New Scientist Space - Space Headlines
Neanderthal groups had their own local food culture
A comparison of cut marks on bones reveals that Neanderthal groups living fairly close to each other had their own distinct ways of butchering animals
Categories: Astronomy
Babies made using three people's DNA are free of hereditary disease
Eight children have been born in the UK using genetic material from three people, which appears to have prevented them from developing serious genetic conditions
Categories: Astronomy
Children conceived using mitochondria from a donor are now doing well
Eight children who were at risk of serious genetic conditions have hit all of their developmental milestones after donor mitochondria was used during their IVF conception
Categories: Astronomy
Have we found an unlikely solution to the climate impact of flying?
Aviation is probably the single hardest industry to decarbonise. Sustainable fuels aren't the answer, but Mike Berners-Lee thinks there is one at hand
Categories: Astronomy
New book is an illuminating but flawed look at the impact of emoji
Emoji add a new depth to communications, but what of their cultural impact? Keith Houston's Face with Tears of Joy offers some answers
Categories: Astronomy
Why we urgently need to talk about geoengineering
The idea that we might attempt large-scale experiments to cool the planet is horrifying to some, but it looks increasingly likely that we will have to do so this century
Categories: Astronomy
Rare images capture snow leopard cubs in their dens
Snow leopard cubs have been photographed in Mongolia - the first time researchers have visited one of the animals' dens since 2019
Categories: Astronomy
Simple device can produce water, oxygen and fuel from lunar soil
Using samples collected by the Chinese Chang’e 5 mission, researchers have discovered a new way to release water from lunar regolith and process the carbon dioxide breathed out by astronauts
Categories: Astronomy
The anthropologist who says shamanism works, even if you don’t believe
Shamanism is on the rise, both in practice and in popular culture. Manvir Singh has spent years exploring why it is so enduring, what we can learn from it and the surprising forms modern shamans take
Categories: Astronomy
How human eggs stay fresh for decades
In human beings, egg cells need to survive for about five decades, much longer than most other cell types – and they may achieve this unusually long lifespan by slowing down their natural cell processes
Categories: Astronomy
Underwater volcanic brine pools could be home to extreme life forms
An expedition in the Red Sea found several brine pools that appear to be fed by underwater volcanoes, which may be home to microbes and animals with unique adaptations
Categories: Astronomy
Ancient rocks show earliest evidence of tectonic activity on Earth
The origins of plate tectonics on Earth are hotly debated, but evidence from Australia now shows that parts of the crust moved in relation to each other as early as 3.5 billion years ago
Categories: Astronomy
We’ve discovered a new kind of magnetism. What can we do with it?
Researchers have found the first new type of magnet in nearly a century. Now, these strange "altermagnets" could help us build an entirely new type of computer
Categories: Astronomy
Brain changes with eating disorders similar to those in OCD and autism
In children with anorexia nervosa or other restrictive eating disorders, changes in the brain’s outer layer don’t seem to be due to lack of nutrition alone – and some mirror those seen in other neurological conditions
Categories: Astronomy
Why you shouldn't worry a nap will stop your child sleeping at night
Parents may discourage naps out of concern that their child won't then sleep at night, but research suggests that is not actually the case
Categories: Astronomy
Complex knots can actually be easier to untie than simple ones
Mathematicians have solved a decades-old problem in knot theory, discovering that linking two knots together can actually produce a knot that is easier to untie – the opposite of what was expected
Categories: Astronomy
Water might be even more important for alien life than we thought
Without enough liquid water on the surface, a planet's atmosphere can become choked with carbon dioxide, raising temperatures to a level beyond what is survivable for all known life
Categories: Astronomy
Climate scientists urge others to take up CO2 tracking as US cuts loom
Proposed budget cuts in the US will lead to the loss of vital carbon dioxide measurements, but no other countries are preparing to step in so far, researchers warn
Categories: Astronomy
Built-in fire extinguishers can prevent battery explosions
Adding fire-suppressing chemicals into batteries can prevent overheating, fires and explosions, cutting the risks for electric vehicles and portable electronics
Categories: Astronomy
Nor'easters slamming New England are growing more powerful
Much like hurricanes further south, the strongest storms to pummel the US north-east are getting even stronger as sea surface temperatures rise
Categories: Astronomy