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A Major Flood Revealed 115 Million-Year-Old Footprints of a T. Rex Wannabe
The 15 dino tracks the volunteers found likely belong to an Acrocanthosaurus, a 35-foot-long meat-eater with some similarities to a T. rex at first glance.
Gabbard says UK scraps demand for Apple to give backdoor access to data
Britain abandoned its demand that Apple provide so-called backdoor access to any encrypted user data stored in the cloud, U.S. Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard said Monday. Gabbard
New moon discovered orbiting Uranus is its smallest one
The James Webb Space Telescope has discovered a new moon that is small and dim in orbit around Uranus. The discovery brings the planet's total to 29 and scientists say there are likely more to be foun
Sharks Are Older Than the Literal North Star, Which Seems Wrong
Sharks are older than a surprising amount of things, both on Earth and in the rest of the universe. While sharks have seen evolutionary changes in the 450 million years they have been around, their
Satellite images capture the broken aftermath of the Ukrainian air force strikes on key Russian bridges to back the Kursk invasion
Ukraine's air force said back-to-back airstrikes are part of an effort to support the Kursk invasion by cutting Russian logistics routes.
New foundational atlas spans the entire Arabidopsis life cycle
Serving as the representative plant species in most plant research across the last half century, Arabidopsis thaliana (thale cress) has revealed how plants respond to light, which hormones control
8 Facts About What Would Happen If We Poured All of Earths Water on the Sun
Things are getting hotter and hotter here on Earth, and global warming has everyone panicking. But let us try a wild idea: what if we took every drop of Earth’s water and poured it on the Sun? Could
Heavy metals found in the scales of black mambas allow tracking of pollutants
Black mambas, Africa's fastest and most feared snakes, can be a key player in tracking pollution, while at the same time keeping ecosystems healthy.
‘Gold'-tinged creature sucked out of mud in Malaysia in first-of-its-kind catch
Equipped with flashlights and a suction pump, a team of scientists stood on a mud flat in Malaysia at night during low tide. The researchers hoped a new approach to biodiversity surveys would lead to
North Pacific waters are acidifying more rapidly below the surface, research reveals
Carbon dioxide in the atmosphere enters the ocean at the surface and has been increasing the acidity of Pacific waters since the beginning of the industrial revolution over 200 years ago. A new study,
Scientists unravel mystery of dark matter
Scientists have long been puzzled by dark matter, an elusive substance that makes up about 27% of the universe. Recent breakthroughs in research are shedding light on its mysterious nature,
Scientists identify sources of blue carbon in wetland soils
Teasing apart the sources of organic carbon stored in coastal wetland soils around the world was the "grand challenge" Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS) scientists successfully tackled in
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