A gene tied to facial development hints humans domesticated themselves0
- Ancient Archeology, From Around the Web, Science & Technology
- December 7, 2019
Called BAZ1B, it may also help explain why domesticated animals look cuter than their wild kin
Called BAZ1B, it may also help explain why domesticated animals look cuter than their wild kin
Subjects in the study simply needed to be given live feedback of their brain activity in order to control their brain waves.
A new report on The War Zone suggests the building interest in UFOs could be met with the same style of government response that previously hushed people who were convinced we were on the verge of meeting extra-terrestrial beings.
A Bachelor’s student at EPFL discovered why air bubbles don’t appear to rise in narrow tubes, solving a 100-year-old conundrum.
Something remarkable happened this past weekend.
Surprise magnetic reversals and an unexpectedly fast rotating wind mark the first findings from NASA’s Parker Solar Probe.
An ancient and mysterious tomb has been shown from space in an image taken with NASA’s Terra satellite.
The Hera spacecraft will observe the effects of a NASA probe’s high-speed crash into an asteroid.
Our use of battery-operated devices and appliances has been increasing steadily, bringing with it the need for safe, efficient, and high-performing power sources.
When astronomers discovered the first exoplanet around a normal star 2 decades ago, there was joy—and bewilderment.