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Mantle heat may have boosted Earth"s crust 3 billion years ago

Little is known about the nature and evolution of Earth's continental crust before a few billion years ago because cratons, or stable swaths of the lithosphere more than 2–3 billion years old, are relatively rare......»»

Source:  PhysorgCategory: Top13 hr. 13 min. ago Related News

Researcher finds that wood frogs evolved rapidly in response to road salts

When we think of evolution, we think of a process that happens over hundreds or thousands of years. In research published in Ecology and Evolution a team led by Rick Relyea, Ph.D., professor of biological sciences and David M. Darrin Senior Endowed.....»»

Source:  PhysorgCategory: Top13 hr. 13 min. ago Related News

International study produces a comprehensive "tree of life" for flowering plants

With their own botanical collection material and their research knowledge on the evolution of cruciferous plants (plants of the cabbage family), bioscientists at Heidelberg University have contributed to a large-scale international study that has pro.....»»

Source:  PhysorgCategory: Top14 hr. 39 min. ago Related News

How evolution has optimized the magnetic sensor in birds

Migratory birds are able to navigate and orientate with astonishing accuracy using various mechanisms, including a magnetic compass. A team led by biologists Dr. Corinna Langebrake and Prof. Dr. Miriam Liedvogel from the University of Oldenburg and t.....»»

Source:  PhysorgCategory: Top14 hr. 39 min. ago Related News

A key gene helps explain how the ability to glide has emerged over-and-over during marsupial evolution

People say "When pigs fly" to describe the impossible. But even if most mammals are landlubbers, the ability to glide or fly has evolved again and again during mammalian evolution, in species ranging from bats to flying squirrels. How did that come a.....»»

Source:  PhysorgCategory: Top16 hr. 41 min. ago Related News

Advances in understanding the evolution of stomach loss in agastric fishes

Living beings can evolve to lose biological structures due to potential survival benefits from such losses. For example, certain groups of ray-finned fishes show such regressive evolution—medakas, minnows, puffera, and wrasses do not have a stomach.....»»

Source:  PhysorgCategory: TopApr 23rd, 2024Related News

Same species, different sizes: Rare evolution in action spotted in island bats

A University of Melbourne researcher has spotted a rare evolutionary phenomenon happening rapidly in real time in bats living in the Solomon Islands......»»

Source:  PhysorgCategory: TopApr 22nd, 2024Related News

RNA"s hidden potential: New study unveils its role in early life and future bioengineering

The beginning of life on Earth and its evolution over billions of years continue to intrigue researchers worldwide. The central dogma or the directional flow of genetic information from a deoxyribose nucleic acid (DNA) template to a ribose nucleic ac.....»»

Source:  MarketingvoxCategory: TopApr 18th, 2024Related News

Researchers realize hydrogen formation by contact electrification of water microdroplets and its regulation

Direct utilization of water as a source of hydrogen atoms and molecules is fundamental to the evolution of the ecosystem and industry. However, liquid water is an unfavorable electron donor for forming these hydrogen species due to its redox inertnes.....»»

Source:  PhysorgCategory: TopApr 18th, 2024Related News

Researchers identify genetic variant that helped shape human skull base evolution

Humans, Homo sapiens, have unique features compared with other closely related hominin species and primates, including the shape of the base of the skull. The evolutionary changes underlying these features were significant in allowing the evolution o.....»»

Source:  PhysorgCategory: TopApr 17th, 2024Related News

First evidence of human occupation in lava tube cave in Saudi Arabia

Recent strides in interdisciplinary archaeological research in Arabia have unveiled new insights into the evolution and historical development of regional human populations, as well as the dynamic patterns of cultural change, migration, and adaptatio.....»»

Source:  InformationweekCategory: TopApr 17th, 2024Related News

Amazon butterflies show how new species can evolve from hybridization

If evolution was originally depicted as a tree, with different species branching off as new blooms, then new research shows how the branches may actually be more entangled. In "Hybrid speciation driven by multilocus introgression of ecological traits.....»»

Source:  PhysorgCategory: TopApr 17th, 2024Related News

Evolution"s recipe book: How "copy paste" errors led to insect flight, octopus camouflage and human cognition

Seven hundred million years ago, a remarkable creature emerged for the first time. Though it may not have been much to look at by today's standards, the animal had a front and a back, a top and a bottom. This was a groundbreaking adaptation at the ti.....»»

Source:  PhysorgCategory: TopApr 15th, 2024Related News

ShadowDragon Horizon enhancements help users conduct investigations from any device

ShadowDragon announced significant enhancements to its Open-Source Intelligence Investigative platform Horizon. These updates represent a milestone in the evolution of investigative technology, offering capabilities to streamline investigative proces.....»»

Source:  NetsecurityCategory: SecurityApr 15th, 2024Related News

Ivanti empowers IT and security teams with new solutions and enhancements

Ivanti released Ivanti Neurons for External Attack Surface management (EASM), which helps combat attack surface expansion with full visibility of external-facing assets and actionable intelligence on exposures. With the evolution of Everywhere Work c.....»»

Source:  NetsecurityCategory: SecurityApr 11th, 2024Related News

The evolving attitudes of Gen X toward evolution

As the centennial of the Scopes Monkey Trial of 1925 approaches, a new study illustrates that the attitudes of Americans in Generation X toward evolution shifted as they aged......»»

Source:  PhysorgCategory: TopApr 10th, 2024Related News

Study shedding new light on Earth"s global carbon cycle could help assess liveability of other planets

Research has uncovered important new insights into the evolution of oxygen, carbon, and other vital elements over the entire history of Earth—and it could help assess which other planets can develop life, ranging from plants to animals and humans......»»

Source:  PhysorgCategory: TopApr 10th, 2024Related News

Study explores changing design of birdfeeders as influenced by unwanted guests

The first birdfeeders were made in the 19th century, and their design rapidly evolved during the 20th century. Researchers at the University of Helsinki and Aalto University consider the evolution of the birdfeeder to be an example of multispecies de.....»»

Source:  PhysorgCategory: TopApr 9th, 2024Related News

Bias distribution and regulation in photoelectrochemical overall water-splitting cells

The photoelectrochemical (PEC) overall water-splitting reaction (OWS) has been fully developed in the past decade, especially in new catalysts, characterization methods and reaction mechanisms. Compared with the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER), the.....»»

Source:  PhysorgCategory: TopApr 8th, 2024Related News

The universe"s accelerated expansion might be slowing down

The universe is still expanding at an accelerating rate, but it may have slowed down recently compared to a few billion years ago, early results from the most precise measurement of its evolution yet suggested Thursday......»»

Source:  InformationweekCategory: TopApr 7th, 2024Related News