|
Muddy riverbanks and quiet waterways hold far more secrets than we realise. When we think about ancient treasures, our minds usually fly straight to dusty chests buried in deep caves or gold tucked away inside stone tombs. |
|
Muddy riverbanks and quiet waterways hold far more secrets than we realise. When we think about ancient treasures, our minds usually fly straight to dusty chests buried in deep caves or gold tucked away inside stone tombs. |
|
In the 1930s, under Mussolini's fascist regime, Italy launched a sweeping reforestation drive across the northern Alps. The goal was to practically prevent soil erosion, secure timber, and project an image of national productivity. |
|
As global temperatures continue to climb, plants face a problem animals don't: they can't move. Stuck in place, they have to find ways to survive heat that they have no way of escaping. |
|
Scientists use laser pulses to manipulate atoms at terahertz frequencies, advancing next-gen computer technology through strain engineering. |
|
Many people think of science as something distant and a little intimidating. A world of labs, equations and experts that has nothing to do with ordinary life. |
|
This is precisely what a group of scientists did while excavating an ancient aristocratic tomb at the Liujiawa archaeological site in northern China. The cemetery goes back to the Spring and Autumn period in Chinese history, which was a period of great rivalry between different states. |
|
When a massive star runs out of nuclear fuel, physicists have long assumed its fate is sealed: it collapses under its gravity and becomes a black hole. A new theoretical study suggests there may be another, stranger possibility. |
|
Palaeontologist Steve Brusatte discusses India's potential as a dinosaur hotspot and the importance of young scientists in discovery. |
|
The National Science Foundation on Thursday reversed a decision to dismantle a sprawling ocean monitoring network after vigorous objections from Democratic lawmakers and scientists who rely on it to track everything from ocean circulation to extreme weather. |
|
For most of modern cosmology, scientists have worked with a surprisingly simple assumption: the mysterious force driving the universe's accelerating expansion has remained unchanged throughout cosmic history. Known as dark energy, this invisible component is thought to make up nearly 70 per cent of the cosmos, yet its true nature remains one of science's greatest unsolved puzzles.Now, a new theoretical study inspired by recent observations from the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) is exploring a provocative possibility. |