Antarctica’s native microorganisms are a hearty bunch, able to eke out a living on the planet’s coldest, highest, driest, windiest and emptiest continent. But the region wasn’t always quite as hospitable as it is today.
Photo Credit: Byron Adams
“It’s kind of like he’s still there, still waving, and it just makes me feel like he’s just still around.”
This smart mirror lets you virtually try on clothes, so you can live out your greatest hi-tech dreams.
Seeking Delphi podcast host Mark Sackler is joined by panelists Liz Parrish, Aubrey de Grey, David Wood and co-moderator Keith Comito to discuss scenarios for getting to—and dealing with—a post aging future.
The magnitude of the Great Lisbon Earthquake event, a historic and devastating earthquake and tsunami that struck Portugal on All Saints’ Day in 1755, may not be as high as previously estimated.
In his study published in the Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America, Joao F. B. D. Fonseca at the Universidade de Lisboa used macroseismic data—contemporaneous reports of shaking and damage—from Portugal, Spain and Morocco to calculate the earthquake’s magnitude at 7.7. Previous estimates placed the earthquake at magnitude 8.5 to 9.0.
Fonseca’s analysis also locates the epicenter of the 1755 earthquake offshore of the southwestern Iberian Peninsula, and suggests the rupture was a complicated one that may have involved faulting onshore as well. This re-evaluation could have implications for the seismic hazard map of the region, he said.