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Are We Living In A Simulation?
We humans are not capable enough to understand and experience the exact nature of the universe, unfiltered. Due to several biological and physical limitations of our sense organs and brain we only process a small fraction of the universe.
Seaweeds: powerhouse of Immunonutrients
Functional foods are those foods which are capable of imparting a therapeutic benefit to the consumer.
Why some people are mosquito magnets
It's impossible to hide from a female mosquito -- she will hunt down any member of the human species by tracking our CO2 exhalations, body heat, and body odor.
Peanuts and herbs and spices may positively impact gut microbiome
Adding a daily ounce of peanuts or about a teaspoon of herbs and spices to your diet may affect the composition of gut bacteria, an indicator of overall health, according to new research from Penn State.
Pandoravirus: the melting Arctic is releasing ancient germs
Scientists have recently revived several large viruses that had been buried in the frozen Siberian ground (permafrost) for tens of thousands of years. The youngest virus to be revived was a sprightly 27,000 years old.
FROM MID-SEA TO MOUNTAIN TOP
Think of this situation: You are in the process of learning swimming with someone's hand-holding.
Waste to wealth via integrated biorefinery
Industrial development for the past two centuries has been driven by non-renewable resources i.e. fossil fuels and petroleum.
US Air Force unveils newest stealth bomber aircraft
The US Air Force introduced the first Sixth Generation Stealth Bomber on 3 December 2022. Its name is B-21 Raider Stealth Bomber.
Remnants of Ancient Earth-Like World Seen Being Eaten by a Star
The main sequence life of a star like the Sun may not end in a supernova like the most massive stars out there, but it will not be a quiet affair.
CRISPR/Cas9 a fantastic voyage to existing medical and agriculture modalities?
Very shortly a CRISPR-based drug will be approved. If approved, it would treat a pair of rare and deadly blood diseases and will cure millions.
Zombie' genes
In the hours after we die, certain cells in the human brain are still active. Some cells even increase their activity and grow to gargantuan proportions, according to new research from the University of Illinois Chicago.
Cancer: A blight but remediable disease due to technological progress in the medical field
Cancer is undoubtedly a serious life-threatening disease that has become unambiguously a global threat.
Ashwagandha: A Potential Source For Cancer Therapeutics
Several ayurvedic plants have been reported to possess cancer preventive and chemotherapeutic potential.
Oyster which went extinct 30 thousand years ago found again near California
The species of oyster which was believed to be 30 thousand years old fossil, has now been found alive.
Scientists wake up Megavirus sleeping in Siberia for 48,500 years
In a new paper, which is yet to be peer-reviewed, the researchers explain how they identified and revived 13 viruses belonging to five different clades from samples collected in the icy Russian far east.
Ancient 15.000-Year-Old Viruses Found in Melting Tibetan Glaciers
Ancient creatures are emerging from the cold storage of melting permafrost, almost like something out of a horror movie.
Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVS)- Drones
During the inter-war period the development and testing of unmanned aircraft continued. In 1935 the British produced several radio-controlled aircraft to be used as targets for training purposes.
Ice And Dust Ladder On Mars
The image of ice and dust layers on Mars from an orbiting NASA spacecraft may provide a window into the complex, waterfilled history of the Red Planet, a new study suggests.
Mysterious Mineral On Mars
Planetary scientists from Rice University, NASA's Johnson Space Center and the California Institute of Technology have an answer to a mystery that's puzzled the Mars research community since NASA's Curiosity rover discovered a mineral called tridymite in Gale Crater in 2016.
Mars Glaciers Were Slowed By Fast Drainage And Weak Gravity, Scientists Suggest
Mars may be a freeze-dried planet now, but once, it was supposedly (almost) another Earth, with flowing water that froze into hulking mountains of ice.
Aliens Hovering Over Ukraine?
Unidentified Flying Objects, or UFOs as popularly called, have become an object of public discussion, with several countries going the uncanny phenomenon.
Terrible explosion in the Baltic Sea
The Nord Stream, Ta natural gas pipeline system in the Baltic Sea, has burst.
Chinese Scientists create world's first cloned wild Arctic wolf 'Maya'
Beijing-based gene firm on 19 Sept 2022 announced the debut of the world's first cloned wild arctic wolf via video, 100 days after its birth in a Beijing lab.
Technology restores cell, organ function in pigs after death
Within minutes of the final heartbeat, a cascade of biochemical events triggered by a lack of blood flow, oxygen, and nutrients begins to destroy a body's cells and organs.
Iran Salt Mountains- Salt Domes
Iran is full of many wonders. One of these is the Salt Mountains.
Paris Syndrome
Paris Syndrome manifests itself differently in different people, but amongst the most common symptoms are acute delusions, hallucinations, dizziness, sweating, and feelings of persecution
Hidden Forests Found Deep Beneath The Ocean Cover Twice The Area of India
Amazon, Borneo, Congo, Daintree. We know the names of many of the world's largest or most famous rainforests.
Nutrient fodder enrichment through crop biofortification
India has largest livestock population in the world, but almost the entire feed requirement is met from poor quality feed resources that lead to declined productivity.
First Medical Amputation-human organ cut first, evidence found
If the hands and feet of the body are damaged, it is cut off. But do you know when a person's hand or leg was cut off for the first time?
Purple Tomatoes, Rich In Health Protecting Anthocyanins
Scientists have expressed genes from snapdragon in tomatoes to grow purple tomatoes high in health-protecting anthocyanins.