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Dec 11, 2018

We Finally Have Found One Part of The Human Body Not Damaged by Space Travel

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, space

Being in space can have weird and sometimes harmful effects on the human body, and we’ll have to work through those issues if we’re to make it out to Mars and beyond, and stay healthy.

But it looks like we have finally found one feature of the human body that’s untroubled by microgravity — and it’s a part of our all-important immune system.

Based on a study of blood samples from International Space Station (ISS) crew members, a few months in space don’t affect B-cell immunity — the number of white blood cells in our bodies ready to fight off infection by producing antibodies.

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Dec 11, 2018

Rapid genetic evolution linked to lighter skin pigmentation in a southern African population

Posted by in categories: evolution, genetics

Populations of indigenous people in southern Africa carry a gene that causes lighter skin, and scientists have now identified the rapid evolution of this gene in recent human history.

The gene that causes lighter pigmentation, SLC24A5, was introduced from eastern African to southern African populations just 2,000 years ago. Strong positive selection caused this gene to rise in frequency among some KhoeSan populations.

UC Davis anthropologist Brenna Henn and colleagues have shown that a gene for lighter skin spread rapidly among people in southern Africa in the last 2,000 years.

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Dec 11, 2018

Scientists identify vast underground ecosystem containing billions of micro-organisms

Posted by in categories: chemistry, physics

The team combines 1,200 scientists from 52 countries in disciplines ranging from geology and microbiology to chemistry and physics. A year before the conclusion of their 10-year study, they will present an amalgamation of findings to date before the American Geophysical Union’s annual meeting opens this week.


Global team of scientists find ecosystem below earth that is twice the size of world’s oceans.

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Dec 11, 2018

OSIRIS-REx spacecraft already found water on its target asteroid

Posted by in category: space travel

The NASA explorer’s initial discoveries might provide some insight into the early Solar System.

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Dec 11, 2018

The Top 8 Things to Know About Anti-Aging Research Right Now

Posted by in category: life extension

“The prospect of intervening in a profound way in human aging is still not seen as credible by the vast majority of thoughtful people around the world,”


Here’s the Inside Scoop from an Icon in the Longevity Field.

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Dec 10, 2018

Watch scientists make and explode lava to study volcanoes

Posted by in category: futurism

When water and lava collide, you’d better get out of the way.

    by

  • Jackson Ryan

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Dec 10, 2018

An Oklahoma High Schooler Changed the Rules of Organic Chemistry

Posted by in category: chemistry

We thought we knew everything about carbon. We were wrong.

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Dec 10, 2018

Researchers say coffee may combat two devastating brain diseases

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience

The past few years have brought lots of good news for anyone who considers coffee a vice. Scientists have discovered that various compounds in coffee can help fight a number of diseases including Alzheimer’s, and now a new study is putting even more weight behind the notion that coffee is very good for you.

The work, which was published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, suggests that not only does coffee battle Parkinson’s but also another incurable brain disease called Lewy body dementia. Conducted by scientists at Rutgers, the study points to the combined effects of caffeine and a fatty acid present in coffee called EHT as potentially playing key roles in disease fighting.

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Dec 10, 2018

The Future of Tech Will Change Everything From Food to Healthcare

Posted by in categories: biological, computing, food

Advancement in technology will continue to impact the way we work, eat, and even take care of ourselves. A new report from Scientific American takes a look at some of the top emerging technologies that range from the field of biology to computer science. The publication’s chief science editor Seth Fletcher talked to Cheddar about what’s next when it comes to tech.

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WATCH NEXT

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Dec 10, 2018

Google’s New AI Is a Master of Games, but How Does It Compare to the Human Mind?

Posted by in categories: entertainment, robotics/AI

After building AlphaGo to beat the world’s best Go players, Google DeepMind built AlphaZero to take on the world’s best machine players.

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