aperçu énergieJapan 100-million-year-old seafloor sediment bacteria have been resuscitated | Boing Boing boingboing.net - Miss Cellania A Japanese research team drilled into the sea floor under 6,000 feet of ocean in the South Pacific Gyre and pulled up sludge that had been sitting …
aperçu énergieSpace Astronaut-explorer Richard Garriott makes record-breaking dive to deepest point on Earth Live Science - Robert Z. Pearlman The son of a NASA astronaut and a video game pioneer who previously traversed both the North and South poles and funded his own trip to the …
aperçu énergieDark Matter 'Gravity portals' could morph dark matter into ordinary matter, astrophysicists propose space.com - Paul Sutter Astrophysicists have an idea that could help to solve two mysteries: the reason for the bizarre abundance of super-high-energy radiation shooting …
aperçu énergieInformation Literacy 10 tips for teaching critical thinking + information literacy thecornerstoneforteachers.com The Truth for Teachers podcast is doing a two-part series about media literacy this season. Back in episode 216, I spoke with Peter Adams of the News …
aperçu énergieTumors The answer to cancer might be these tiny robots bgr.com - Mike Wehner Cancer treatments have improved dramatically over the past few decades. Many types of cancer have a high survival rate thanks to medical …
aperçu énergieChromosomes Your genetics influence how resilient you are to cold temperatures: new research verified_publisherSalonThis article was originally published on The Conversation. Some people just aren't bothered by the cold, no matter how low the temperature dips. And the reason for this may be in a person's genes. Our...
aperçu énergieBoeing Boeing Starliner test flight delayed once again verified_publisherDigital Trends - Georgina Torbet The second orbital test flight of the Boeing Starliner has been delayed again. The Starliner is designed to ferry astronauts between the Earth and …
aperçu énergieCRISPR "The Code Breaker": Jennifer Doudna and how CRISPR may revolutionize mankind verified_publisherCBS News When Jennifer Doudna won the Nobel Prize for Chemistry last year, there was no black-tie ceremony in Sweden. Because of the pandemic, she picked up …
aperçu énergieCarbon VC Lindy Fishburne on the sudden democratization of science -- and deep tech investing verified_publisherTechCrunch - Connie LoizosDeep science investor Lindy Fishburne cofounded the seed- and early-stage venture firm Breakout Ventures several years ago, after cofounding Breakout Labs within the Thiel Foundation back in 2011, and...
aperçu énergieEarth Science Asteroid dust helps solve the mystery of dinosaur extinction verified_publisherTNW - The ConversationMore than 99% of all organisms that have ever lived on Earth are now extinct. Most of these just died out quietly. However, in Earth’s history there have been five major mass extinction events – known...
aperçu énergieCell Biology The epic battle with cancer's 'Death Star' verified_publisherThe Guardian - David CoxIn the early 1980s, Channing Der was just beginning his career as a scientist at Harvard Medical School when he happened upon a discovery that would change the course of cancer research. At the time, holy...