Science

Reindeer can sleep while they chew

Time spent chewing cud eases the reindeer’s need for sleep, a new study finds Arctic reindeer make time for digesting by doing it in their sleep, a new study suggests. Frank Meissner   In this busy holiday season, many of us multitask. Arctic reindeer are no exception.  Reindeer can eat and sleep at the same

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A rare, extremely energetic cosmic ray has mysterious origins

Efforts to find the particle’s birthplace led scientists to a mostly empty void in space When cosmic rays hit Earth’s atmosphere, they create a shower of other particles (illustrated) that can be spotted with detectors on the ground (colored dots). Osaka Metropolitan University/L-INSIGHT, Kyoto University/Ryuunosuke Takeshige The “Oh-My-God” particle has a new companion. In 1991

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Astronomers call for renaming the Magellanic Clouds

Explorer Ferdinand Magellan’s name is not fitting, a group of scientists argues The Large Magellanic Cloud (center) and Small Magellanic Cloud (right) can be seen with the naked eye in the Southern Hemisphere, as shown in this photo from Paranal Observatory in Chile. Y. Beletsky/LCO, ESO Names have significance, especially when they’re written in the

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A hunt for fungi might bring this orchid back from the brink

If the work is a success, scientists could possibly regrow the species in the wild Cooper’s black orchid, a rare, critically endangered species found only in New Zealand, relies on fungi for the nutrients it needs to sprout. Scientists are working to identify the fungi to prevent the flowers from dying out. Kathy Warburton/inaturalist (CC

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T. rex may have had lips like a modern lizard’s

In movies and TV shows, Tyrannosaurus rex often sports a fleet of big, sharp teeth that are almost always on display. But the dinosaurs and their kin may have kept their pearly whites mostly tucked behind lizardlike lips. Similar to Komodo dragons today, these dinosaurs had ample soft tissue around the mouth that would have

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Mammoths may have gone extinct much earlier than DNA suggests

Some ancient DNA may be leading paleontologists astray in attempts to date when woolly mammoths and woolly rhinos went extinct. In 2021, an analysis of plant and animal DNA from sediment samples from the Arctic, spanning about the last 50,000 years, suggested that mammoths survived in north-central Siberia as late as about 3,900 years ago

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