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Science & Technology

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

    Science & Technology

    How birdwatching can slow the aging of your vision and memory

    According to researchers at Baycrest Hospital in Toronto, birdwatching skills are closely linked to the development of …

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  • Science & Technology

    Does Waking Up at 5 AM Actually Make You More Productive?

    Biological Clocks and Chronotypes: Why We’re Different The human body operates on circadian rhythms—an internal biological clock that regulates sleep, alertness, body temperature, hormone levels, and cognitive activity throughout the…

  • Science & Technology

    60,000-Year-Old Eggshell Engravings Reveal Earliest Geometric Thinking

    A study published in PLOS ONE by researchers from the University of Bologna (Italy) presents evidence of the oldest geometric thinking in Homo sapiens, found on fragments of eggshells from…

  • Science & Technology

    ALMA’s Most Detailed Milky Way Image Reveals How Stars Form

    A new photograph taken by a radio telescope in the Atacama Desert in Chile is the most detailed image of our galaxy ever captured. Experts have hailed this image as…

  • Science & Technology

    Wild chimps get drunk on fermented fruit—about as much as one to two human drinks

    A team of biologists from the University of California, Berkeley, and the University of Michigan has discovered that wild African chimpanzees consume roughly the same amount of ethanol in a…

  • Science & Technology

    How Roman Artists Made ‘Red Gold’ — A Lost Painting Technique Found in Cartagena

    During a groundbreaking archaeometric study in the former city of Carthage Nova (now Cartagena), founded in 227 B.C., researchers uncovered a unique painting technique used by Roman artisans. The scientists’…

  • Science & Technology

    Why Myopia Is Surging Worldwide and the Hidden Cause Behind It

    Medical professionals and researchers are sounding the alarm: myopia, or nearsightedness, is rapidly spreading worldwide. A team of researchers from the State University of New York College of Optometry (SUNY)…

  • Science & Technology

    A 43,000-Year-Old Symbol System Suggests Paleolithic Proto-Writing

    Artifacts from the Stone Age discovered in Germany have reshaped our understanding of the timeline of human symbolic behavior on our planet. It turns out that around 43,000 years ago,…

  • Science & Technology

    Alaska Dig Points to an Ice-Free Inland Route from Asia 14,000 Years Ago

    A new study finds that tools and other artifacts uncovered by archaeologists in Alaska shed light on how people first reached North America. The excavated evidence of prehistoric migration is…

  • Science & Technology

    A rare nicotine-receptor gene variant makes it easier for carriers to avoid heavy smoking

    An international team of geneticists — including researchers from Mexico — found that people who carry a rare variant of a nicotine receptor gene are less likely to develop nicotine…

  • Science & Technology

    Why the 21–24-foot ‘toothed’ bird Pelagornis sandersi probably didn’t skim the sea

    The bird species Pelagornis sandersi is one of the largest known flying birds. It also boasts the largest wingspan ever recorded, measuring between 21 and 24 feet. This magnificent creature…

  • Science & Technology

    A compound in aloe vera shows promise for slowing Alzheimer’s

    A new study has identified a compound in aloe vera that may slow the progression of Alzheimer’s disease. This severe, incurable condition gradually destroys memory and other cognitive functions because…

  • Science & Technology

    Ancient ‘Gate of Death’ Tunnel Found Under Roman Amphitheater Near Split

    The ancient port city of Salona, once a thriving capital of the Roman province of Dalmatia, continues to unveil its secrets. The magnificent ruins, which form an open-air archaeological complex,…

  • Science & Technology

    Why small dogs tremble so much — it isn’t just the cold

    When you take your retriever for a walk, its movements are clear and confident. Meanwhile, your neighbor’s Chihuahua often shakes for no apparent reason, so much so that you feel…

  • Science & Technology

    Homo erectus reached East Asia 1.7 million years ago — 600,000 years earlier than we thought

    A recent discovery of fossil remains has confirmed that the distant ancestor of modern humans—Homo erectus—appeared in East Asia hundreds of thousands of years earlier than anthropologists had believed. The…

  • Science & Technology

    How Physics Explains the Perfect Pancake Flip

    Physicists from the Royal Institute of Great Britain have clearly demonstrated how to flip a pancake by tossing it in the air above the skillet. The secret to this skill…

  • Science & Technology

    Meet the ‘hellish heron’ — a new Spinosaurus with a bizarre crest unearthed in the Sahara

    In the Sahara, researchers uncovered a previously unknown species of Spinosaurus. Its skull bore a distinctive crest unlike any seen before in this group of dinosaurs. The official name of…

  • Science & Technology

    Lost Roman Theater and Forum Discovered Buried Along the Appian Way

    It might seem that the cradle of Roman civilization has long been devoid of archaeological mysteries. However, that’s not the case. Recently, researchers stumbled upon previously unknown architectural structures hidden…

  • Science & Technology

    One Year of Regular Exercise Can Make Your Brain Look Years Younger

    Researchers at the AdventHealth Research Institute in the U.S. found that people who followed a regular exercise program for a year had brains that looked significantly younger on MRI. This…

  • Science & Technology

    Laser-etched glass stores data for 10,000 years — here’s how

    Humans used stone and parchment to preserve information. More recently, people invented floppy disks, CDs, and flash drives for the same purpose. But all known data storage media have limited…

  • Science & Technology

    How climate warming is turning up the heat on frog love songs

    Researchers at the University of California, Davis, have found that the sound and quality of male mating calls are significantly influenced by environmental temperature. Warmer temperatures make their love songs…

  • Science & Technology

    Neolithic dugout and settlement unearthed beneath Dortmund university meadow

    During planned excavations ahead of infrastructure construction at the Technical University of Dortmund in Germany, archaeologists made a remarkable discovery. They uncovered traces of a long-forgotten settlement. On a plot…

  • Science & Technology

    Robocops Are Coming by 2031 — How AI Will Remake Policing

    Professor Ivan San of the University of Delaware told the Daily Mail that robotic police officers could be patrolling our streets by 2031. These real-life ‘Robocops’ would be capable of…

  • Science & Technology

    Rare Seljuk Amulet Unearthed in the Ruins of Lystra

    Archaeological excavations in the ancient city of Lystra in Konya province have turned up a string of remarkable finds. Among the latest discoveries is a rare bronze amulet believed to…

  • Science & Technology

    Pink noise can cut REM and deep sleep — earplugs gave the best rest

    A new study reveals that the calming backdrop of so-called pink noise, designed to drown out external sounds and lull us to sleep, may not be as harmless as we…

  • Science & Technology

    Why We Get Selfish When Options Are Plentiful — and Kinder When They’re Scarce

    We like to think that kindness is something innate. As if it’s a stable trait: you’re either generous or you’re not. But in real life, every act of helping is…

  • Science & Technology

    Inside Archaeopteryx’s Beak: Surprising Features That Shaped Bird Evolution

    For a long time, Archaeopteryx was considered the quintessential example of a transitional link between reptiles and birds. However, a fresh analysis of one of the best-preserved skeletons, known as…

  • Science & Technology

    Anthropic Warns Today’s AI Could Help Plan Catastrophic Crimes — Urgent Safeguards Needed

    The risk of artificial intelligence becoming a tool for catastrophic crimes is no longer just theoretical—companies are calling for urgent security measures, reports ZME Science. Anthropic’s new report says current…

  • Science & Technology

    The Real Reason Humans Have Chins

    Auguste Rodin’s “The Thinker” is perhaps the most recognizable sculpture in the world. A man frozen in thought, resting his chin on his hand, has become a symbol of deep…

  • Science & Technology

    Before Numbers: What 8,000-Year-Old Mesopotamian Pottery Reveals About Early Math

    Sometimes history takes unexpected turns. We tend to think that mathematics began with numbers, counting, and the first inscriptions on clay tablets. However, new research on ancient ceramics from Mesopotamia,…

  • Science & Technology

    AI Cracks a Roman Mystery: The Stone That Turned Out to Be an Ancient Game Board

    Archaeological discoveries often leave researchers scratching their heads, but this time cutting-edge technology helped solve one. A smooth, mysterious stone from the Roman era found in the Netherlands had puzzled…

  • Science & Technology

    How a Tiny Copper Tool Pushed Back Egyptian Metalworking by 2,000 Years

    Nearly a century ago, archaeologists excavating a cemetery in Upper Egypt dating to the late fourth millennium B.C. found a small, hard-to-identify object in the grave of an adult male.…

  • Science & Technology

    Ask this six-word question to learn what makes your partner feel loved

    Harvard psychiatrists say the smartest moves are often the simplest. All it takes is one short question that can break the ice and reveal new dimensions of intimacy. Even in…

  • Science & Technology

    3,000 Years Before Apple: How Digital Archaeology Uncovered Tutankhamun’s Medical Sandals

    We often picture Tutankhamun’s treasures as piles of gold waiting to be dusted off. But a recent Live Science piece shows that the pharaoh’s real secrets came into focus only…

  • Science & Technology

    Hidden Under Moss: 3,000-Year-Old Rock Carvings Found at Kolsåstoppen

    A recent discovery beneath the Kolsåstoppen hill in the municipality of Bærum, in eastern Norway, has once again drawn attention to prehistoric rock art. These artworks were created more than…

  • Science & Technology

    Black hole’s jets blast energy trillions of times greater than the Death Star

    A team of astronomers from Oregon State University and Harvard University, led by astrophysicist Ivette Sendres, has discovered a supermassive black hole behaving strangely. The radio emissions from it are…

  • Science & Technology

    Roman Ship Loaded with Garum Discovered off Italy’s Ionian Coast

    The ancient port city of Gallipoli is located in southern Italy, in the Apulia region, along the Ionian coast of the Salento peninsula (not to be confused with Gallipoli in…

  • Science & Technology

    Why Women Often Prefer Men Who Look Like Their Brothers

    Researchers at the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology in Seoul found that women often choose men who resemble their brothers. Kirsten Dunst and Jesse Plemons, Justin and Hailey…

  • Science & Technology

    How Caring for Grandkids Boosts Grandparents’ Brain Health

    Many grandparents are dedicated to ensuring their grandchildren grow up healthy and well-rounded. However, researchers from Tilburg University in the Netherlands have found that older adults also reap significant benefits…

  • Science & Technology

    Archaeologists May Have Found a Lost Roman City on Mallorca

    A research team from the Department of Social Mediterranean Archaeology at the Autonomous University of Barcelona has uncovered an ancient Roman city during excavations on the Spanish island of Mallorca.…

  • Science & Technology

    A Nilotic Mosaic in a Roman Anatolian Villa Reveals Edessa’s Far‑Flung Tastes

    Researchers have revisited the Birds Room mosaic from the so-called Villa of the Amazons, excavated between 2006 and 2009 at the Halepli Bahçe site in ancient Edessa in southeastern modern-day…

  • Science & Technology

    How the Green River Managed to Flow ‘Uphill’ Through the Uinta Mountains

    Researchers have uncovered why the Green River doesn’t skirt the Uinta Mountains but instead carves its way through the heart of the rocky range before merging with the Colorado River.…

  • Science & Technology

    An AI Learned to Recognize Individual Bears

    For most people, estimating a bear’s weight or fur color isn’t a top priority during an unexpected encounter in the woods. However, for ecologists and zoologists, these details are crucial…

  • Science & Technology

    Rebooting the thymus: mRNA therapy restores youthful T-cells in mice

    Our immune system weakens as we age, leaving the body more vulnerable to disease. Recently, scientists discovered a way to rejuvenate a key part of the immune system, the thymus,…

  • Science & Technology

    How human voices can throw your dog off balance

    The sound of food pouring into a bowl, the creak of the front door, the laughter of a boisterous group—these everyday noises can significantly affect your dog’s balance. A team…

  • Science & Technology

    1,400-Year-Old Zapotec Tomb Reveals Sinister Owl Holding a Human Head

    A team from Mexico’s National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH) has discovered a 1,400-year-old Zapotec tomb that researchers believed was lost. The artistic decorations are remarkably well preserved, featuring…

  • Science & Technology

    Controversial Claim: The Great Pyramid Might Date to 20,000 B.C.

    Could the Great Pyramid of Giza be hiding a much older history? A hypothesis from engineer‑researcher Alberto Donini of the University of Bologna has ignited intense debate. Until now, the…

  • Science & Technology

    Britain’s Police Are Getting AI Tools to Supercharge Crime-Fighting

    British police are entering a high-tech era: AI-powered tools will now be part of their crime-fighting arsenal. Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood says these new technologies will “increase the number of…

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LATEST POSTS

A woman’s immune system is more susceptible to age-related changes than a man’s.
Postponed-Life Syndrome: How to Find Happiness Here and Now
Tooth loss leads to weight gain: study
People enjoy dull small talk, even though they deny it.
Triassic relative of the crocodile: scientists have identified a new species
The negative effects of artificial sweeteners are passed on to future generations.
Millennia in Stone: Rare Rock Paintings Discovered in Mexico
Genetic quirks: some people need only four hours of sleep a day.

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