Home Blog Page 38

Great Pyramid of Giza’s Design Naturally Shields It from Earthquakes, Archaeologists Say

Science & Nature For more than four and a half millennia, the Khufu Pyramid has stood on the Giza plateau, enduring dozens of earthquakes without serious structural damage.
The post Great Pyramid of Giza’s Design Naturally Shields It from Earthquakes, Archaeologists Say appeared first on Sci.News: Breaking Science News…
Read MoreEnrico de Lazaro

The Supernova That Sparked the Original Scientific Revolution

Science & Nature Centuries before we started debating the transformative effect of AI on science, a new light in the sky shone the way
The post The Supernova That Sparked the Original Scientific Revolution appeared first on Nautilus…
Read MoreBob Grant

Russian cosmonauts install sun-watching telescope on ISS during 6-hour spacewalk

Science & Nature Russian cosmonauts Sergey Kud-Sverchkov and Sergei Mikaev worked to install and retrieve science experiments while on a spacewalk outside the International Space Station on Wednesday, May 27, 2026…
Read MoreLarisa Noren

Study: Early Complex Life Forms Were Bottom-Dwellers

Science & Nature Analyzing 1.75-billion-year-old microfossils from ancient Australian seabeds, paleontologists say ancient eukaryotes — the ancestors of every plant, animal and fungus — huddled in oxygenated seafloor patches for over a billion years before breaking free into open water.
The post Study: Early Complex Life Forms Were Bottom-Dwellers appeared first on Sci.News: Breaking Science News…
Read MoreNews Staff

Four drones will go where no astronaut have landed—yet

Science & Nature NASA’s MoonFall mission plans to send drones to the moon’s South Pole sometime in 2028.
The post Four drones will go where no astronaut have landed—yet appeared first on Popular Science…
Read MoreLaura Baisas

Bioluminescent Deep-Sea Fish Use Crystal ‘Prisms’ to Recycle Their Own Glow

Science & Nature A marine biologist studying the photophores of a bioluminescent fish species found needle-shaped guanine crystals that scatter and redirect light instead of merely reflecting it, a discovery that could inspire more efficient biomedical and optical devices.
The post Bioluminescent Deep-Sea Fish Use Crystal ‘Prisms’ to Recycle Their Own Glow appeared first on Sci.News: Breaking Science News…
Read MoreNews Staff

Rare Przewalski’s horse born in New York

Science & Nature The endangered wild horse species was brought back from near extinction.
The post Rare Przewalski’s horse born in New York appeared first on Popular Science…
Read MoreMargherita Bassi

Girl Scouts Event Brings Space Science to the Next Generation

Science & Nature In early May 2026, NASA employees, contractors, and volunteers helped to bring Heliophysics to girls of all ages in a fun-filled weekend of hands-on science activities and experiments…
Read MoreLarisa Schroeder

Tomato-Soy Drink May Help Fight Chronic Inflammation in Adults with Obesity

Science & Nature In a small clinical trial, researchers at the Ohio State University found that a tomato juice rich in lycopene and soy isoflavones lowered several proteins linked to chronic inflammation, raising hopes for food-based therapies.
The post Tomato-Soy Drink May Help Fight Chronic Inflammation in Adults with Obesity appeared first on Sci.News: Breaking Science News…
Read MoreNews Staff

NSF launches Tech Accelerators initiative to speed key technologies to the market faster

Science & Nature The U.S. National Science Foundation announced the launch of the NSF Tech Accelerators initiative to transform research outputs emanating from basic research into scalable and market-ready…
Read MoreNSF