Supernova Ashes Found in Tiny Magnetic Fossils0
- Ancient Archeology, From Around the Web
- August 25, 2016
Supernova ash has been discovered in fossils that were created by bacteria on Earth, a new study finds.
Supernova ash has been discovered in fossils that were created by bacteria on Earth, a new study finds.
The first ever robot to have absolutely no ridged parts. Every part of this octobot is made of a soft material.
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Finding the long lost patterns on a piece of ancient Greek sculpture can be as easy as shining a lamp on it.
Edmund Halley – of Halley’s Comet fame – noted the ‘Chill and Damp which attended the Darkness’ of an eclipse in 1715, causing ‘some sense of Horror’ among the spectators.
Geneticists have made a step forward in ‘recoding’ the genome as we know it, replacing 62,214 DNA base pairs in a synthetic E. coli genome.
Communications with STEREO-B were lost during a test of the spacecraft’s command loss timer, but then on Aug. 21, 2016, contact was reestablished.
Nearly a year after first making headlines around the world, “Tabby’s star” is still guarding its secrets.
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