A new report from the National Academy of Sciences in the United States released today estimates that the ice fields atop Mount Kilimanjaro and on its flanks will likely disappear within several decades, if...
created by yuls.source | 4 days ago | updated 11 hrs ago 120 views | 2 recommendations | 1 comment
An open access/free PLoS Biology article by the science writer Tabitha M. Powledge**.Who - or what - is Homo floresiensis? (Wiki) The tiny hominid bones, which a joint Australian-Indonesian team unearthed in 2003 on the Indonesian island of Flores, have quickly become as...
created by jorolat | 2 years ago | updated 2 years ago 355 views | 0 recommendations | 0 comments
From the New Scientist: Fossil bones of a mouse-sized creature that died between 16 million and 19 million years ago have been discovered on the South Island of New Zealand. It is the first hard evidence that the islands once had their own indigenous land mammals.Today the...
created by jorolat | 2 years ago | updated 2 years ago 445 views | 0 recommendations | 0 comments
Scientists believe a species of bat has an inbuilt magnetic compass to find its way home over long distances, in addition to its famous echolocation*, which guides it around its neighbourhood.Princeton University batologists used radio telemetry aboard a small aircraft to...
created by jorolat | 2 years ago | updated 2 years ago 227 views | 0 recommendations | 0 comments
Oakland, California: A new study by scientists at Children's Hospital Oakland Research Institute (CHORI) is the first to show that a mother's diet during pregnancy influences the health of her grandchildren by changing the behavior of a specific gene. The study was conducted...
created by jorolat | 2 years ago 733 views | 0 recommendations | 0 comments
From CBC News, Canada: There may be a little Neanderthal in all of us.That's the conclusion of anthropologists who have re-examined 30,000-year-old fossilized bones from a Romanian cave - bones that languished in...
created by jorolat | 3 years ago | updated 3 years ago 1201 views | 0 recommendations | 0 comments
"BBC Health News: The faces we pull when we are happy, sad or angry may be passed from generation to generation, according to researchers.
An Israeli team discovered facial expressions among family members bore...
created by jorolat | 3 years ago | updated 3 years ago 767 views | 0 recommendations | 0 comments