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Earth's oceans are a 'ticking time bomb' as acidity levels enter 'danger zone,' study suggests
By Patrick Pester published
Researchers have found that ocean acidification entered a "danger zone" in 2020, suggesting increased carbon dioxide levels have caused Earth to breach another planetary boundary.

Bottom of the sun becomes visible to humans for the first time in history (photos)
By Brandon Specktor published
For the first time, scientists have imaged the elusive south pole of the sun. The images captured by the Solar Orbiter spacecraft reveal our star's magnetic field is a powder keg ready to blow.

Astronomers discover most powerful cosmic explosions since the Big Bang
By Sharmila Kuthunur published
Astronomers have discovered a new class of bright, long-lasting cosmic explosions that offer a new probe into studying the universe's most distant black holes.

New menstrual pad device tracks period blood for signs of disease
By Rachel Somerstein published
Scientists are developing a new device that fits inside a menstrual pad and checks for "biomarkers" of disease in period blood.

Ottoman-era burial found in Israel may violate Islamic tradition
By Tom Metcalfe published
The unusual grave of a Bedouin woman who may have been buried with her son was found in southern Israel.

Almost half of California's faults — including San Andreas — are overdue for earthquakes
By Stephanie Pappas published
California's earthquakes are far more likely to be "overdue" compared with earthquakes in the rest of the world.

Meet 'Dragon prince' — the newly discovered T. rex relative that roamed Mongolia 86 million years ago
By Chris Simms published
A new species of dinosaur that was probably a princely ancestor of T. rex, the king of the dinosaurs, has been identified from fossils excavated in Mongolia.

'Strawberry Moon' in pictures: Major lunar standstill sees June's full moon hang low in the sky
By Patrick Pester published
Last night's "Strawberry Moon" hovered lower in the night sky than it had done since 2006. Here are some stunning global snaps of June's full moon during the major lunar standstill.

Roman-era 'fast food' discovered in ancient trash heap on Mallorca
By Kristina Killgrove published
Songbird bones found in a Roman-era trash pit on Mallorca suggests they were a tasty tweet.

Russian scientists discover a new island in the Caspian Sea — the world's largest inland body of water
By Sascha Pare published
Researchers have confirmed the existence of a new island in the northern part of the Caspian Sea, but they haven't managed to land on it yet.

'People thought this couldn't be done': Scientists observe light of 'cosmic dawn' with a telescope on Earth for the first time ever
By Ben Turner published
For the first time, astronomers have used a ground-based telescope to observe polarized microwave light from the universe's earliest epoch. Their observations could give them a better understanding of how the universe evolved.

People's mental health often improves after weight-loss surgery. A study pinpoints the real reason why.
By Marianne Guenot published
Feeling less stigma — not losing weight — was linked to better mental health and eating behaviors after bariatric surgery.

Haunting blood-red squid with large hooks drifts through Antarctic ocean's midnight zone in world-first video
By Patrick Pester published
Researchers have filmed a living Antarctic gonate squid in a world-first sighting deep in the ocean surrounding Antarctica.

First-ever image of China's mysterious 'quasi moon' probe revealed weeks after it secretly launched into space
By Harry Baker published
A new image released by China's space agency offers the first glimpse at the Tianwen 2 spacecraft, which is en route to collect samples from one of Earth's "quasi-moons". The photo shows some surprising similarities with a current NASA probe.

'Extraordinary' sarcophagus discovered in Israel shows carving of Dionysus beating Hercules in a drinking contest
By Skyler Ware published
Archaeologists in Israel have unearthed a Roman-era sarcophagus that depicts Dionysus beating Hercules in a drinking contest.

IBM's monster 10,000-qubit quantum computer coming in 2029 after science behind fault-tolerenance 'solved'
By Tristan Greene published
The quantum computer, called Starling, will use 200 logical qubits — and IBM plans to follow this up with a 2,000-logical-qubit machine in 2033

'Lost Colony' of Roanoke may have assimilated into Indigenous society, archaeologist claims — but not everyone is convinced
By Kristina Killgrove published
The recent discovery of copious amounts of iron trash on North Carolina's Hatteras Island may reveal the fate of a 16th-century "Lost Colony."
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