science

Asteroid hunters spot 27,500 overlooked near-Earth asteroids more than were discovered by all of the worlds telescopes last year - New York Post

Ben Cost

We may no longer have to fear unseen Empire State Building-sized space rocks passing within our orbit. Asteroid hunters have identified 27,500 overlooked near-Earth asteroids using cutting-edge tec ...[Continue Reading]

New York Post

17 days ago

Recent News (Science)

science

Some mice have a cheating heart. It's a hormonal thing, scientists find. - The Washington Post

Mark Johnson

The deer mouse, believed to be the most common mammal in North America, has a very different take on family values thanits evolutionary sibling, the oldfield mouse. Oldfield mice are monogamous. Fat ...[Continue Reading]

The Washington Post

about 24 hours ago

science

The First Warm-Blooded Dinosaurs Probably Evolved 180 Million Years Ago - IFLScience

Stephen Luntz

The ability to regulate body temperature internally, rather than relying on the Sun, may have first appeared among dinosaurs around 180 million years ago, coinciding with an extreme climatic period. ...[Continue Reading]

IFLScience

1 day ago


science

Ancient Humans Crafted Deadly Wooden Weapons 300000 Years Ago, Study Finds - ScienceAlert

Tessa Koumoundouros

Powerful new imaging techniques reveal humans were already crafting complex hunting weapons from wood 300,000 years ago, upending the stereotype of the Stone Age. Archeologists have previously suspe ...[Continue Reading]

ScienceAlert

1 day ago


science

Recycled beer yeast can remove lead from water: breakthrough discovery - New York Post

Alex Mitchell

Well drink to that! Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Georgia Tech have found a way to use recycled beer yeast to make water cleaner by removing lead, the schools announc ...[Continue Reading]

New York Post

1 day ago


science

How Gossip Shapes Cooperation - Neuroscience News

Neuroscience News

Summary: A new study explores how gossip influences cooperation and behavior. Researchers found that gossip helps maintain social order by spreading information about reputations, which encourages co ...[Continue Reading]

Neurosciencenews.com

1 day ago