Cracking the Genetic Code on Facial Features

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Sometimes, resemblances between parent and child or siblings can be uncanny. Other times, such resemblances can pop up between aunt and niece or grandfather and grandchild. And still, other times, resemblances don’t exist at all.One child may look like one parent, and their sibling may look like the other parent. Sometimes, certain facial traits seem to jump from one generation to the next repeatedly.All of these outcomes lead us to wonder what impacts facial features. What part of our DNA is ...read more

These Animals Have the Best and Worst Sense of Taste

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Humans derive their sense of taste from tastebuds, which allow us to identify bitter, salty, sour, and sweet. In 1990, umami was identified as the fifth taste. Many animals also get their sense of taste through tastebuds, although there are other methods in the animal kingdom for identifying taste. Let’s take a look. What Animals Have the Best and Worst Sense of Taste?(Credit: MEDIAIMAG/Shutterstock)The animal with the best sense of taste is the catfish. Possessing over 100,000 (and in some c ...read more

Do Fish Sleep? The Subtle Clues in Their Behavior

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Many fish owners have tapped on their aquarium and hoped little Bubbles was merely taking a nap inside the tiny castle.It can be difficult to determine whether a fish is sleeping, and even scientists have struggled to understand the sleep process of fish in the past.In recent years, technology has made it possible for researchers to scan fish brains and learn how they snooze.Do Fish Sleep?“Fish sleep, but not the same as humans or mammals,” says Jared Guthridge, the aquarium curator at the A ...read more

The Hunt For The Laws Of Physics Behind Memory And Thought

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One of the curious features of the laws of physics is that many of them seem to be the result of the bulk behavior of many much smaller components. The atoms and molecules in a gas, for example, move at a huge range of velocities. When constrained in a container, these particles continually strike the surface creating a force. But it is not necessary to know the velocities of all the particles to determine this force. Instead, their influence averages out into a predictable and measurable bulk p ...read more

How to Build A Virtual Cell With Artificial Intelligence

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The cell is a biochemical factory of immense complexity. As fundamental units of life, cells harvest energy from the environment and use it to synthesize complex molecular machinery, to build replicas of themselves and to move. This is a 4-billion-year-old trick that even today mystifies biologists who struggle to understand the processes and principles at work.To change this, life scientists have modeled cells at various levels of detail. These models can simulate some important biomolecular pr ...read more

Unique Discovery Paints New Picture of Sauropod Migration Patterns

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A large and unique discovery in Spain reveals how sauropods may have dispersed across Asia and Europe before dinosaurs went extinct.The well-preserved bones of the newly named Qunkasaura have improved paleontologists’ knowledge of dinosaurs in Europe during the Late Cretaceous.“Qunkasaura was one of the most outstanding specimens in our quarry,” says Pedro Mocho, a paleontologist at the University of Lisbon in Portugal.How Was Qunkasaura Discovered?(Credit: GBE-UNED) General view of the ...read more

Rare Florida Fossil Finally Ends Debate About How Porcupine Jaws and Tails Evolved

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A rare, nearly complete fossil of an extinct North American porcupine helped me and my colleagues solve a decades-long debate about how the modern North American porcupine evolved from its ancestors.Published in Current Biology, our paper argues that North American porcupine ancestors may well date back 10 million years, but they wouldn’t be recognizable until about 8 million years later.By comparing the bone structure of porcupines across North America and South America, we determined that fo ...read more

Magma Feeding the Eruption in Iceland Has a Complicated Past

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It has been over 10 months since the on-again, off-again eruption near Grindavík in Iceland began. Since then, multiple eruptions have tapped a source of magma at the base of the crust under the island nation. That magma made its way to the surface to eruption as spectacular lava fountains and flows that have covered a significant area of real estate near the small fishing village and Blue Lagoon hydrothermal area.Thankfully, there has been only one death from a worker falling into a crack whil ...read more

How Evolutionary Traps Plague the Animal Kingdom

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In a world so thoroughly reshaped by human hands, animals often bump into novel ecological conditions — problems evolution didn’t prepare them for. Plastic items look like food, but they’re indigestible; artificial lights look like stars, but they’re useless in navigation; dead logs look like prime real estate, but they’re often bound for the woodchipper. Natural selection couldn’t foresee all these deadly new surprises, known as “evolutionary traps,” and thus, animals lack the b ...read more

Bees have irrational biases when choosing which flowers to feed on − just like human shoppers do

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Just like people confronted with a sea of options at the grocery store, bees foraging in meadows encounter many different flowers at once. They must decide which ones to visit for food, but it isn’t always a straightforward choice.Flowers offer two types of food: nectar and pollen, which can vary in important ways. Nectar, for instance, can fluctuate in concentration, volume, refill rate, and accessibility. It also contains secondary metabolites, such as caffeine and nicotine, which can be eit ...read more

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