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Meteor strikes on the moon! Astronomer captures possible Geminid lunar impacts
By Daisy Dobrijevic published
A Japanese astronomer captured several impacts on the moon during the Geminid meteor shower.
Watch adorable birdlike robot waddle, fall down and leap into flight — it could change how drones take off forever
By Rory Bathgate published
With legs and wings, the RAVEN can take off with no runway, and even hop along the ground.
Archaeologists have found dozens more sacrificed horses in 2,800-year-old burial in Siberia that's eerily similar to Scythian graves
By Sierra Bouchér, Kristina Killgrove last updated
The sacrifices could be an early form of a Scythian burial tradition that lasted for hundreds of years.
Recycled black plastic can contain flame retardants, viral study found. That's still true — but their math was off
By Michael Schubert last updated
Researchers detected flame retardants in household items made from recycled black plastic. The study later received a correction — but regardless of this paper, the chemicals' health effects remain unclear.
Large Hadron Collider finds 1st evidence of the heaviest antimatter particle yet
By Robert Lea published
Scientists at CERN's ALICE detector are replicating conditions found during the Big Bang, attempting to get to the bottom of how matter came to dominate over antimatter.
James Webb telescope uncovers massive 'grand design' spiral galaxy in the early universe — and scientists can't explain how it got so big, so fast
By Joanna Thompson published
Galaxies in the early universe tend to be clumpy, but the new JWST discovery of a "grand design" spiral galaxy just 1.5 billion years after the Big Bang has scientists stumped.
'Alien plant' fossil discovered near Utah ghost town doesn't belong to any known plant families, living or extinct
By Olivia Ferrari published
Fossilized plant remains discovered near a Utah ghost town have stumped scientists, who are unable to link them to any modern or extinct plants.
'Truly extraordinary' ancient offerings, including statues of snakes and a child priest, found submerged in 'healing' spring in Italy
By Owen Jarus published
The remains of ancient bronze statues, including sculpted snakes up to 35 inches long, have been found within a hot spring in Italy.
Killer squirrels have developed taste for flesh — and voles are running for their lives
By Patrick Pester published
Ground squirrels have turned into carnivorous killers in a local park after vole numbers exploded in Contra Costa County, California.
Rare army general and chariot unearthed among China's Terracotta Warriors
By Pandora Dewan published
The life-size clay figurines offer new insights into the organization and structure of China's army 2,000 years ago.
NASA commander Suni Williams meets tentacled Astrobee robot on ISS
By Samantha Mathewson published
The robot's flexible arms are a technology demonstration that could one day aid in satellite maintenance and space debris management.
Fatal familial insomnia: a genetic condition where people never sleep again
By Emily Cooke published
As fatal familial insomnia progresses, patients completely stop sleeping and enter a coma-like state that results in death within months.
Person in Louisiana hospitalized with H5N1 in nation's 1st severe case
By Nicoletta Lanese published
A person in Louisiana has been hospitalized with the United States' first serious case of H5N1 bird flu, following 60 milder cases this year.
Centuries-old floor patched with sliced bones discovered in the Netherlands
By Kristina Killgrove published
DIY-ers in northern Holland filled a large gap in a tile floor with precisely sliced cow bones several centuries ago.
Surprise discovery in alien planet's atmosphere could upend decades of planet formation theory
By Sharmila Kuthunur published
The odd atmosphere of a fledgling exoplanet is causing astronomers to question leading theories of how planets form.
Boeing Starliner astronauts could spend nearly 300 days stuck in space — is that a new record?
By Brandon Specktor last updated
NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Sunita Williams will spend at least nine consecutive months aboard the International Space Station after their Boeing Starliner spacecraft returned to Earth empty. Is their extended spaceflight record-setting?
'I knew they were something special': New York homeowner discovers mastodon jaw fossils in backyard
By Patrick Pester published
A New York homeowner, in Scotchtown, Orange County, was "thrilled" to find mastodon fossils in their backyard, which museum staff plan to study to learn more about the last ice age.
'Stranded' NASA astronauts' return to Earth delayed until at least 'late March' 2025 due to SpaceX capsule issues, NASA reveals
By Stephanie Pappas published
Due to a delay with SpaceX's Dragon capsule, NASA's Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams, who were meant to spend 10 days in space in June 2024, will now not return to Earth until late March 2025 at the earliest, NASA announced.
Scientists say sprinkling diamond dust into the sky could offset almost all of climate change so far — but it'll cost $175 trillion
By Sascha Pare published
The geoengineering scheme, known as stratospheric aerosol injection, would not be cheap, but scientists say it could buy us some time until we reach net-zero carbon.
James Webb telescope spies stunning 'Firefly Sparkle' galaxy — a baby clone of the Milky Way being 'assembled brick by brick' in the early universe
By Harry Baker published
The James Webb Space Telescope has captured an image of a baby, Milky Way-like galaxy that formed more than 13 billion years ago. This "Firefly Sparkle" galaxy could reveal how our own galaxy evolved.
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