www.livescience.com
Open in
urlscan Pro
151.101.66.114
Public Scan
Submitted URL: http://www.livescience.com/
Effective URL: https://www.livescience.com/
Submission: On July 24 via manual from IN — Scanned from DE
Effective URL: https://www.livescience.com/
Submission: On July 24 via manual from IN — Scanned from DE
Form analysis
1 forms found in the DOMGET https://www.livescience.com/search
<form class="search-box" action="https://www.livescience.com/search" method="GET" data-analytics-id="search-submit" data-before-rewrite-localise="/search" data-component-tracked="19">
<label for="search-input" class="sr-only">Search Live Science</label>
<input tabindex="0" type="search" name="searchTerm" placeholder="Search Live Science" class="search-input" id="search-input">
<button type="submit" class="search-submit" aria-label="Search">
<span class="search-icon">
<svg class="icon-svg" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 1000 1000">
<path d="M720 124a422 422 0 1 0-73 654l221 222 132-131-222-222a422 422 0 0 0-58-523zm-92 504a291 291 0 1 1-412-412 291 291 0 0 1 412 411z"></path>
</svg> </span>
</button>
</form>
Text Content
Skip to main content Open menu Close menu Live Science LIVE SCIENCE Search Search Live Science Subscribe RSS How It Works Magazine Why subscribe? * The ultimate action-packed science and technology magazine bursting with exciting information about the universe * Subscribe today and save an extra 5% with checkout code 'LOVE5' * Engaging articles, amazing illustrations & exclusive interviews * Issues delivered straight to your door or device From€23.49 View Deal * * Space * Health * Planet Earth * Animals * Archaeology * Physics & Math * Human Behavior * More * Technology * Chemistry * Science news * About us * Newsletter * Follow us * Story archive Trending * 'Dark oxygen' * Bonnie Prince Charlie * 'Invasive' owl cull * Orcas attacking boats * Delta Aquariids 2024 LATEST NEWS LASERS REVEAL ROMAN-ERA CIRCUS IN SPAIN WHERE 5,000 SPECTATORS WATCHED HORSE-DRAWN CHARIOT RACES Jennifer Nalewicki published 13 hours ago Researchers used lidar technology to map Iruña Veleia, a Roman-era city in Spain. TROTTING HIPPOS CAN 'FLY,' BUT ONLY IN 0.3-SECOND BURSTS, STUDY FINDS Sascha Pare published 13 hours ago Researchers have discovered that, unlike other four-legged mammals, hippopotamuses trot at high speeds and become airborne for "quite a large amount of time." 'IT'S RISKY FOR MALE FROGS OUT THERE': FEMALE FROG DRAGS AND ATTEMPTS TO EAT SCREAMING MALE Jacklin Kwan published 15 hours ago Female green and golden bell frogs in Australia will eat their male counterparts when the males' mating call displeases them. SEVERELY INJURED GIRAFFE WITH 'VERY TWISTED' ZIGZAG NECK SPOTTED IN SOUTH AFRICA Harry Baker published 16 hours ago New photos show a young giraffe with an extremely deformed neck in Kruger National Park. The animal may have survived a broken neck or could have a severe case of an illness that also affects humans. 'RIVER OF TEA' BLEEDS INTO SEA AFTER HURRICANE SALLY SMASHES INTO US COAST Harry Baker published 19 hours ago Earth from space A 2020 satellite photo shows "blackwater" flowing from South Carolina's Winyah Bay after Hurricane Sally made landfall and triggered flash flooding. THE BEST METEOR SHOWERS OF 2024 ARE YET TO COME. HERE ARE THE KEY NIGHTS TO WATCH FOR. Gretchen Rundorff published 20 hours ago Here's everything you need to know to see the best meteor showers of 2024. Discovery of 'dark oxygen' from deep-sea metal lumps could trigger rethink of origins of life In a global first, scientists working in the Clarion-Clipperton Zone in the North Pacific Ocean have found that metallic nodules on the seafloor produce their own oxygen, dubbed "dark oxygen." Why did Homo sapiens outlast all other human species? What's the secret to Homo sapiens' success as a species? This bizarre animal lives on the seabed and uses its large hand-like fins to move walk around. This bizarre animal lives on the seabed and uses its large hand-like fins to move walk around. red handfish How many animal species have humans driven to extinction? Animals are disappearing too fast for researchers to record all of the extinctions we've caused. Bonnie Prince Charlie narrowly escaped an assassination attempt in Scotland in 1745, musket ball hole reveals Volunteers at Bannockburn House in Scotland discovered a musket ball hole in a wall that dates to the Jacobite Rebellion of 1745. What are ultraprocessed foods? Ultraprocessed foods have been tied to various health risks — but what are they, exactly? Nearly half a million 'invasive' owls, including their hybrid offspring, to be killed by US The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has released a final proposal to kill around 450,000 invasive barred owls in the Northwest, in an attempt to save two native species. PLANET EARTH LAST CHANCE LAKE: THE UNUSUAL 'SODA LAKE' WITH CONDITIONS THAT MAY HAVE GIVEN RISE TO LIFE ON EARTH By Sascha Pare published July 19, 2024 Scientists consider Last Chance Lake to be an analog for lakes that may have existed on Earth 4 billion years ago and contained the ingredients for early life on our planet. Evolution SEE STUNNING PHOTOS OF THE ATACAMA DESERT — THE DRIEST ON EARTH — BLOOMING IN WINTER FOR 1ST TIME IN A DECADE By María de los Ángeles Orfila published July 19, 2024 "This very arid soil houses a treasure," ecologist María Fernanda Pérez told Live Science after the Atacama Desert produced a rare winter bloom. Plants VIEW MORE MOST READMOST SHARED 1. 1 What causes you to get a 'stitch in your side'? 2. 2 No, NASA hasn't warned of an impending asteroid strike in 2038. Here's what really happened. 3. 3 James Webb Space Telescope spies strange shapes above Jupiter's Great Red Spot 4. 4 What defines a species? Inside the fierce debate that's rocking biology to its core 5. 5 Newly discovered asteroid larger than the Great Pyramid of Giza will zoom between Earth and the moon on Saturday 1. 1 What causes you to get a 'stitch in your side'? 2. 2 Newly discovered asteroid larger than the Great Pyramid of Giza will zoom between Earth and the moon on Saturday 3. 3 2,000 years ago, a bridge in Switzerland collapsed on top of Celtic sacrifice victims, new study suggests 4. 4 Self-healing 'living skin' can make robots more humanlike — and it looks just as creepy as you'd expect 5. 5 Tasselled wobbegong: The master of disguise that can eat a shark almost as big as itself SPACE IS THE JAMES WEBB SPACE TELESCOPE REALLY 'BREAKING' COSMOLOGY? By Paul Sutter published 3 days ago While headlines around the world claimed that ancient galaxies discovered by the James Webb Space Telescope were "breaking" our understanding of the Big Bang, the truth is much more nuanced — and much more interesting. Cosmology SPACE PHOTO OF THE WEEK: 55 YEARS AGO, THE 'WORLD'S LONELIEST MAN' SNAPPED THIS ICONIC APOLLO 11 IMAGE By Jamie Carter published 3 days ago Command module pilot Michael Collins took this iconic Apollo 11 photo 55 years ago today, after his historic trip around the far side of the moon made him "the world's loneliest man". The Moon VIEW MORE ARCHAEOLOGY 1,800-YEAR-OLD RING DEPICTING ROMAN GODDESS DISCOVERED BY ANCIENT QUARRY IN ISRAEL By Laura Geggel published July 19, 2024 A 13-year-old boy hiking in Haifa discovered a Roman-era ring with a depiction of Minerva, the goddess of war and wisdom. Romans ROCK CARVINGS OF ANCIENT EGYPTIAN PHARAOHS FOUND UNDERWATER NEAR ASWAN By Owen Jarus published July 18, 2024 Archaeologists discovered rock carvings featuring several pharaohs during an underwater expedition near Aswan, Egypt. Ancient Egyptians VIEW MORE HEALTH 'WE CAN'T ANSWER THESE QUESTIONS': NEUROSCIENTIST KENNETH KOSIK ON WHETHER LAB-GROWN BRAINS WILL ACHIEVE CONSCIOUSNESS By Emily Cooke published July 19, 2024 So much is still unknown about consciousness, nevermind whether brain organoids will achieve it, explains a leading neuroscientist. Neuroscience COULD BLOCKING THIS ONE PROTEIN EXTEND HUMAN LIFE SPAN? By Emily Cooke published July 19, 2024 Blocking a pro-inflammatory protein extended the life span of mice by around 25%. Could it do the same in humans? Ageing RARE 'STIFF PERSON SYNDROME' TREATED WITH RECONFIGURED CANCER THERAPY By RJ Mackenzie published July 18, 2024 A case study shows how a therapy typically used for cancer could be adapted to treat a disorder that Céline Dion recently disclosed she has. Medicine & Drugs VIEW MORE ANIMALS WHY DO DOGS LOOK LIKE THEIR OWNERS? By Ashley Hamer published July 20, 2024 When a dog looks strikingly like its owner, is that a coincidence or is there more to the story? Dogs 2 YOUNG ORCAS RAM SAILBOAT OFF NORTHERN FRANCE — 800 MILES FROM 'ATTACK' HOTSPOT By Sascha Pare published July 19, 2024 Coastguards had to tow a 40-foot-long sailboat back to port after two young orcas severely damaged the boat's rudder near Guilvinec in the French region of Brittany. Orcas ULTRA-RARE WHALE NEVER SEEN ALIVE WASHES UP ON ON NEW ZEALAND BEACH — AND SCIENTISTS COULD NOW DISSECT IT FOR THE 1ST TIME By Harry Baker published July 19, 2024 A beaked whale that recently washed up dead on a New Zealand beach likely belongs to the world's rarest cetacean species. If confirmed, researchers could dissect the species for the very first time. Whales VIEW MORE HUMAN BEHAVIOR 30,000 YEARS OF HISTORY REVEALS THAT HARD TIMES BOOST HUMAN SOCIETIES' RESILIENCE By Stephanie Pappas published May 9, 2024 Human societies that experience downturns do a better job of recovering from later disasters, new research finds. Human Behavior 'WE'RE MEETING PEOPLE WHERE THEY ARE': GRAPHIC NOVELS CAN HELP BOOST DIVERSITY IN STEM, SAYS MIT'S RITU RAMAN By Alexander McNamara published May 5, 2024 In a new series of comics, where young, female scientists take center stage, MIT's Ritu Raman explains how the format can inspire the next generation of young people into the world of STEM. Arts & Entertainment WHY DO PEOPLE FEEL LIKE THEY'RE BEING WATCHED, EVEN WHEN NO ONE IS THERE? By Angely Mercado published April 18, 2024 The causes range from innocuous media exposure to severe mental illness. Human Behavior VIEW MORE PHYSICS & MATHEMATICS DEAD STARS SOMETIMES SHINE AGAIN — AND GRAVITY ITSELF MAY BE RESPONSIBLE By Paul Sutter published July 19, 2024 Do dead stars glow? A strange gravitational phenomenon could be generating enormous amounts of light around neutron stars, new research suggests. Gravity SCIENTISTS CREATE WEIRD 'TIME CRYSTAL' FROM ATOMS INFLATED TO BE HUNDREDS OF TIMES BIGGER THAN NORMAL By Ben Turner published July 12, 2024 By blowing atoms up to several hundred times their size, researchers have been able to make another type of oddly-behaving time crystal. Physics & Mathematics GOOGLE DOODLE HONORS CÉSAR LATTES, BRAZILIAN PHYSICIST WHO DISCOVERED A LONG-SOUGHT PARTICLE HIDDEN IN COSMIC RAYS By Ben Turner published July 11, 2024 The physicist César Lattes, who is honored today (July 11) in a Google Doodle, is famous across Latin America for his discovery of the pion — a subatomic particle produced by shockwaves from exploding stars. Particle Physics VIEW MORE CHEMISTRY DOES HONEY EVER GO BAD? By Kristel Tjandra published July 12, 2024 Honey owes its long shelf-life to its makers, but it doesn't always last forever. Chemistry WHAT IS THE WORLD'S MOST DANGEROUS CHEMICAL? By Victoria Atkinson published July 6, 2024 There are plenty of harmful chemicals, but the devil is in the details when determining which is the most dangerous. Chemistry WHY DOES COTTON SHRINK? By Sarah Wells published June 24, 2024 The science of ruining your favorite shirt is more complicated than you might think. Chemistry VIEW MORE TECH 'CHATGPT MOMENT FOR BIOLOGY': EX-META SCIENTISTS DEVELOP AI MODEL THAT CREATES PROTEINS 'NOT FOUND IN NATURE' By Stephanie Pappas published July 18, 2024 The ESM3 model can 'write' new proteins from scratch, opening up new possibilities for synthetic biology. Artificial Intelligence SAVE $76 ON CELESTRON NATURE DX 12X56 BINOCULARS BEFORE PRIME DAY ENDS By Kimberley Lane last updated July 17, 2024 Deals Hurry! Prime Day ends tonight! Celestron Nature DX 12x56 binoculars are fantastic for wildlife observation and stargazing — $193.89 in this Prime Day binocular deal. Deals MASSIVE 100-INCH TRANSPARENT SCREEN SET TO ENTER PRODUCTION — SCIENTISTS CLAIM IT WILL BE 10 TIMES CHEAPER THAN TRANSPARENT OLEDS By Rory Bathgate published July 17, 2024 Researchers say the screen can work both indoors and outdoors, and can be adjusted to become more or less transparent depending on user needs. Engineering VIEW MORE Live Science is part of Future US Inc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site. * About Us * Contact Future's experts * Terms and conditions * Privacy policy * Cookies policy * Accessibility Statement * Advertise with us * Web notifications * Careers * Editorial standards * How to pitch a story to us © Future US, Inc. Full 7th Floor, 130 West 42nd Street, New York, NY 10036.