Science & Technology
This scene combines images taken during the period from December 2002 to November 2004 by the Thermal Emission Imaging System instrument on the Mars Odyssey orbiter. It is part of a special set of images marking the 20th anniversary of Odyssey, the longest-working Mars spacecraft in history. The pictured location on Mars is 80.3 degrees north latitude, 172.1 degrees east longitude.

A cicada climbs on a tree trunk in an undated stock image.
In April 2004, "Mean Girls" was playing in theaters and "Yeah!" by Usher was topping the Billboard music charts.
At the same time, around the mid-Atlantic region, small holes in the ground were opening up from which billions of bulky, red-eyed, winged insects would emerge, readying for a bacchanal of singing and mating -- and reminding humans of a horror movie.

Equipment for subsurface sampling of microbes in Death Valley, California. New research led by Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences has revealed that a group of microbes, Candidatus Desulforudis audaxviator, have been at an evolutionary standstill for millions of years.
First discovered three kilometres down a South African gold mine, the microbe (Candidatus Desulforudis audaxviator) lives in water-filled pockets inside rocks far below the surface, feeding off the energy created in chemical reactions caused by natural radioactivity in minerals.
The research team, led by the Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences in the US, set out to understand how this microbe evolves in isolation. They discovered other populations in Siberia and California: two very different environments that the team expected would lead to clear differences between the populations as they adapted to their surroundings.
"We thought of the microbes as though they were inhabitants of isolated islands, like the finches that Darwin studied in the Galapagos," says co-author Ramunas Stepanauskas from Bigelow.
But when they examined the genomes of 126 microbes from three different continents, they were almost identical.
The researcher ruled out cross-contamination, and found no evidence that the microbes could have travelled long distances, seeing as they are unlikely to last in the presence of oxygen or survive on the surface.
Front-and-center are two major questions: What happens to the brain when it ages? And do male and female brains age differently?
A study released Thursday in Stem Cell Reports focused on the brains of aging male and female mice. Blood vessels in male mouse brains, as opposed to female ones, showed more detrimental changes. The female brains seemed to have comparative protection.
These changes in brain blood vessels suggest potential differences in the way human male and female human brains age. Men, the study suggests, might have it worse.
Comment: Despite the ongoing corruption of the sciences by woke ideologies, studies continue to reveal how understanding the differences between the two genders can be of critical importance:
- Sex differences in immune responses to viral infection
- Sex-specific Alzheimer's treatment found to benefit males but not females

The research team lowers a particle collection device into waters off the coast of Manzanillo, Mexico.
Estimates for future sea-level rise are based on a large ensemble of climate model simulations. The output from these simulations helps to understand future climate change and its effects on the sea level. Climate researchers continually aim to improve these models, for example by using a much higher spatial resolution that takes more details into account. "High-resolution simulations can determine the ocean circulation much more accurately," says Prof. Henk Dijkstra. Together with his Ph.D. candidate René van Westen, he has been studying ocean currents in high-resolution climate model simulations over the past few years.
Comment: They are only confirming what researchers on the margins have been saying for years.
- Scientists claim Antarctica is ramping up sea level rise, but tide gauges show sea level rise is NOT accelerating
- LA Times backpedals on crazy talk about Antarctica, glacier melt, sea level rise, and the Los Angeles Airport
- Kiribati and China to develop farm land in Fiji, land had been predicted to 'disappear under a rising ocean'
- Scientists caught 'adjusting' sea level data to create false impression of rising oceans
- South Pacific sea levels - Best records show little or no rise?!
- Dialing back the 10 foot hype - NOAA Tide Gauge Data shows no coastal sea level rise acceleration
- 30 years ago global warming 'authorities' warned the Maldives would be swallowed by the Indian Ocean
Jeffrey Love of the US Geological Survey, who authored the study, analyzed Earth's strongest geomagnetic storms since the early 1900s. Previous studies looked back only to the 1950s. The extra data led to a surprise:
"A storm as intense as, say, the Québec Blackout of 1989 is predicted to occur, on average, about every four solar cycles. This is twice as often as estimated using only the traditional shorter dataset," says Love.
Dickinsonia Could Still Be a Fungus
In my article (Bechly 2018b) about the iconic and enigmatic Ediacaran organism Dickinsonia, I showed why in spite of new biomarker evidence presented by Bobrovskiy et al. (2018), Dickinsonia is unlikely to be an animal. Such evidence-based skepticism is of course not greatly appreciated in Darwinist circles and provoked a response.
At the Peaceful Science forum, an anonymous atheist and self-professed blogging graduate student (evograd 2018), who obviously lacks sufficient expertise as well as some reading comprehension, criticized my article with a red herring quibble about two of six references that Bobrovskiy et al. quoted (which I actually never disputed), while ignoring all real arguments. Just read my article and compare it with his criticism to decide for yourself if it has any merit. Anyway, this young know-it-all then triumphantly proclaimed:
In the video above, Neuralink demonstrates how it used its sensor hardware and brain implant to record a baseline of activity from this macaque (named "Pager") as it played a game on-screen where it had to move a token to different squares using a joystick with its hand. Using that baseline data, Neuralink was able to use machine learning to anticipate where Pager was going to be moving the physical controller, and was eventually able to predict it accurately before the move was actually made. Researchers then removed the paddle entirely, and eventually did the same thing with Pong, ultimately ending up at a place where Pager no longer was even moving its hand on the air on the nonexistent paddle, and was instead controlling the in-game action entirely with its mind via the Link hardware and embedded neural threads.
Comment: More on this transhumanist technology:
- Elon Musk-linked scientists working on brain probes for DARPA
- Elon Musk unveils version 2 of the Neuralink brain-machine interface surgery bot
- Are superbrains getting closer? Musk 'lines up $100m' to fund Neuralink brain-computer interface
- Neuralink wants to connect your brain to the internet using brain-machine interfaces
- Elon Musk claims brain microchip has allowed monkey to "control a computer"
Big data produced during decades of research was fed into a computer language model to see if artificial intelligence can make more advanced discoveries than humans.
Academics based at St John's College, University of Cambridge, found the machine-learning technology could decipher the 'biological language' of cancer, Alzheimer's, and other neurodegenerative diseases.
Comment: See also:
- Algorithm similar to those used by Netflix and Spotify to recommend content allegedly predicts lethal heart attacks with 90% accuracy
- AI is getting smarter
- Prime privacy intrusion: Amazon rolls out body-scanning fitness tracker that detects emotions in voice
- Mind-reading algorithm uses EEG data image reconstruction based on what we perceive
- Researchers have created an AI that can predict what humans will do in the future

Electron micrograph of a Concordia micrometeorite extracted from Antarctic snow at Dome C.
An international program conducted for nearly 20 years by scientists from the CNRS, the Université Paris-Saclay and the National museum of natural history with the support of the French polar institute, has determined that 5,200 tons per year of these micrometeorites reach the ground. The study will be available in the journal Earth & Planetary Science Letters from April 15.
Micrometeorites have always fallen on our planet. These interplanetary dust particles from comets or asteroids are particles of a few tenths to hundredths of a millimeter that have passed through the atmosphere and reached the Earth's surface.











Comment: See also: