Friday, November 8, 2013

FOX News: New hammerhead shark species found off South Carolina

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New hammerhead shark species found off South Carolina
Nov 8th 2013, 19:15

When new species are found near populated areas, they are often small and inconspicuous, not, for example, a hammerhead shark.

But that's exactly what a team of researchers discovered along the coast of South Carolina. The new species looks virtually identical to the scalloped hammerhead, but is genetically distinct, and contains about 10 fewer vertebrae, or segments of backbone, new research shows.

'Outside of South Carolina, we've only seen five tissue samples of the species.'

- University of South Carolina fish expert Joe Quattro

The new species, named the Carolina hammerhead (Sphyrna gilbert), gives birth to shark "pups" in estuaries near the shore off the Carolinas, according to a study published in August in the journal Zootaxa.

To find the shark, scientists led by University of South Carolina fish expert Joe Quattro collected 80 young sharks that looked liked scalloped hammerheads. They then analyzed their DNA, and found that they were distinct from their scalloped cousins. Further analysis found more subtle differences; the new species is slightly smaller, for instance, according to the study. Of these 80 sharks, 54 of them belonged to the new species, the study noted.

The study shows that the new species is quite rare. "Outside of South Carolina, we've only seen five tissue samples of the cryptic species," Quattro said in a release from the University of South Carolina. "And that's out of three or four hundred specimens."

Populations of scalloped sharks, like those of most other shark species, have plummeted in the past few decades by up to 90 percent, Quattro said.

"Here, we're showing that the scalloped hammerheads are actually two things," Quattro said. "Since the cryptic species is much rarer than the [more widespread one], God only knows what its population levels have dropped to."

The decline of sharks has been driven in part by demand for shark fin soup, a Chinese delicacy. About 100 million sharks are killed each year to satisfy this craving, scientists estimate. But there may be some good news consumption of the soup is down by about 50 percent in China over the past two years, according to the environmental group WildAid.

In more shark news, a new species of "walking shark" was discovered near a remote Indonesian island in August.

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FOX News: Track Europe's falling, 2,000-pound satellite in real-time

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Track Europe's falling, 2,000-pound satellite in real-time
Nov 8th 2013, 14:45

Sometime this weekend, the sky will actually be falling.

A defunct satellite from the European Space Agency the size of a Chevy Suburban is set to plunge to Earth somewhere between Sunday and Monday -- and experts say there's no way to precisely determine where it will crash.

Its orbit goes over the poles, and as the planet rotates the satellite whizzes over nearly every point on Earth. But GOCE, or Gravity field and steady-state Ocean Circulation Explorer, ran out of gas last month and has been steadily sinking towards the Earth. 

The satellite had been orbiting at a very low altitude for its mission, just 161 miles above the planet. Indeed, GOCE's orbit is so low that it experiences drag from the outer edges of Earth's atmosphere, the ESA said.

GOCE Facts and Figures

Full name: Gravity field and steady-state Ocean Circulation Explorer

Launched: March 17, 2009

Launch site: Plesetsk Cosmodrome, Russia

Mission control: European Space Operations Centre (ESOC), Darmstadt, Germany

Number of instruments: 3

Mission cost: $470 million (including launcher and operations)

Mass: 2,425 pounds

Size: 17.4 feet long, about 3 feet body diameter

Propulsion tank: 88 pounds of xenon

Learn more

Where is it now? Thanks to a neat widget built just for FoxNews.com by the satellite-tracking website N2YO.com, you can watch the falling satellite as it courses through the heavens.

Pinpointing where and when hurtling space debris will strike is an imprecise science. To calculate the orbit, N2YO.com runs information from the U.S. Air Force Space Command through a series of algorithms, and overlays it on mapping data from Google.

Not that citizens need to take cover. Although the satellite will break into pieces -- between 25 and 45 with the largest as big as 200 pounds, according to The New York Times -- they are most likely to plunge into the ocean.

"It's rather hard to predict where the spacecraft will re-enter and impact," Rune Floberghagen, the mission manager for GOCE, told The Times.

GOCE has been orbiting Earth since March 2009 at the lowest altitude of any research satellite. With a sleek, aerodynamic design meant to eliminate drag on the craft from the planet -- it's been called the "Ferrari of space" -- GOCE has mapped variations in Earth's gravity with extreme detail, creating a model of the planet's "geoid."

The satellite is 17.4 feet long, according to the European Space Agency. A 2014 Chevrolet Suburban is 18.5 feet long, including the bumpers. The slim satellite is only 1/3 the weight of the truck, however.

When a NASA satellite fell from orbit two years ago, it plunged into the Pacific. When Russia's Phobos-Grunt failed last year, it too plunged into the Pacific. One day before GOCE re-enters the thick atmosphere of the planet, ESA will be able to narrow down the exact time and location of the crash.

As far as anyone knows, falling space debris has never injured anyone -- although one woman came dangerously close. Nor has significant property damage been reported. That's because most of the planet is covered in water and there are vast regions of empty land.

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FOX News: NASA photograph shows Comet ISON as it streaks toward sun

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NASA photograph shows Comet ISON as it streaks toward sun
Nov 8th 2013, 13:00

The potentially spectacular Comet ISON streaks through the constellation Leo (The Lion) in a stunning new NASA photo taken just a month before the icy object's highly anticipated close encounter with the sun.

Comet ISON assumes a greenish tinge in the photo, which was taken with a 14-inch telescope on Oct. 25 at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala. The comet was about 132 million miles from Earth at the time, blazing through space at nearly 88,000 mph, agency officials said.

The image also captures the motion of a manmade object, this one much closer to home. "The diagonal streak right of center was caused by the Italian SkyMed-2 satellite passing though the field of view," NASA officials wrote in a description of the photo. [See more amazing photos of Comet ISON by stargazers]

Comet ISON is slated to skim just 730,000 miles above the surface of the sun on Nov. 28. If the icy wanderer survives this flyby, it could put on a great show for skywatchers through the first half of December, experts say.Spotting the comet right now, however, requires a bit of work.

"At magnitude 8.5, the comet is still too faint for the unaided eye or small binoculars, but it's an easy target in a small telescope," NASA officials wrote.

Nobody knows exactly how ISON will behave during its close solar approach later this month. It's tough to predict the behavior of any comet, especially a "dynamically new" one like ISON that's making its first trip to the inner solar system from the distant, frigid Oort Cloud.

Comet ISON was discovered in September 2012 by two Russian amateur astronomers. Scientists have thus had more than a year to prepare for the comet's solar flyby, and they've mobilized a variety of instruments on the ground and in space to track ISON's progress.

Researchers hope to learn a great deal about the comet's composition by noting which gases boil off ISON as it gets closer and closer to the sun. This information, in turn, could yield insights about the early days of the solar system, which came together nearly 4.6 billion years ago. 

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Thursday, November 7, 2013

FOX News: Swiss scientists say Arafat was poisoned with polonium

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Swiss scientists say Arafat was poisoned with polonium
Nov 7th 2013, 17:53

LONDON –  The deadly radioactive element polonium first hit the headlines when it was used to kill KGB agent-turned-Kremlin critic Alexander Litvinenko in London in 2006.

Scientists at Switzerland's Institute of Radiation Physics said Thursday they've found evidence that Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat was deliberately poisoned with polonium though they don't know if it ultimately killed him.

Arafat died under mysterious circumstances at a French military hospital in 2004 but the Swiss say the amounts of polonium and its byproducts, including lead, that they found in his bones and grave soil could not have been accidental.

Espionage?

Arafat died in 2004 in France, a month after falling ill at his Israeli-besieged West Bank compound. Palestinian officials have alleged Israel poisoned Arafat, a claim Israel denies.

Arafat's widow says the Palestinian leadership must seek justice for her husband after Swiss scientists found evidence suggesting he was poisoned by the radioactive substance polonium-210.

Read more

Other scientists said the Swiss results were suggestive of poisoning but not definite proof. The Swiss have countered that it might be impossible to get definitive proof since the tests were conducted years after Arafat's death.

WHAT IS POLONIUM?
Polonium-210 is one of the world's rarest elements, discovered in 1898 by scientists Marie and Pierre Curie and named in honor of her country of origin, Poland. It occurs naturally in very low concentrations in the Earth's crust and also is produced artificially in nuclear reactors. In small amounts, it has legitimate industrial uses, mainly in devices to eliminate static electricity. Polonium is not naturally found in the human body.

HOW DANGEROUS IS IT?
Very. If ingested, it is lethal in extremely small doses. A minuscule amount of the silver powder is sufficient to kill. British radiation experts say once polonium-210 enters the bloodstream, its deadly effects are nearly impossible to stop.

WHERE DOES IT COME FROM?
Polonium can be a byproduct of the chemical processing of uranium, but usually it's made artificially in a nuclear reactor or a particle accelerator. Dozens of countries including Russia, Israel and the U.S. have the nuclear capability to produce polonium. Derek Hill, a radiation expert at University College London, said if there was enough polonium left in the Arafat samples, it might be possible to trace where the element came from -- providing more clues about whether Arafat was poisoned.

IS IT UNUSUAL TO FIND POLONIUM IN PEOPLE?
Yes. Alastair Hay, a professor of environmental toxicology at the University of Leeds, said there is no natural amount of polonium you would expect to find in someone -- unless they worked in atomic energy plants or dealt with radioactive isotopes. He said it was difficult to explain why Arafat's body had any traces of it.

HOW CAN IT POISON PEOPLE?
People can be poisoned if they eat or drink food contaminated with polonium, breathe air contaminated with it or get it in an open wound. Litvinenko apparently drank tea laced with polonium during a meeting at a London hotel.

CAN SCIENTISTS PROVE THAT ARAFAT WAS POISONED?
Absolute proof is elusive. There have been so few cases of known polonium poisoning that scientists don't know very much about its exact symptoms. Swiss scientists say Arafat had symptoms commonly linked to radiation poisoning, including nausea, vomiting, diarrhea and liver and kidney failure -- but not two other classic symptoms, hair loss and a weaker immune system. The Swiss scientists also noted their tests faced several limitations. They had to perform their analyses on very small specimens -- such as a single hair shaft or traces of blood and urine. Those tests were also conducted eight years after Arafat's death, so there could have been problems with chemical degradation.

WHO HAS DIED FROM IT?
In addition to Litvinenko's presumed death from polonium poisoning, some speculate that the Curies' daughter Irene, who died of leukemia, may have developed the disease after accidentally being exposed to polonium in the laboratory. Israeli author Michal Karpin has claimed the cancer deaths of several Israeli scientists were the result of a polonium leak at the Weizmann Institute of Science in 1957. Israeli officials have never acknowledged a connection.

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FOX News: Lawn sprinkler in space? NASA's Hubble spies asteroid spouting six comet-like tails

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Lawn sprinkler in space? NASA's Hubble spies asteroid spouting six comet-like tails
Nov 7th 2013, 16:58

An asteroid with six comet-like tails of dust radiating from it like a rotating lawn mower was spotted for the first time by NASA's Hubble Space telescope.

"We were literally dumbfounded when we saw it," lead investigator David Jewitt of the University of California at Los Angeles said today in a press release. 

Astronomers were puzzled over the tiny points of light beaming from asteroid P/2013 P5 found in August. However, it wasn't until September 10 when Hubble was used to take a more detailed image of the flying object that the multiple tails were discovered.

When Hubble spotted the asteroid again on September 23, 

"Even more amazing, its tail structures change dramatically in just 13 days as it belches out dust," Jewitt said. "That also caught us by surprise. It's hard to believe we're looking at an asteroid."

Astronomers believe the asteroid's rotation rate increased to the point where its surface starting flying apart causing the tails of dust to blast off into space.

The mysterious asteroid will continue to be observed by Jewitt and his team of astronomers in hopes of measuring the asteroid's true spin rate

"In astronomy, where you find one, you eventually find a whole bunch more," Jewitt said. "This is just an amazing object to us, and almost certainly the first of many more to come."

Jewitt said P/2013 P5 is probably a fragment of a larger asteroid that broke apart in a collision approximately 2000million-years ago.

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FOX News: NASA Curiosity Rover spots iguana on Mars

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NASA Curiosity Rover spots iguana on Mars
Nov 7th 2013, 15:37

NASA's Mars Rover has captured the image of a rock that looks just like an iguana.

The iguana doppleganger was first spotted by the website UFO Sightings Daily who found the photograph on NASA's archives of dozens of images of the barren landscape surrounding the Curiosity Rover.

The reptile-shaped rock is not the first "animal" to be found on Mars. A rock shaped like a rat was discovered earlier this year.

"This is not the first animal found on Mars, actually there have been about 10-15 to date," UFO Sightings Daily coordinator Scott C. Warring told Canadian news site agoracosmopolitan.com. "I even found a rock that moved four times in four photos...then vanished on the fifth."

Proof of life on Mars or just a weirdly-shaped rock? Check out the images on NASA's website for yourself.

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FOX News: Fossil captures ancient insects having sex

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Fossil captures ancient insects having sex
Nov 7th 2013, 12:30

About 165 million years ago Bam! froghoppers' mating session was interrupted by a volcanic eruption.

Now, scientists have unearthed a fossil in China that shows the two creatures immortalized in the act. The discovery, detailed Nov. 6 in the journal PLOS ONE, is the earliest fossil of insect sex ever discovered. It reveals that, at least for a group of sap-sucking insects called froghoppers, sex hasn't changed much over the last 165 million years.

Rare finds
Fossils of insects copulating usually trapped in amber are fairly rare, with only about 40 found around the world known to date, said study co-author Chung Kun Shih, a visiting professor from Capital Normal University in China. But until now, the oldest fossil showing insect sex dated to about 100 million years ago. [See Photos of Fossilized Turtles Caught in the Act]

'The male and female organ -- we can see it. That's really rare.'

- Chung Kun Shih, a visiting professor from Capital Normal University in China

The researchers were excavating a fossil-rich area of Inner Mongolia in China when they discovered the two creatures clinging to each other.

In this region, "insect fossils are so good we can see the detailed structure, including the hair," Shih said.

The insects, of the species Anthoscytina perpetua, are face-to-face, with the male's sex organ, called the aedeagus, clearly inserted into the female's sex organ, called the bursa copulatrix.

"The male and female organ we can see it," Shih told LiveScience. "That's really rare."

The fossils dated to the middle Jurassic Period, about 165 million years ago. [See Images of the Fossil Insects Getting Busy]

Same old sex
Despite 165 million years having passed, modern-day froghoppers look anatomically very similar to the Jurassic insects, with symmetric sex organs.

Froghopper sex hasn't changed much in those 165 million years, either. The fossilized male's abdominal section is twisted in order to better insert his sex organ a position also seen in modern insect species. Froghoppers today also prefer to mate either face-to-face, when standing on a small twig or side by side on a leaf or tree trunk.

The team hypothesizes that the two insects were in a lover's hug when a volcanic eruption released a plume of poisonous gas, killing all life in the area, including the bacteria and fungus that would have normally decomposed their bodies. Later, wind or other natural forces tossed the love bugs into a nearby lake, where they were buried under layers of sediment and protected for millions of years.

The team isn't sure whether the insects were truly face-to-face during sex or were originally side by side and later shifted by natural forces after they died.

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FOX News: Report: Genetics breakthrough enables scientists to edit any part of human genome

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Report: Genetics breakthrough enables scientists to edit any part of human genome
Nov 7th 2013, 10:16

A new technique has enabled scientists to engineer parts of the human genome with extreme precision, a breakthrough which could mean new treatment possibilities for maladies such as cancer, HIV, and inherited genetic disorders. 

According to the report, published in Thursday's edition of The Independent in Britain, the technique, known as Crispr, enables the most detailed and specific possible alteration to any part of DNA of the 23 pairs of human chromosomes without introducing unintended mutations or flaws. 

"Crispr is absolutely huge. It's incredibly powerful and it has many applications, from agriculture to potential gene therapy in humans," Craig Mello of the University of Massachusetts Medical School, a 2006 Nobel Prize winner, told the paper. 

"It's one of those things that you have to see to believe. I read the scientific papers like everyone else but when I saw it working in my own lab, my jaw dropped. A total novice in my lab got it to work."

The Independent reports that Crispr could be used to hasten the development of genetically-modified crops and livestock, but many experts are most excited about its possibilities in humans. 

Crispr works by using an RNA guide molecule that can be programmed to match any unique DNA sequence in the human genome. The molecule is attached to a special enzyme that cut both strands of the DNA double helix. Once that is done, the copied DNA is inserted into the double helix and defective DNA is deleted. 

According to the Independent, some scientists believe the technique could be used to eliminate certain genetic diseases, like Down syndrome or Huntington's Disease, by altering the DNA of an embryo before implanting it in the mother's womb. 

"It would be difficult to argue against using it if it can be shown to be as safe, reliable and effective as it appears to be," Dr. Daga Wells, an IVF scientist at Oxford University, told the paper. "Who would condemn a child to terrible suffering and perhaps an early death when a therapy exists, capable of repairing the problem?"

Click for more from the Independent

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FOX News: Southern California sky lights up with reported fireball

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Southern California sky lights up with reported fireball
Nov 7th 2013, 07:29

LOS ANGELES –  Southern Californians from Santa Barbara to San Diego have reported seeing a fireball that forecasters said was most likely a meteor streaking across the sky.

The National Weather Service says the sightings reported starting at about 8 p.m. Wednesday night are most likely associated with the South Taurids meteor shower that has been especially active in early November. Astronomers say the Taurids don't bring big numbers of visible meteors but a high percentage of extremely bright ones that look like fireballs.

Twitter lit up with reports of the sightings, though few if any were able to capture the streak on photo or video.

Comedian Eli Braden tweeted that he "just saw an absolutely INSANE meteor in the sky above Glendale, CA ... Either that or the alien invasion has begun."

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FOX News: New tyrannosaur that predates the tyrannosaurus-rex discovered in southern Utah

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New tyrannosaur that predates the tyrannosaurus-rex discovered in southern Utah
Nov 7th 2013, 07:30

SALT LAKE CITY –  They called him the King of Gore -- but prey probably called him King of Pain.

Paleontologists in Utah unveiled a new dinosaur Wednesday named Lythronax argestes (LY'-throw-nax ar-GES'-tees) -- the first part of which means "king of gore." It's an apt name for what turned out to be the great uncle of the famous Tyrannosaurus rex, or "Tyrant Lizard."

Discovered in southern Utah in 2009, the Lythronax skeleton looks like a half-sized tyrannosaur, and it proves giant dinosaurs like T.rex were around 10 million years earlier than previously believed. 

A full skeletal replica of the carnivore was on display at the Natural History Museum of Utah alongside a 3-D model of the head and a large painted mural of the dinosaur roaming a shoreline. It should be an eye-opener, because in many ways, it's nothing like what visitors may expect, explained University of Utah paleontologist Randall Irmis, who co-authored a journal article about the discovery.

'Dinosaur down probably would have been pretty comfortable as well.'

- University of Utah paleontologist Randall Irmis

"We're really changing the view of dinosaurs," he told FoxNews.com. For one thing, Lythronax, which was 24 feet long and 8 feet tall at the hip,was covered in feathers that formed a soft-to-the-touch down.

"Based on fossils found elsewhere, we now that a lot of tyrannosaurs had something of a downy covering -- protofeathers," Irmis noted. People today stuff their pillowcases with down, he said. "Dinosaur down probably would have been pretty comfortable as well," he said.

For another thing, this predator's vision was likely quite sharp; many armchair enthusiasts think dinosaurs had poor eyesight, thanks to an inaccurate description in the movie "Jurassic Park." Stand still and it would have missed you.

But Lythronax had a very narrow snout with a wide back to its skull. The creature clearly had forward-facing eyes with overlapping, binocular vision -- acute eyesight befitting a predator, making this terrifying beast even scarier.

"They were likely more creepy and fearsome," he said.

The Wednesday unveiling was the public's first glimpse at the new species, which researchers found in the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument in November 2009, and then spent the past four years digging them up and traveling the world to confirm they were from a new species.

"The discovery is often the most exciting part, but it's just the beginning of the process," Irmis told FoxNews.com.

Paleontologists believe the dinosaur lived 80 million years ago in the late Cretaceous Period on a landmass in the flooded central region of North America.

The discovery offers valuable new insight into the evolution of the ferocious tyrannosaurs that have been made famous in movies and captured the awe of school children and adults alike, said Thomas Holtz Jr., a vertebrate paleontologist at the University of Maryland department of geology.

"This shows that these big, banana-tooth bruisers go back to the very first days of the giant tyrant dinosaurs," said Holtz, who reviewed the findings. "This one is the first example of these kind of dinosaurs being the ruler of the land."

The new dinosaur likely was a bit smaller than the Tyrannosaurus rex but was otherwise similar, said Mark Loewen, a University of Utah paleontologist who co-authored the journal article. Asked what the carnivorous dinosaur ate, Loewen responded: "Whatever it wants."

"That skull is designed for grabbing something, shaking it to death and tearing it apart," he said.

The fossils were found by a seasonal paleontologist technician for the Bureau of Land Management who climbed up two cliffs and stopped at the base of a third in the national monument.

"I realized I was standing with bone all around me," said Scott Richardson, who called his boss, Alan Titus, to let him know about the fossils.

Loewen and others spent three years traveling the world to compare the fossils to other dinosaurs to be absolutely sure it was a new species. The findings are being published in the journal PLOS One.

There are about 1 million acres of cretaceous rocks that could be holding other new species of dinosaurs, said Titus, the BLM paleontologist who oversees the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument. Only about 10 percent of the rock formation has been scoured, he said. Twelve other new dinosaurs found there are waiting to be named.

"We are just getting started," Titus said. "We have a really big sandbox to play in."

Holtz said the finding is a testament to the bounty of fossils lying in the earth in North America. He predicts more discoveries in Utah.

"It shows we don't have to go to Egypt or Mongolia or China to find new dinosaurs," Holtz said. "It's just a matter of getting the field teams out."

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Wednesday, November 6, 2013

FOX News: Study suggests life began with clay, echoing Bible creation story

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Study suggests life began with clay, echoing Bible creation story
Nov 6th 2013, 20:15

A new study suggests clay may have been the birthplace of life on Earth.

Cornell University researchers found that clay may have served as the first breeding ground for the complex biochemicals that make life possible, a finding that may reverberate with anyone familiar with the Biblical creation story.

"We propose that in early geological history, clay hydrogel provided a confinement function for biomolecules and biochemical reactions," said Dan Luo, professor of biological and environmental engineering and a member of the Kavli Institute at Cornell for Nanoscale Science, according to Science Daily.

The clay absorbs liquids like a sponge and acts as the perfect place for chemicals to react with one another to form proteins, DNA and eventually living cells.

According to the Old Testament, God made the first man Adam from earth or clay. Adam comes from the Hebrew word adamah, which means earth. The Quaran, Greek mythology and other creation stories also say God molded man from clay.

Scientists found that the clay hydrogel could have protected the chemical processes until the membrane that surrounds living cells fully developed.

The study cites further evidence, nothing that geological history shows the first appearance of clay to be at the same time biomolecules began to form into cell-like structures.

How the biological machines evolved remains to be explained, Luo said. Luo and his fellow researchers are still trying to figure out why clay hydrogel is such a successful material in cell-free protein production.

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FOX News: Russian fireball shows meteor risk may be bigger than once thought

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Russian fireball shows meteor risk may be bigger than once thought
Nov 6th 2013, 20:53

WASHINGTON –  Scientists studying the terrifying meteor that exploded without warning over a Russian city last winter say the threat of space rocks smashing into Earth is bigger than they thought.

Meteors about the size of the one that streaked through the sky at 42,000 mph and burst over Chelyabinsk in February -- and ones even larger and more dangerous -- are probably four to five times more likely to hit the planet than scientists believed before the fireball, according to three studies published Wednesday in the journals Nature and Science.

Until Chelyabinsk, NASA had looked only for space rocks about 100 feet wide and bigger, figuring there was little danger below that.

This meteor was only 62 feet across but burst with the force of about 40 Hiroshima-type atom bombs, scientists say. Its shock wave shattered thousands of windows, and its flash temporarily blinded 70 people and caused dozens of skin-peeling sunburns just after dawn in icy Russia. More than 1,600 people in all were injured.

Up until then, scientists had figured a meteor causing an airburst like that was a once-in-150-years event, based on how many space rocks have been identified in orbit. But one of the studies now says it is likely to happen once every 30 years or so, based on how often these things are actually hitting.

By readjusting how often these rocks strike and how damaging even small ones can be, "those two things together can increase the risk by an order of magnitude," said Mark Boslough, a Sandia National Lab physicist, co-author of one of the studies.

Lindley Johnson, manager of NASA's Near Earth Object program, said the space agency is reassessing what size space rocks to look for and how often they are likely to hit.

The U.S. government gained a new sense of urgency after Chelyabinsk, quietly holding a disaster drill earlier this year in Washington that was meant to simulate what would happen if a slightly bigger space rock threatened the East Coast.

After the drill, NASA and Federal Emergency Management Agency officials said they should look at the need for evacuations, figure out ways of keeping the public informed without scaring them, and handle meteor threats in a way comparable to how they deal with hurricanes bearing down on the coast.

During the drill, when it looked as if the meteor would hit just outside the nation's capital, experts predicted 78,000 people could die. But when the mock meteor ended up in the ocean, the fake damage featured a 49-foot tsunami and shortages of supplies along the East Coast, according to an after-action report obtained by The Associated Press.

The exercise and the studies show there's a risk from smaller space rocks that strike before they are detected -- not just from the giant, long-seen-in-advance ones like in the movie "Armageddon," said Bill Ailor, a space debris expert at the Aerospace Corporation who helped coordinate the drill.

"The biggest hazard from asteroids right now is the city-busting airbursts, not the civilization-busting impacts from 1-kilometer-diameter objects that has so far been the target of most astronomical surveys," Purdue University astronomer Jay Melosh, who wasn't part of the studies, wrote in an email.

"Old-fashioned civil defense, not Bruce Willis and his atom bombs, might be the best insurance against hazards of this kind."

Scientists said a 1908 giant blast over Siberia, a 1963 airborne explosion off the coast of South Africa, and others were of the type that is supposed to happen less than once a century, or in the case of Siberia, once every 8,000 years, yet they all occurred in a 105-year timespan.

Because more than two-thirds of Earth is covered with water and other vast expanses are uninhabited deserts and ice, other past fireballs could have gone unnoticed.

This week, NASA got a wake-up call on those bigger space rocks that astronomers thought they had a handle on, discovering two 12-mile-wide space rocks and a 1.2-mile-wide one that had escaped their notice until this month.

The three objects won't hit Earth, but their discovery raises the question of why they weren't seen until now.

The last time a 12-mile-wide rock had been discovered was about 30 years ago, and two popped into scientists' view just now, NASA asteroid scientist Donald Yeomans said. He said NASA had thought it had already seen 95 percent of the large space rocks that come near Earth.

Asteroids are space rocks that circle the sun as leftovers of failed attempts to form planets billions of years ago. When asteroids enter Earth's atmosphere, they become meteors. (When they hit the ground, they are called meteorites.)

The studies said the Chelyabinsk meteor probably split off from a much bigger space rock.

What happened in the Russian city of 1 million people is altering how astronomers look at a space rocks. With first-of-its-kind video, photos, satellite imagery and the broken-up rock, scientists have been able to piece together the best picture yet of what happens when an asteroid careens into Earth's atmosphere. It's not pretty.

"I certainly never expected to see something of this scale or this magnitude," said University of Western Ontario physicist Peter Brown, lead author of one study. "It's certainly scary."

Scientists said the unusually shallow entry of the space rock spread out its powerful explosion, limiting its worst damage but making a wider area feel the effects. When it burst it released 500 kilotons of energy, scientists calculated.

"We were lucky. This could have easily gone the other way. It was really dangerous," said NASA meteor astronomer Peter Jenniskens, co-author of one of the papers. "This was clearly extraordinary. Just stunning."

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FOX News: Mummy's colorful collar found in Egyptian tomb

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Mummy's colorful collar found in Egyptian tomb
Nov 6th 2013, 13:00

A collar with "almost pristine" colors that would have been worn by a mummy has been discovered in small pieces in an Egyptian tomb in Thebes and put back together again.

People in ancient Egypt wore collars called "wesekhs" made of beads when they were alive. This painted collar is made of a different type of material called cartonnage (a plastered material) and was meant to be worn by a mummy after death. A clay seal found near the collar suggests that it was worn by the mummy of a wealthy undertaker.

Dating back around 2,300 years ago and found in modern-day Luxor, the collar is painted in a vivid array of colors, designs and images that show elements of ancient Egyptian religion. The god Horus is signified by two falcons wearing red sun-disk crowns on the top corners, while at top center is a human-headed bird (called a "Ba" bird) that represents, in essence, the immortal soul of the deceased mummy. [In Photos: The Mummy of King Ramesses III]

Additionally, in the center of the design, there is a drawing of a golden shrine with two goddesses, possibly the sisters Isis and Nephthys, facing a deity in the center that may be the jackal-headed Anubis. The collar is about 8.7 inches (22 centimeters) high (not including the falcons) and about 16.5 inches (42 cm) in width. Near the bottom of the collar lotus blossoms are shown flourishing.

Complex tomb

The tomb that it was found in is a complex place. Originally it was built more than 3,300 years ago for a butler named Parennefer who served the pharaoh Akhenaten. Then, sometime later, an official named Amenemopet excavated his own tomb into part of the butler's courtyard. As the centuries went on more individuals (the precise number is unknown) were buried at the site, one of them being interred around 2,300 years ago with this colorful collar.

The re-use of tombs was a common practice in Thebes. "I guess it was much more economical to use these old derelict tombs than to excavate out new tombs at that time," Susan Redford, of Penn State University, told LiveScience in an interview. She and her team found hundreds of cartonnage fragments in excavations at the site, the fragments that made up this collar being discovered in 2000 and 2002. The team's artist, Rupert Nesbitt, carefully put the collar back together again, along with several other coverings that belong to different mummies.

"These pieces could range from about palm-sized to dime-sized," Redford said. "It was like a giant jigsaw puzzle," added Redford, who detailed the collar discovery in a paper in "Archaeological Research in the Valley of the Kings & Ancient Thebes: Papers Presented in Honor of Richard H. Wilkinson" (University of Arizona Egyptian Expedition, 2013). [See Photos of Egypt's Valley of the Kings]

Archaeologists cannot say for sure whom this collar belonged to. In addition to being re-used multiple times the tomb site has been robbed in both ancient and modern times and, until recently, was even used to hold dead animals.

Egyptian tombs and temples tended to be very colorful places and the collar reflects that, Redford said.

An undertaker's collar?

The mummy who wore this collar is now gone or otherwise part of the various humans remains found in the tomb. However, an inscription written in a mud-clay seal was found near the fragments of the collar.

The seal would have held together the string or binding of a papyrus scroll. While the scroll itself is mostly destroyed, the inscription from the seal says that it is for a man named "Padihorwer," reading (in translation) that he was "privy to the mysteries and god's sealer, 'embalmer,' scribe, prophet of the 'desert' (necropolis) of Qus," which is located north of Thebes.

An ancient archival record also survives, telling of "a man of Qus" being buried at Thebes in the same period that the collar has been dated to, Redford said.

Padihorwer was basically an undertaker, a profession that could bring some level of wealth. "He's a little higher than just an ordinary necropolis worker," she said, noting that these ancient undertakers arranged for embalming and burial, were paid by families and generally ran their affairs like a business. "We think that they had a guild of sorts," she said, "it was a business just like undertakers are today."

If this collar, with its elaborate decorations, was worn by Padihorwer, it would suggest that his business prospered and that he was a relatively wealthy undertaker at the time he was buried.

FollowLiveScience @livescience, Facebook& Google+. Original article onLiveScience.

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FOX News: China's Forbidden City built with giant 'sliding stones'

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FOXNews.com - Breaking news and video. Latest Current News: U.S., World, Entertainment, Health, Business, Technology, Politics, Sports. // via fulltextrssfeed.com 
China's Forbidden City built with giant 'sliding stones'
Nov 6th 2013, 12:45

The Forbidden City, the palace once home to the emperors of China, was built by workers sliding giant stones for miles on slippery paths of wet ice, researchers have found.

The emperors of China lived in the Forbidden City, located in the heart of Beijing, for nearly 500 years, during China's final two imperial dynasties, the Ming Dynasty and the Qing Dynasty. Vast numbers of huge stones were mined and transported there for its construction in the 15th and 16th centuries. The heaviest of these giant boulders, aptly named the Large Stone Carving, now weighs more than 220 tons but once weighed more than 330 tons.

Many of the largest building blocks of the Forbidden City came from a quarry about 43 miles away from the site. People in China had been using the spoked wheel since about 1500 B.C., so it was commonly thought that such colossal stones would've been transported on wheels, not by something like a sled. [See Photos of the Forbidden City & Building Stones]

'It's humbling to think about a big project like this taking place 500 to 600 years ago.'

- Howard Stone, an engineer at Princeton University

However, Jiang Li, an engineer at the University of Science and Technology Beijing, translated a 500-year-old document, which revealed that an especially large stone measuring 31 feet long and weighing about 135 tons was slid over ice to the Forbidden City on a sledge hauled by a team of men over 28 days in the winter of 1557. This finding supported previously discovered clues suggesting that sleds helped to build the imperial palace.

To discover why sleds were still used for hauling gigantic stones 3,000 years after the development of the wheel, Li and her colleagues calculated how much energy it would take for sleds to accomplish this goal.

"We were never sure quite what we would learn," said study co-author Howard Stone, an engineer at Princeton University.

The ancient document Li translated revealed that workers dug wells every 1,600 feet or so to get water to pour on the ice to lubricate it. This made the ice even more slippery and, therefore, easier upon which to slide rocks.

The researchers calculated that a workforce of fewer than 50 men could haul a 123-ton stone on a sledge over lubricated ice from the quarry to the Forbidden City. In contrast, pulling the same load over bare ground would have required more than 1,500 men.

Moreover, the researchers estimated that the average speed of a 123-ton stone hauled on a sled on wet ice would be about 3 inches per second. This would have been fast enough for the stone to slide over the wet ice before the liquid water on the ice froze.

All in all, the researchers suggested that workers preferred hauling stones on smooth, flat, slippery, wet ice rather than on a bumpy ride on a wheeled cart. The ancient document Li translated revealed there were debates over whether to rely on sledges or wheels to help build the Forbidden City sledges may have required far more workers, time and money than mule-pulled wagons, but sledges were seen as a safer and more reliable means for slowly transporting heavy objects.

"It is humbling to think about a big project like this taking place 500 to 600 years ago, and the level of planning and coordination that was needed for it to occur," Stone told LiveScience.

Li, Stone and their colleague Haosheng Chen detailed their findings online Nov. 4 in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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FOX News: America's rocketeers: Young geniuses could push the space race forward

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America's rocketeers: Young geniuses could push the space race forward
Nov 6th 2013, 18:00, by John Brandon

Fresh ideas from young rocket scientists of the millennial generation might just kick-start the U.S. space program -- just as similarly young scientists did in the 1960s' race to the moon.

Rocketeers like 24-year-old Cory Medina are inventing new ways to explore space. A design engineer at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., he's using 3D printed parts (also known as additive manufacturing) to design a combustion chamber for a new 35,000-pound thrust liquid rocket engine. The idea is to launch multiple low-cost "cube" satellites created using 3D printed materials.

Another example: Neelanjan Bandyopadhyay is a 29-year-old Ph.D. student at Northwestern University. He's working on something called a quantum cascade laser. Current lasers used to look for life on Mars are too big and bulky, so Bandyopadhyay has developed a laser that is more portable and yet powerful enough to make the search more feasible. 

"I've developed high-power lasers below 4 microns to as short as 3 microns," he told FoxNews.com. "Right now, interband cascade lasers are in use on the Mars Rovers. However, our lasers can have much higher power due to cascading of many repetitions of the same active region ... and can detect hydrocarbons with greater sensitivity."

By focusing on one particularly important wavelength of light that is strongly absorbed by methane, he's improving the hunt for life.

"Finding methane, the simplest hydrocarbon, in sufficient quantity, should indicate the possibility of more complex organic compounds for life," Bandyopadhyay said.

India on Tuesday launched its first Mars exploration rocket and China has in recent years poured millions into its space program. Citing space policy experts, The Houston Chronicle wrote that the government must step up NASA funding to retain a leadership position. 

While there are no signs we're ready to go back to the moon today, let alone send someone to Mars, some of these bright ideas might help get us there someday.

Sam Rodkey is a propulsion engineer at Blue Origin, the space tech company funded by Jeff Bezos from Amazon. Rodkey is designing new lower-cost rocket technology to compete with NASA. At SpaceX, young rocketeers like Kevin Miller and John Tsohas are also working on next-gen rocket technology. All are recent graduates from Purdue University in Indiana.

What's fueling these young rocketeers? It's partly a new funding effort from the U.S. government. In late September, NASA announced the winners of the Space Technology Research Grants Program to help universities invent new ideas. Some of the projects, which each receive $250,000, include an oxygen recovery system, a study of cryogenic fuel for deep-space voyages, and a way to detect asteroids in space using image recognition technology.

"A critical element of America's space technology pipeline rests in the cutting edge research in the early stage technologies conducted at the nation's universities," said Michael Gazarik, NASA's associate administrator for space technology, in a statement. "Through this investment NASA will continue to benefit from university-led R and D."

Last year, DARPA awarded the SpaceGAMBIT program a $500,000 grant to build a hackerspace for young rocketeers. So far, one of the proposals includes a self-sustaining biosphere habitat, a new spacesuit, and a low-cost bioreactor that can grow organisms in space.

"Exploring and living for extended periods in space will require advances on many, many technologies, especially life support systems," Jerry Isdale, the SpaceGAMBIT program lead, told FoxNews.com. "We can now quickly prototype systems on Earth, refining the designs based on real world usage so the technology will be ready for use off planet."

Of course, there's a big difference between these ideas from young adults of today and those that helped start the space program originally. Their work is not nearly as glamorous -- many of these rocketeering programs involve lab work to design new laser systems or methods to communicate in space without as much interference. 

But they could help us reach Mars or even beyond our solar system in the next 10-20 years. 

Here's hoping.

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