and the weevil's hardened forewings, or elytra, mirror the markings on the fly's body that can change their texture to look transparent, allowing the insect to fool predators successfully.Guardian|BIF

Why trusting our senses may be the wrong choice.
Diamonds in Oldest Zircons Are Fakes
  


Diamonds in Oldest Zircons Are Fakes

Diamonds found in the world’s oldest zircons, a mineral found in igneous rock, are actually laboratory contamination, according to a new analysis of the Jack Hills zircons. The zircons date to the Hadean Area, about 4,200 to 3,000 million years ago, which is the earliest period in Earth’s history. Two recent papers had shown diamond structures embedded in the zircons, but in reality, they were residue left from the diamond abrasive paste used to prepare the zircon samples for analysis under microscope.  Science Direct

Uncovering others' mistakes makes for the best science.

February 6
Getting the Blues, Reds, and Greens
  


Getting the Blues, Reds, and Greens

We use color to signify particular characteristics of ourselves: we can get the blues, be rednecks or even yellow-bellied cowards, but these metaphors could have a new physical meaning. Shooting silver particles in hydrogel with a laser causes it to form hologram structures: as the hydrogel comes into contact with different compounds in the blood, it shrinks and expands, causing the holograms to change color. The bolder the color, the more the compound is in the blood; let's hope the nurse isn't colorblind.Cambridge|RSC

If we know the color, what is the sound of personhood?
Astrobiology, On a Human Scale
  


Astrobiology, On a Human Scale

France approved a heart built with satellite technology, called the "Carmat Heart," for human trials. Using the same electronics and motors as a satellite scaled down to a human scale and encased in animal pericardium membrane, the machine is masked from the body. Body and space are inaccessible, hostile places where failure is not an option: Satellites give us the uninterrupted information flow we need to forge on in space exploration, and now, a steady heart beat.Reuters|Carmat

Encounters with the Post-Human
Risk Takers Lack Self-Control
  


Risk Takers Lack Self-Control

People that take risks may seem like thrill-seekers, but in fact they may be more motivated by a lack of willpower. Neuroscientists scanned people’s brains while they played a game that forced them to choose between taking a risk to get more points, or playing safe and getting an average score. When they opted for the safer choice, the neural networks that controlled executive functions like memory and cognition were more active than when they decided to take the risk.  PNAS

For some, ignoring the risk of playing the lottery is a weekly event.

February 5
So You Think You Know Science?
  


So You Think You Know Science?

Do you know what solar radiation sunscreen is, or what red blood cells do in the body? The Pew Research Center is conducting a survey of people’s science and technology knowledge with this 13-questioninteractive quiz. Click the link and find out if you have more science savvy than the average American. People Press|Pew Center

Having some base knowledge is good, but uncertainty plays a starring role in physics.
A Planet Like a Spinning Top
  


A Planet Like a Spinning Top

A new Neptune-like planet called Kepler-431b has been found orbiting an orange and red dwarf in a binary star system. The planet wobbles wildly on its spin axis, tilting as much as 30 degrees over 11 years, far more than Earth’s own wobble of 23.5 degrees tilt every 26,000 years. As Kepler-431b orbits the binary stars, its orbit tilts, making it look as if the planet’s path is continuously moving up and down as it crosses the stars’ faces.  NASA

Our own home in the universe is rocking out of control, too.
Chatter From Beyond the Grave
  


Chatter From Beyond the Grave

New company Eterni.me wants to use your digital paper trail to create an artificial intelligence “chat bot”. An algorithm uses your instant messages, emails, and other online traces to create a bot that can talk to your loved ones from beyond the grave. Chat bots are increasingly common interfaces between companies and customers: soon they could be the interface between memories shared between two people, even when one is no more. Fast Company

A purely mathematical structure already informs each moment of your life.

February 4
Plankton Give an Ancient Weather Report
  


Plankton Give an Ancient Weather Report

Microscopic plankton build their shells in uniform layers, forming daily bands composed of chemicals filtered out from seawater. The concentration of magnesium in a plankton shell increases in warmer water, replacing the calcium usually found in the shell. By analyzing the ring patterns in plankton shells dating back tens of millions of years, scientists get a glimpse of the changing temperatures of the world’s ancient oceans. Science Direct

How to predict the ever-changing weather.
Anti-fungal Treatment has Anti-Cancer Benefit
  


Anti-fungal Treatment has Anti-Cancer Benefit

A common anti-fungal treatment called itraconazole appears to disable the  “hedgehog signaling pathway,” a molecular pathway involved in cell division and growth. When the pathway malfunctions, it can cause diseases such as basal cell carcinoma, which is the most common skin cancer in the U.S. In a small clinical trial of the anti-fungal’s effect on the cancer, researchers found that it decreased tumor size by an average of 23 percent.  Jrnl of Clinical Ontology

Discovering the unexpected, right under your nose.
Where Did Water on the Moon Come From?
  


Where Did Water on the Moon Come From?

The Moon’s oldest rocks have extremely similar hydrogen isotopic composition to the Earth’s water and carbon-rich meteorites. This affinity is the strongest evidence yet of a common source for the Moon and the Earth’s water. Either primordial water survived the supposed impact that separated the Moon from the Earth 4.5 billion years ago, or both were seeded with water not long after the Moon’s formation.  Science Direct

How man's trips to the Moon took terrestrial science into space.

February 3
Fungus That's Faking It
  


Fungus That's Faking It

Distinct and earthy, the black truffle, or tuber melanosporum, packs a punch on the nose and on the wallet. The truffles can fetch more than $1,200 per kilo, leading Chinese suppliers to try and pass off the supposedly inferior and far cheaper tuber indicum, as the real thing. Scientists at the National Institute for Agronomic Research in France are analyzing the olfactory qualities of both truffles, so that suppliers can detect when a fungus is a fake. Guardian

Sino-science thinks fame is a mark of success, but is it?
Gene Mutations Help Aboriginal Australians Withstand the Heat
  


Gene Mutations Help Aboriginal Australians Withstand the Heat

The hormone thyroxine increases in concentration in our blood when we get hot, increasing our metabolic rate far above its normal state.  Aboriginal Australians have a unique pair of mutated genes, called A191T and L283P, which regulate thyroxine. Together, they inhibit the release of thyroxine at high temperatures, keeping the body functioning normally despite living in an extremely hot environment. Royal Society

Did beer cause man to domesticate himself over time?
Aspirin Could Stop Hearing Loss in its Tracks
  


Aspirin Could Stop Hearing Loss in its Tracks

Acoustic neuromas, or vestibular schwannomas, are tumors that grow in the skull and typically cause hearing loss and tinnitus. The tumors are typically treated with surgery and radiotherapy, but a new study of more than 600 patients found that tumors grew slower in participants who took aspirin. Aspirin’s anti-inflammatory properties are well documented, but more research is needed to see if and how the aspirin halted tumor growth.  Otology and Nuerotology

More medical breakthroughs that came from unlikely places.

February 2
The Geometry of American Football
  


The Geometry of American Football

When a player with the ball makes a break for the end zone, defenders have to chase him at the ideal “angle of pursuit” if they want to stop him in his tracks. Taking a defender’s running speed into account, Pythagoras’ theorem can be used to find the angle he needs to run at: the path of the defender is the hypotenuse of a triangle drawn between the end zone and the players’ starting positions. Because there is no time for math on the pitch, players judge the angle by instinct alone. Science 360

The secret of the perfect game of tennis.
Dark Pools of the Stock Market
  


Dark Pools of the Stock Market

Most stock trading takes place in public, but about 10% is hidden in so-called “dark pools.” These are private stock markets where trades are anonymous, meaning big financial players can make trades without impacting the market. Despite the attraction of trading without public scrutiny, the dark pools often attract under-informed investors that won’t be able to take up the other side of the trade fast enough for the big traders who rely on deals that go down within nanoseconds, keeping the biggest deals out in the open. MIT|Oxford Journals

We put our money down on blind faith even when we know the stakes.
Man’s Biggest Footprint
  


Man’s Biggest Footprint

Seven years ago, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change confirmed in a report that the world was getting warmer. The authors said that the most likely cause was the increase in anthropogenic greenhouse gases in the Earth’s atmosphere. In a new article linked below, Lee Billing’s explores mankind’s effect on the geological record. BBC|IPCC

Join the search for mankind's mark on Earth.

February 1
The Older the Population, the More Worried About Aging
  


The Older the Population, the More Worried About Aging

By 2050, the number of people over 65 is expected to triple, and East Asian countries have some of the most rapidly aging populations in the world. Their largest demographic group will be citizens over 65 by then. This is causing some anxiety: 9 out of 10 Japanese, 8 out of 10 South Korean and 7 out of 10 Chinese people say aging is a major problem in their country. Pew Center

How we imagine ourselves in time is very personal.
Tracking the Flood Through Time
  


Tracking the Flood Through Time

This composite radar image of Zambia’s Zambezi River’s flood plain combines three images taken at different points of time in 2011. Every spring, the flood transforms the land into one of the largest wetlands in the world, supporting diverse populations of fish and animals and nourishing grasslands. The image shows the river in lime green snaking from top left to bottom right, and the flood plain in deep blue coming right to the edges of a city, picked out in white. ESA

How do you know if the constants of nature change through time?
Life Before It Even Happens
  

Life Before It Even Happens


Children believe they are alive before their parents have even conceived them, but only in spirit.  Most of those surveyed said that they felt emotion and desire before being born, usually because they believed their prelife self would anticipate their birth. It seems that even at a young age, people believe that the mind, not the body, is at the core of personhood.  

What is our personal beginning of time?

January 31
 Ancient Alasitas Festival Safeguards the Coming Year
  


Ancient Alasitas Festival Safeguards the Coming Year

In La Paz, Bolivia, people prepare for the coming year during the ancient harvest festival Alasitas, which celebrates the Andean god of abundance, Ekeko. People buy miniatures of things they want, whether it is a new car, a house, or a divorce certificate. In a confluence of Christianity and folk tradition, Andean and Roman Catholic priests bless the objects, before the goods are offered to Ekeko. BBC

The ancient texts that may hold modern cures.
Wolves Are Top Dog At Social Learning
  


Wolves Are Top Dog At Social Learning

Dogs may know how to sit, lie down, and roll over, but their cousins, the wolves, learn from each other. They pay close attention to demonstrations from other wolves in order to learn how to behave in a close-knit pack. This habit guarantees better cooperation, something domesticated dogs no longer have to worry about. PLOS One

Why we need social hierarchies.
Smelling Out the Perfect Partner
  


Smelling Out the Perfect Partner

Many insects co-opt ants to defend them in return for food rewards, but ants are picky about what species they will serve. To get their attention, Narathura japonica caterpillars excrete the same hydrocarbon mix on their bodies as ants do. The ants recognize the smell and enter into partnership with the caterpillar, protecting it while supping on nutritious droplets leaked by the caterpillar’s dorsal nectary organ.  PLOS One

To speak to plants and bugs, you need to smell right.

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