Tropical parasite gains a foothold in the US, especially in Texas

Scientists identified a new strain of a parasite that causes the disease leishmaniasis, and they mainly found it in people who had not recently traveled outside the U.S. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

Identity of mysterious 'mermaid globster' that washed up in Papua New Guinea 'is anyone's guess,' experts say

The severely decayed remains of a marine creature recently washed up on a beach in Papua New Guinea. Experts can't agree on what the ghostly white lump is, but it is most likely the remains of a marine mammal. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

Horrifying parasitic worm snatches its host's genes to control its mind

Horsehair worms flood their hosts' minds with proteins made from copied chunks of their own genomes. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

Orcas attacked a great white shark to gorge on its liver in Australia, shredded carcass suggests

Orcas have been feasting on sharks' livers off the coast of South Africa for several years and could now be doing the same in Australia, the carcass of a great white suggests. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

Ancient New Year's scene from Egypt uncovered on roof of 2,200-year-old temple

Researchers restored an ancient painting of the gods depicted at New Year's during restoration work at the Temple of Esna in Egypt. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

Scientists finally solve mystery of strongest Marsquake ever detected

The strongest recorded Marsquake, which rattled for six hours in May 2022, left no visible traces on the Red Planet surface. Now, scientists think they know what caused it. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

Mysterious signals from 'hell planet' 40 light-years from Earth could finally be solved by James Webb Space Telescope

The hellish super-Earth '55 Cancri e' may be constantly losing and re-growing its atmosphere, a new study of the planet's strange transit signals suggests. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

Save $90 on this gorgeous Fossil smartwatch

Fossil's Gen 6 smartwatch looks amazing, and you can save almost $100, too. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

Save $300 on this ideal laptop for students or those working from home

Get the LG UltraPC for $300 off at Amazon right now. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

Save $50 on the Fitbit Sense 2 at Amazon

Fitbit's latest and greatest is available for less than usual right now. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

Only 1% of chemicals in the universe have been discovered. Here's how scientists are hunting for the rest.

Most chemical compouds are still unknown to science. How many new ones can we make by combining elements from the periodic table? | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

Scientists finally solve mystery of why Europeans have less Neanderthal DNA than East Asians

Modern Europeans have a smaller proportion of Neanderthal genes in their genomes than East Asians do. New research suggests the reason lies at the feet of migrating early farmers. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

Stash of 'eye-catching' Bronze Age jewelry discovered by metal detectorist in Swiss carrot field

Archaeologists have dated Bronze Age artifacts unearthed in Switzerland to roughly 1500 B.C. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

Strange elements unknown to science may lurk in the hearts of asteroids, new study suggests

Naturally occurring superheavy elements beyond those listed in the periodic table could potentially explain why asteroid 33 Polyhymnia is so dense, new research suggests. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

What is a heart murmur?

Heart murmurs are extra, unusual sounds heard during a heartbeat — but why do they happen? | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

Scientists propose 'missing' law for the evolution of everything in the universe

The "law of increasing functional information" says that complex systems in nature evolve to become more complex. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

Tiny, highly venomous jellyfish stings 2 people in the middle of the ocean — forcing them to be airlifted to hospital

Irukandji jellyfish, which are around the same size as a dime, have a venom-filled sting that can trigger an extremely painful and occasionally deadly syndrome. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

Last-known crocodile in Europe lived in Spain 4.5 million years ago, researchers say

A tooth unearthed in Spain and dating to the Pliocene is the latest evidence of a crocodile ever found in Europe and supports the idea crocs crossed over from Africa about 6.2 million years ago. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

Toxic pigment that causes red hair discovered in 10 million-year-old frog fossil

Paleontologists have discovered the first molecular evidence of pheomelanin, a pigment that causes red hair, in the fossil record. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

Egypt had an unusually powerful 'female king' 5,000 years ago, lavish tomb suggests

Excavations of the tomb of ancient Egyptian queen Meret-Neith reveal she was an influential figure with "unusually high levels of authority," but experts are divided about whether she actually reigned. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

Soar through the 'Labyrinth of Night' — a Martian canyon the size of Italy — in thrilling new satellite video

See Mars' geology up close, thanks to decades of stunning images from the Mars Express satellite, in a new visualization of Noctis Labyrinthus, the 'Labyrinth of Night'. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

Ultra-powerful plasma 'blades' could slice entire stars in half, new paper suggests

Stars could be sliced in half by "relativistic blades," or ultra-powerful outflows of plasma shaped by extremely strong magnetic fields, an unpublished paper claims. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

Hitting 'snooze' can boost morning cognition, study hints

Did you hit "snooze" this morning? You're not alone, and the extra sleep may improve your brain function after getting up, a study suggests. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

New 'atlas' of a monkey brain maps 4.2 million cells

Scientists have published a new atlas of a primate brain with single-cell resolution. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

China is building the world's largest underwater telescope to hunt for elusive 'ghost particles'

China's forthcoming Tropical Deep-sea Neutrino Telescope (TRIDENT) will search for the origins of cosmic rays in momentary flashes of light beneath the ocean's surface. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

Watch rare footage of huge crocodile eating baby hippo with umbilical cord still attached

A crocodile in Kenya's Mara River was filmed thrashing around with the corpse of a baby hippo in its jaws in unusual sighting. It is unclear if the crocodile killed the calf or if it snatched a stillborn. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

Why do beets turn your poop and pee red?

After you've eaten beets, your poop and urine can take on a shocking red or pink color — but why? | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

AI reveals scroll's lost text after it was scorched by Mount Vesuvius eruption 2,000 years ago

Mount Vesuvius' eruption in A.D. 79 carbonized hundreds of scrolls and papyri in the ancient Roman city of Herculaneum. Now, AI has decoded part of a scroll. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

Orionid meteor shower peaks this weekend: How to get the best views

The Orionid meteor shower will peak this weekend. Here's when to get the best view. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

See gorgeous ancient Egyptian 'mummy portraits' from nearly 2 millennia ago

These ancient 'mummy portraits' provide a window into ancient Egyptian life and culture. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

Violence in the ancient Middle East spiked with the formation of states and empires, battered skulls reveal

Human violence in the Middle East has ebbed and flowed since 12000 B.C., with spikes in the Copper and Iron ages and a lull in the Bronze Age, new research finds. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

Scientists finally figure out why hundreds of gray whales keep washing up dead along U.S. coasts

Three mass mortality events have struck a population of gray whales off the west coast of North America since the 1980s, and scientists have linked them to changing conditions in the Arctic. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

The best photos of the Oct. 14 'ring of fire' eclipse over North America

Almost every part of North, Central and South America had a view of a partial solar eclipse on Oct. 14, with millions of lucky viewers witnessing a glorious 'ring of fire' around the moon. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

Gulf Stream weakening now 99% certain, and ramifications will be global

A new analysis has concluded that the Gulf Stream is definitely slowing, but whether it's due to climate change is hard to tell. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

Man gets rare 'shiitake dermatitis' from undercooked mushrooms

The man developed the painful rash two days after eating undercooked shiitake mushrooms. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

A strong El Niño is coming this winter. What does that mean?

Thanks to El Niño, meteorologists are predict a snowy winter in the Rockies, storms and wet weather in the South and drier conditions in the Northwest and Uppder Midwest. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

11,000-year-old statue of giant man clutching penis unearthed in Turkey

A 7.5-foot-tall statue of a man clutching his penis was unearthed at one of the oldest temple sites in Turkey. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

See the entire 'ring of fire' eclipse in 4 seconds in stunning satellite videos

The NOAA satellites GOES-East and GOES-West watched as the shadow of the moon darkened the surface of Earth on Saturday, Oct. 14. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

Cannibalism was a common funerary rite in northwest Europe near end of last ice age

Research suggests cannibalism was a funerary rite for the Magdalenian people in northwest Europe, but others preferred to bury their dead. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

City-size comet racing toward Earth regrows 'horns' after massive volcanic eruption

The cryovolcanic comet 12P/Pons–Brooks, which will make its closest approach to Earth next year, has re-sprouted its distinctive "horns" after its second major eruption in four months. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

Elusive Planet Nine could be an alternative form of gravity masquerading as a planet, study claims

Astronomers suggest that an alternative concept of gravity, known as modified Newtonian dynamics, could explain orbital inconsistencies that have previously pointed to the existence of a ninth planet in the solar system. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

How long does it take to digest food?

The speed at which food moves through the digestive tract depends on many factors. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

Mysterious 'fountain of youth' near Milky Way's central black hole is full of newborn stars that shouldn't exist

New James Webb Space Telescope observations might be able to explain why clusters of young stars keep turning up near the Milky Way’s central black hole. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

Can foxgloves really give you a heart attack?

Foxgloves contain digoxin, a drug used to treat cardiac arrhythmia and heart failure that can also be toxic. But can ingesting it cause a heart attack? | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

Science news this week: False memories and swallowed seas

Oct. 15, 2023: Our weekly roundup of the latest science in the news, as well as a few fascinating articles to keep you entertained over the weekend. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

The Fram: A Victorian expedition to the North Pole that was as brilliant as it was bonkers

British physicist and oceanographer Helen Czerski explains how Norwegian explorer Fridtjof Nansen's expedition to the North Pole was 'one of the most bonkers and brilliant experiments ever devised'. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

'This is the cost of living in seawater': The ingenious and (to us) heartbreaking way turtles survive the salty oceans

In this extract from the new book Blue Machine: How the Ocean Works, oceanographer Helen Czerski explains the ingenious way turtles contend with the extreme saltiness of the sea. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago

'Earth's civilizations are shaped by what the ocean engine does,' says oceanographer Helen Czerski

In this interview, British oceanographer Helen Czerski explains the systems driving our ocean, compares it to a fancy cocktail, and explains what the next great ocean frontier is. | Continue reading


@livescience.com | 1 year ago