This spring, Brood XIV—also known as Brood 14—will surface across at least 13 eastern US states. These cicadas have spent the last 17 years underground and are expected to appear in the coming weeks as soil temperatures hit the…
Category: 9. Sci/Tech
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Deadly peanut allergies could be prevented with simple new method
A new study offers hope to adults who live in fear of their allergic reactions, as adults with severe peanut allergies could become tolerant in a matter of weeks.
Scientists gradually introduced 21 severely allergic adults to peanut products and…
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Global Thaw 10,000 Years Ago May Have Fueled Volcanoes and Sped Up Continental Drift
Melting glaciers in North America 10,000 years ago may have given continental drift a bit of a push. Similar activity in Greenland now could eventually trigger volcanic eruptions in Iceland.
Geoscientists modeled a chain of events that demonstrate…
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Cancer Mortality Rates Declined Over the Past 20 Years in the United States
Both lung cancer diagnoses and deaths in men and women have declined over the past 20 years. That trend has helped improve the overall cancer mortality picture. Twenty years of cancer data indicate a slow, gradual, but significant change, with…
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Tardigrade Tattoos Could Pave the Way for Microscopic Medical Devices
Tardigrades take extreme living to another level, thriving in the toughest conditions. These animals (nicknamed “water bears” for their rotund figure) live practically everywhere and can endure any ordeal thrown their way, from subzero…
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Rattlesnake Venom Evolves and Adapts to Climate Change
Encountering rattlesnake venom is something many of us would prefer to avoid. But for a research team from the University of South Florida, this venom may hold the key to species evolution and protection.
A new study, published in Evolution, has…
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Giant Kangaroos’ Weight at 375 Pounds and Limited Roaming Likely Led to Their Extinction
Australia’s giant kangaroos of yesteryear were likely homebodies — and that inclination ultimately did them in.
The massive marsupial megaherbivores, which, at an estimated 375 pounds, weighed more than twice as much as contemporary kangaroos,…
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Ancient Bite Wounds Confirm Roman Gladiators Did Fight Lions in Combat
Tales of gladiators going head-to-head with ferocious lions in ancient Rome’s coliseum are legendary. Scenes of such deadly combat have been portrayed in stories, paintings, and mosaics (a Man versus Big Cat conflict was even suggested in the…
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Scientists Discover First Probable Evidence of a Roman Fighter Mauled by a Lion : ScienceAlert
For most humans who have breathed Earth’s air over the course of history, our deaths have disappeared from record, as completely as an exhalation.
For one resident of the ancient Roman Empire, who met a violent demise around 1,800 years ago,…
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This (creepy) Roman skeleton offers first proof of a gladiator fighting a lion – and losing
Archaeologists have uncovered the first physical evidence of Roman gladiators fighting lions, after bite marks on a skeleton excavated in York, England, were identified as those of a large cat.
The remains, found at Driffield Terrace – one of…
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