Google Assists in Publishing the Largest High-Res Image of Brain Connectivity0
- From Around the Web, Science & Technology
- January 24, 2020
It’s the brain of a fruit fly, but it’s impressive nonetheless.

It’s the brain of a fruit fly, but it’s impressive nonetheless.

A man who died in Herculaneum during the historic Vesuvius eruption was found with an exploded skull and glass-like brain tissue.

Bigfoot sightings used to be the province of obsessive loners who spent a lot of time in the woods.

The replica reveals what the ancient Egyptian’s voice might have sounded like

Life is pretty easy to recognize. It moves, it grows, it eats, it excretes, it reproduces. Simple. In biology, researchers often use the acronym ‘MRS-GREN’ to describe it. It stands for movement, respiration, sensitivity, growth, reproduction, excretion and nutrition. But Helen Sharman, Britain’s first astronaut and a chemist at Imperial College London, recently said that alien life forms that are impossible to spot may be living among us. How could that be possible?

Unidentified flying objects (UFOs) and aliens have captured the public’s attention over the decades. But these visiting “aliens” may be ones of time rather than space.

China’s lunar robots images cover about a year of exploration on the far side of the moon.

It was a lot more powerful than anyone believed.

Using a technique akin to echolocation, scientists were able to map the region around a distant black hole’s event horizon in unprecedented detail.

Extensive water channels built by indigenous Australians thousands of years ago to trap and harvest eels for food have been revealed after wildfires burned away thick vegetation in the state of Victoria.





























































