Frankenstein Outside the Castle

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Dr. Frankenstein in L.I.F.E | Image courtesy of ASU It’s alive! The first time Mary Shelley introduced Dr. Frankenstein’s lab in her 1818 novel, she described it as “a solitary chamber, or rather cell, at the top of the house… I kept my workshop of filthy creation… The dissecting room and the slaughter-house furnished many of my materials.” Two hundred years later, researchers at Arizona State University (ASU) in Tempe, Arizona are challenging that or ...read more

The 'Trillion Planet Survey' is Looking for Alien Laser Beams

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The Andromeda Galaxy, where researchers are searching for bright lights that could be sign of intelligent extraterrestrial life. (Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech) An Extraterrestrial Search Physicists at the University of California, Santa Barbara are taking a unique approach to the search for extraterrestrial life. Instead of searching the cosmos for radio signals, they’re hunting for brilliant light beams to locate intelligent beings in the Andromeda Galaxy. It’s inspired by UC Santa Ba ...read more

Scientists Discover 102 Genes Linked to Autism In Largest Study To Date

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A new study looks at the genes linked to autism. (Credit: Sharomka/shutterstock) The quest to understand autism spectrum disorder seems an unending one. Now, researchers discover 102 genes associated with the disorder. The find virtually doubles the number of genes implicated in the complicated condition. Curbed Communication Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a developmental condition that affects at least 1 in 59 U.S. children. The disorder usually shows up as a range of symptoms in early chi ...read more

How Climatic Changes Toppled The Ancient Megacity Of Angkor

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(Credit: Intarapong/Shutterstock) Angkor, one of the most significant archaeological sites in Southeast Asia, was a thriving metropolis at the center of the Khmer Empire in the 13th century. Then its inhabitants suddenly left town. Now, researchers find abrupt climatic changes and vulnerable infrastructure led to the city’s demise. It’s a cautionary tale for modern cities, many of which are already feeling the stress of climate change. Monumental Megacity Once a vast, urb ...read more

Where Should NASA Search for Extraterrestrial Life? Underground, A New Report Says

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This artist’s concept shows Jupiter’s moon Europa. Researchers believe that a vast, liquid ocean could exist below the moon’s icy surface. (Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech) We usually associate habitability with terrestrial, Earth-like planets, but what if completely different environments are capable of harboring life? A new report released by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine (NASEM) recommends that NASA search these disregarded worlds for signs of life ...read more

Oldest Trace Fossils Ever Found Might Not Be Fossils

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Trace fossils indicating the first signs life on Earth or just deformed rock? Researchers previously interpreted several anomalies (yellow arrows) found in 3.7 billion-year-old rock as the oldest evidence of life, but a new study, which focused on one portion of the sample (blue box), questions the previous findings. (Credit Allwood et al 2018) Fossil or faux pas? A 2016 study that interpreted rock anomalies as the oldest evidence of life on our planet got it wrong, say researchers be ...read more

Dogs Accompanied the First Farmers to Europe

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(Credit: MPH Photos/Shutterstock) The first farmers of Europe didn’t leave anything to chance. When they migrated west from the Near East, beginning about 10,000 years ago, they brought everything they needed: crop seeds, domesticated animals, pottery and agriculture tools. And, oh yes, man’s best friend. In a study published Tuesday in Biology Letters, a journal published by the Royal Society, a team of international researchers says that dogs accompanied Near Eastern farmers ...read more

Kīlauea's Summit Collapsed Into Itself

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The new shape of Kīlauea’s summit area, where the caldera floor collapsed over the course of the summer. USGS/HVO. A few weeks back I wrote about how much the lower East Rift Zone of Hawaii’s Kīlauea had been changed by this summer’s eruption. Over half a cubic kilometer of lava came pouring out of the multitude of fissures that opening in Leilani Estates and the neighboring area and 850 acres were added to the Big Island from all those lava flows entering the ocean. ...read more

20 Things You Didn't Know About … Lasers

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1. Chances are, you can thank a laser for helping you get through the day. The technology lets us do everything from scan groceries at the checkout to remove regretted tattoos. 2. The word laser, coined in 1957, is an acronym for “light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation.” Since that -er ending makes a laser seem like a doer of ... something, it soon spawned the verb “to lase.” 3. Unlike the sun or a flashlight, which shines in a broad range of colors combi ...read more

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