Paleo in the News

Chemistry that works like Hermione’s magic handbag wins a 2025 chemistry Nobel

Science News - Wed, 10/08/2025 - 12:27
Richard Robson, Susumu Kitagawa and Omar Yaghi developed metal-organic frameworks, structures that can collect water from air, capture CO₂ and more.
Categories: Fossils

Biased online images train AI bots to see women as younger, less experienced

Science News - Wed, 10/08/2025 - 10:00
Age and gender bias in online images feeds into AI tools, revealing stereotypes shaping digital systems and hiring algorithms, researchers report.
Categories: Fossils

Scientists just proved the moai could walk, solving a 500-year mystery

Science Daily - Paleontology - Wed, 10/08/2025 - 08:43
Researchers confirmed that Rapa Nui’s moai statues could “walk” upright using a rocking motion, aided by rope and just a few people. Experiments with replicas and 3D models revealed design features like a forward lean and curved bases that made movement possible. Concave roads across the island further supported this transport method. The findings celebrate the innovation and intelligence of the ancient islanders.
Categories: Fossils

Are ultraprocessed foods truly addictive?

Science News - Wed, 10/08/2025 - 08:00
Ultraprocessed foods can create powerful pulls similar to those of alcohol, nicotine or opioids, with worrisome consequences for our health.
Categories: Fossils

The hidden Denisovan gene that helped humans conquer a new world

Science Daily - Paleontology - Tue, 10/07/2025 - 22:38
Ancient humans crossing the Bering Strait into the Americas carried more than tools and determination—they also carried a genetic legacy from Denisovans, an extinct human relative. A new study reveals that a mysterious gene called MUC19, inherited through interbreeding between Denisovans, Neanderthals, and humans, may have played a vital role in helping early Americans survive new diseases, foods, and environments.
Categories: Fossils

The hidden Denisovan gene that helped humans conquer a new world

Science Daily - Fossils - Tue, 10/07/2025 - 22:38
Ancient humans crossing the Bering Strait into the Americas carried more than tools and determination—they also carried a genetic legacy from Denisovans, an extinct human relative. A new study reveals that a mysterious gene called MUC19, inherited through interbreeding between Denisovans, Neanderthals, and humans, may have played a vital role in helping early Americans survive new diseases, foods, and environments.
Categories: Fossils

Antarctic krill eject more food when it’s contaminated with plastic

Science News - Tue, 10/07/2025 - 18:01
Antarctic krill don’t just sequester carbon in their poop; they also make carbon-rich pellets out of leftovers. But microplastics may throw a wrench in the works.
Categories: Fossils

Discoveries that enabled quantum computers win the Nobel Prize in physics

Science News - Tue, 10/07/2025 - 11:06
In the 1980s, John Clarke, Michel Devoret and John Martinis demonstrated quantum effects in an electric circuit, an advance that underlies today’s quantum computers.
Categories: Fossils

What the longest woolly rhino horn tells us about the beasts’ biology

Science News - Tue, 10/07/2025 - 09:00
A nearly 20,000-year-old woolly rhino horn reveals the extinct herbivores lived as long as modern-day rhinos, despite harsher Ice Age conditions.
Categories: Fossils

Finding immune cells that stop a body from attacking itself wins medicine Nobel

Science News - Mon, 10/06/2025 - 12:25
Shimon Sakaguchi discovered T-reg immune cells. Mary Brunkow and Fred Ramsdell identified the cells’ role in autoimmune disease.
Categories: Fossils

New oral GLP-1 drugs could offer more options for weight loss

Science News - Mon, 10/06/2025 - 08:00
GLP-1 injections use needles and require refrigeration. Pills that work in a similar way could be a cheaper, simpler solution.
Categories: Fossils

Would a ban on genetic engineering of wildlife hamper conservation?

New Scientist - Mon, 10/06/2025 - 03:00
Some conservation groups are calling for an effective ban on genetic modification, but others say these technologies are crucial for preserving biodiversity
Categories: Fossils

Hidden for 70 million years, a tiny fossil fish is rewriting freshwater evolution

Science Daily - Paleontology - Sun, 10/05/2025 - 00:57
Researchers in Alberta uncovered a fossil fish that rewrites the evolutionary history of otophysans, which today dominate freshwater ecosystems. The new species, Acronichthys maccognoi, shows early adaptations for its unusual hearing system. Evidence suggests otophysans moved from oceans to rivers more than once, leaving scientists puzzled about their ancient global journeys.
Categories: Fossils

Hidden for 70 million years, a tiny fossil fish is rewriting freshwater evolution

Science Daily - Fossils - Sun, 10/05/2025 - 00:57
Researchers in Alberta uncovered a fossil fish that rewrites the evolutionary history of otophysans, which today dominate freshwater ecosystems. The new species, Acronichthys maccognoi, shows early adaptations for its unusual hearing system. Evidence suggests otophysans moved from oceans to rivers more than once, leaving scientists puzzled about their ancient global journeys.
Categories: Fossils

Hidden for 70 million years, a tiny fossil fish is rewriting freshwater evolution

Science Daily - Dinosaurs - Sun, 10/05/2025 - 00:57
Researchers in Alberta uncovered a fossil fish that rewrites the evolutionary history of otophysans, which today dominate freshwater ecosystems. The new species, Acronichthys maccognoi, shows early adaptations for its unusual hearing system. Evidence suggests otophysans moved from oceans to rivers more than once, leaving scientists puzzled about their ancient global journeys.
Categories: Fossils

What Jane Goodall taught me about bones, loss and not wasting anything

Science News - Fri, 10/03/2025 - 13:04
A personal reflection recalls Jane Goodall’s quiet pragmatism, her deep bond with Gombe’s chimps and the scientific legacy of her skeletal collection.
Categories: Fossils

To make a tasty yogurt, just add ants (and their microbes)

Science News - Fri, 10/03/2025 - 10:01
Spiking milk with live ants makes tangy traditional yogurt. Researchers have identified the ants' microbial pals and enzymes that help the process.
Categories: Fossils

Nobel Prizes honor great discoveries — but leave much of science unseen

Science News - Fri, 10/03/2025 - 08:00
The Nobel Prize might be the most famous science prize but it celebrates just a narrow slice of science and very few scientists.
Categories: Fossils

Scientists uncover a mysterious Jurassic lizard with snake-like jaws

Science Daily - Paleontology - Fri, 10/03/2025 - 06:01
A strange Jurassic lizard discovered on Scotland’s Isle of Skye is shaking up what we know about snake evolution. Named Breugnathair elgolensis, the “false snake of Elgol” combined hook-like, python-style teeth and jaws with the short body and limbs of a lizard. Researchers spent nearly a decade studying the 167-million-year-old fossil, revealing that it belonged to a newly defined group of squamates and carried features of both snakes and geckos.
Categories: Fossils

Scientists uncover a mysterious Jurassic lizard with snake-like jaws

Science Daily - Fossils - Fri, 10/03/2025 - 06:01
A strange Jurassic lizard discovered on Scotland’s Isle of Skye is shaking up what we know about snake evolution. Named Breugnathair elgolensis, the “false snake of Elgol” combined hook-like, python-style teeth and jaws with the short body and limbs of a lizard. Researchers spent nearly a decade studying the 167-million-year-old fossil, revealing that it belonged to a newly defined group of squamates and carried features of both snakes and geckos.
Categories: Fossils

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