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Jun 26, 2022

30,000-Year-Old Baby Mammoth Found Almost Perfectly Preserved in Canadian Gold Fields

Posted by in category: government

The most complete found in North America.


A gold miner found a mummified baby woolly mammoth in the Trʼondëk Hwëchʼin Traditional Territory in Yukon, Canada.

According to a press release from the local government, the female baby mammoth has been named Nun cho ga by the First Nation Tr’ondëk Hwëch’in elders, which translates to “big baby animal” in the Hän language.

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Jun 26, 2022

Scientists Find One of the Most Massive Black Holes With 34 Billion Times The Mass of Our Sun

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, food

Merging COVID-19 + MonkeyFox +????

Martin Chartrand https://www.nbcnews.com/…/who-monkeypox-public-health…


Scientists have recently reported discovering what they believe is the most massive black hole ever discovered in the early Universe.

Continue reading “Scientists Find One of the Most Massive Black Holes With 34 Billion Times The Mass of Our Sun” »

Jun 26, 2022

Life will find a way: could scientists make Jurassic Park a reality?

Posted by in categories: existential risks, lifeboat, sustainability

Alex SharpThe world needs to be subsidising heat pumps for the poorer regions of the world, to keep people safe.

2 Replies.

Chris BartlettThat’s alarmist, while they’re is global warming, there’s little evidence that we are yet seeing extreme weather previously unseen in Earth’s history or even during human history.

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Jun 26, 2022

‘Killer robots’ are coming. Is the US ready for the consequences?

Posted by in categories: information science, military, robotics/AI

🤖 Officially, they’re called “lethal autonomous weapons systems.” Colloquially, they’re called “killer robots.” Either way you’re going to want to read about their future in warfare. 👇


The commander must also be prepared to justify his or her decision if and when the LAWS is wrong. As with the application of force by manned platforms, the commander assumes risk on behalf of his or her subordinates. In this case, a narrow, extensively tested algorithm with an extremely high level of certainly (for example, 99 percent or higher) should meet the threshold for a justified strike and absolve the commander of criminal accountability.

Lastly, LAWS must also be tested extensively in the most demanding possible training and exercise scenarios. The methods they use to make their lethal decisions—from identifying a target and confirming its identity to mitigating the risk of collateral damage—must be publicly released (along with statistics backing up their accuracy). Transparency is crucial to building public trust in LAWS, and confidence in their capabilities can only be built by proving their reliability through rigorous and extensive testing and analysis.

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Jun 26, 2022

Dream Chaser® Spaceplane

Posted by in categories: habitats, space travel

Capable of runway landings & maximum reuse, the Dream Chaser® spaceplane enables resupply and space travel to and from space habitats.

Jun 26, 2022

First solar-powered car will debut this year

Posted by in categories: law, sustainability, transportation

A futuristic new solar-powered vehicle is now road-legal, with first delivery expected as early as November and will give drivers the freedom to exceed 1,000 km of range between charges.

Jun 26, 2022

Remarkable Intelligence: Octopus and Human Brains Share the Same “Jumping Genes”

Posted by in category: neuroscience

New research has identified an important molecular analogy that could explain the remarkable intelligence of these fascinating invertebrates.

An exceptional organism with an extremely complex brain and cognitive abilities makes the octopus very unique among invertebrates. So much so that it resembles vertebrates more than invertebrates in several aspects. The neural and cognitive complexity of these animals could originate from a molecular analogy with the human brain, as discovered by a research paper that was recently published in BMC Biology and coordinated by Remo Sanges from Scuola Internazionale Superiore di Studi Avanzati (SISSA) of Trieste and by Graziano Fiorito from Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn of Naples.

This research shows that the same ‘jumping genes’ are active both in the human brain and in the brain of two species, Octopus vulgaris, the common octopus, and Octopus bimaculoides, the Californian octopus. A discovery that could help us understand the secret of the intelligence of these remarkable organisms.

Jun 26, 2022

Solar Desalination Skylight provides free lighting and drinking water

Posted by in categories: energy, sustainability

A New Zeland-based designer Henry Glogau has developed Solar Desalination Skylight, a device that uses seawater to create natural ambient light, drinking water, and generates energy from the remaining sea salt.

Glogau’s Solar Desalination Skylight is the finalist of the Lexus Design Award 2021, a competition dedicated to empowering humans to make good things for the future of humanity and the planet. Projects that are finalized and awarded are determined by their positive impact on human society.

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Jun 26, 2022

Researchers Devise Ultra-Thin Film That Produces Detailed 3D Images

Posted by in category: futurism

Researchers have created a new ultra-thin film that can produce finely detailed 3D pictures that can be viewed in ordinary lighting without the use of special reading equipment.

Jun 26, 2022

Views, 7.4K likes, 773 loves, 189 comments, 2K shares, Facebook Watch Videos from The Secrets Of The Universe: Goodbye, Voyager!

Posted by in category: space