Science & TechnologyS

Sherlock

Reading The Zip Codes Of 3,500-Year-Old Letters

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© UnknownProf. Yuval Goren demonstrates the portable x-ray device on an ancient tablet
Unfortunately, when ancient kings sent letters to each other, their post offices didn't record the sender' return address. It takes quite a bit of super-sleuthing by today's archaeologists to determine the geographical origin of this correspondence - which can reveal a great deal about ancient rulers and civilizations.

Now, by adapting an off-the-shelf portable x-ray lab tool that analyzes the composition of chemicals, Prof. Yuval Goren of Tel Aviv University's Department of Archaeology and Ancient Near Eastern Civilizations can reveal hidden information about a tablet's composition without damaging the precious ancient find itself.

These x-rays reveal the soil and clay composition of a tablet or artefact, to help determine its precise origin.

But Prof. Goren's process, based on x-ray fluorescence (XRF) spectrometry, can go much further. Over the years, he has collected extensive data through physical "destructive" sampling of artefacts.

Better Earth

An Ancient Earth Like Ours

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© UnknownMud Cracks, Ordovician Period, Manlius formation (limestone), town of New Salem, (eastern) New York. More evidence of warm shallow sea conditions from 400 million years ago, long before the rocks of the Connecticut Valley formed.
An international team of scientists including Mark Williams and Jan Zalasiewicz of the Geology Department of the University of Leicester, and led by Dr. Thijs Vandenbroucke, formerly of Leicester and now at the University of Lille 1 (France), has reconstructed the Earth's climate belts of the late Ordovician Period, between 460 and 445 million years ago.

The findings have been published online in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA - and show that these ancient climate belts were surprisingly like those of the present.

The researchers state: "The world of the ancient past had been thought by scientists to differ from ours in many respects, including having carbon dioxide levels much higher - over twenty times as high - than those of the present.

Sherlock

Oldest Earth Mantle Reservoir Discovered

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© Don Francis, McGill UniversityView of the basalts along the northeastern coast of Baffin Island.
Researchers have found a primitive Earth mantle reservoir on Baffin Island in the Canadian Arctic. Geologist Matthew Jackson and his colleagues from a multi-institution collaboration report the finding--the first discovery of what may be a primitive Earth mantle--this week in the journal Nature.

The Earth's mantle is a rocky, solid shell that is between the Earth's crust and the outer core, and makes up about 84 percent of the Earth's volume. The mantle is made up of many distinct portions or reservoirs that have different chemical compositions.

Scientists had previously concluded that the Earth was slightly older than 4.5 billion years old, but had not found a piece of the Earth's primitive mantle.

Until recently, researchers generally thought that the Earth and the other planets of the solar system were chondritic, meaning that the mantle's chemistry was thought to be similar to that of chondrites--some of the oldest, most primitive objects in the solar system.

Telescope

Perseids Meteor Shower Lights Up Night Sky

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© ReutersThe Perseid meteor shower is sparked every August when the Earth passes through a stream of space debris left by comet Swift-Tuttle
Star-gazers witnessed the climax of one of the year's most spectacular meteor showers last night as a new moon and cloud-free night in some areas produced perfect conditions for seeing the Perseids.

The display of shooting stars is created by debris from the Swift-Tuttle comet burning up in the Earth's atmosphere.

While most of the meteors are no bigger than a grain of sand, they create tremendous amounts of heat when they hit the atmosphere at 135,000 miles per hour (216,000 kph).

The northern hemisphere offers the best views of the annual event, because of the tilt in the Earth's axis. Some of the meteors - named after the Perseus constellation which provides their backdrop - are so bright they can outshine the light-pollution in big cities, although country-dwellers always get the best views.

Blackbox

Google, Boffins Crack Rubik's Cube Mystery

The ultimate answer - or is it?

Has Google finally cracked it? Revealed today, courtesy of the massed ranks of Google computing, the answer to the ultimate question - not the old one about Life the Universe and Everything - is 20!

We're talking God's Number here, or more prosaically the maximum number of moves required to solve the Rubik's Cube no matter what the start position. This result, if no one comes up with a position that demands 21 moves or more, is the end of a 30 year quest that began in July 1981 with a claim by mathematician Morwen B Thistlethwaite that 52 was the answer.

Igloo

'Climategate' university to open up data

The University of East Anglia is to receive JISC funding for a project to open up its research on global warming to scrutiny and re-use.

The university, which was at the centre of a scandal revealed by leaked emails from its Climatic Research Unit, will examine how best to expose climate data for re-use, make it easier for researchers to find the data and to understand its validity.

Sun

One month ago today on Easter Island

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© Billy Mallery
On July 11, 2010, the Moon passed directly in front of the sun, producing a total eclipse over the South Pacific. "It was one of the most beautiful sights I have ever seen," says Billy Mallery who witnessed the event from Easter Island.

"I spent much time trying to find just the right place on the island for totality, and this was it... with the Moai 'looking' straight at the sun's corona," says Mallery.

Easter island was one of the few places the Moon's shadow made landfall. Mostly, the path of totality sprawled across open, uninhabited ocean. That didn't stop the eclipse-chasers, though, who crowded upon every boat, cruise ship, and atoll they could find to watch the show.

Info

Best of the Web: Fresh Scar on the Moon's Surface

Fresh Moon Crater
© NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University

With all the hoopla about the Moon having or not having water, let's not forget our satellite's best-known features: its craters.

Although typically a sign of an ancient, unchanged landscape, a new crater on the Moon reminds us that we still live in an intergalactic shooting gallery.

The new crater was announced last week by the Lunar Science Institute at NASA Ames. The impact occurred sometime between an image of the region taken by the Apollo program in 1971 and an image recently taken by the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO).

The LRO is a spacecraft that is taking large amounts of data on the Moon's terrain and mineralogy, as well as taking those neat pictures of the Apollo landers and astronaut footsteps.

The crater itself is ten meters across, suggesting to me that the impactor was roughly a meter in size. Chunks of rock that size might hit the Earth several times a year, causing a stir in the local media or falling harmlessly and unnoticed. On the Moon however, it makes a bright crater, spewing forth lighter colored rock over the dark basalt surface.

Info

New Desert Crater Found Using Google Maps and Free Software

The discovery of a new crater in the Bayuda Desert in Sudan suggests that the next generation of crater hunters could be amateurs based at home.

Sudan Crater
© Technology Review, MITCrater in the Bayuda Desert, Sudan.
Most of the rocky planets, moons and asteroids in the Solar System are pock-marked with impact craters of all sizes. On Earth, however, small craters are rare because they quickly get eroded by weather and water.

So the discovery of new small craters is a reason to celebrate. A couple of weeks ago, an Italian team announced in the journal Science that it had used Google Earth to identify an impact crater in the remote desert of southern Egypt. A quick trip to the region showed this crater to be 45 meters in diameter and reasonably well-preserved in the desert rocks.

Now, just a few days later, Amelia Sparavigna at the Politecnico di Torino in Italy has found evidence of another crater in the Bayuda Desert in Sudan using Google Maps. This one is a little bigger: about 10 kilometres in diameter.

What's interesting about this discovery is the technology used to make it. Sparavigna used Google Maps, an astronomical image-processing program called AstroFracTool which she and a colleague developed, and an open source image-processing package called GIMP.

All of this stuff is available for free on the web, making this kind of discovery open to all. That means the next generation of crater hunters could just as easily be amateurs working from home as professional geologists working on location.

Info

Scientists question accepted wisdom on what killed Pompeiians when Mt. Vesuvius erupted

Scientists question accepted wisdom on what killed Pompeiians when Mt. Vesuvius erupted.

A child lies on the ground with his tiny arms elevated in motion. Beside him, a woman with another child on her lap clenches her fists, as if guarding herself from an inevitable horror. Inside a dimly lit room, surrounded by chipping coral frescoes, lie 2,000-year-old skeletal remnants, vividly human forms encased in chalky plaster.