Science & TechnologyS


Sherlock

Archeologists Discover Ancient Fortress near Moscow

Fortress
© cinform.ru
Archeologists have found defensive installations of an Old Russian fortress that stood at the confluence of Dubna River and Volga more than 800 years back.

In the course of archeological excavations they cleared a plot of a defensive moat, which had been constructed in the early 12th century and soon destroyed by a massive fire.

Experts assume that the initial version of the fortress on the border with Novgorod land was erected by Yuri Dolgoruki - the Prince of Rostov and Suzdal - around 1134.

Cultural strata of the ancient town are up to two and a half meters thick. During archeological diggings of 2009 over a thousand Old Russian artifacts have been procured.

Info

Harvesting energy from nature's motions

By taking advantage of the vagaries of the natural world, Duke University engineers have developed a novel approach that they believe can more efficiently harvest electricity from the motions of everyday life.

Energy harvesting is the process of converting one form of energy, such as motion, into another form of energy, in this case electricity. Strategies range from the development of massive wind farms to produce large amounts of electricity to using the vibrations of walking to power small electronic devices.

Info

'Technology' plays large role in wealth inheritance

A new study reveals the important role inherited wealth plays in sustaining economic inequality in small scale societies. A team of 26 anthropologists, statisticians, and economists based at the Santa Fe Institute in New Mexico amassed an unprecedented data set allowing 43 estimates of a family's wealth inheritance and found that financial inequality among populations largely depends on the "technologies" that produce a people's livelihood.

According to the report, released in the October 30 edition of the journal Science, technologies differ across societies. Technologies are defined here to include everything one needs to make a living--from material things such as farms, herds and other real property, to knowledge, skills and other valuable resources.

Chalkboard

Superstitious Beliefs Cemented Before Birth

The propensity to believe in paranormal phenomena and superstitions appears to arise in the womb, suggests new research.

The findings, published in the journal Personality and Individual Differences, further indicate that a reduced ability for analytical thinking may correspond with increased intuitive thinking, which has been associated with a belief in extrasensory perception (ESP), ghosts, telepathy and other paranormal phenomena.

Author Martin Voracek claims his new study's determinations "suggest (there are) biologically based, prenatally programmed influences on paranormal and superstitious beliefs."

Telescope

Teams Observe Cosmic Explosion from Farthest Point in the Universe

Big Bang
© NASA/Swift/Stefan ImmlerThe gamma-ray burst occurred 630 million year after the Big Bang. This image merges data from Swift's Ultraviolet) and X-Ray telescopes
Two teams have observed a huge cosmic explosion that occurred 13 billion years ago in the farthest point of the universe ever detected, the journal Nature reports.

The groups, a British team using telescopes in Hawaii, and an Italian team on the Canary Islands, both observed the burst of gamma rays.

NASA says the burst came from a star that died when the universe was only 630 million years old, or less than 5% of its present age.

The event, dubbed GRB 090423, is the most distant cosmic explosion ever seen, NASA says.

Nature says the previous record sighting was an event from 825 million years after the Big Bang.

The ground-based teams scrambled to observe the event 20 minutes after NASA's space-based Swift telescope spotted the burst in April and relayed the information to Earth.

Nature says the work by the teams "shows that astronomers can effectively probe the early universe from the ground."

Magnify

Inequality, 'Silver Spoon' Effect Found in Ancient Societies

Sheep
© iStockphotoHerdsman and flock of sheep.
The so-called "silver spoon" effect -- in which wealth is passed down from one generation to another -- is well established in some of the world's most ancient economies, according to an international study coordinated by a UC Davis anthropologist.

The study, to be reported in the Oct. 30 issue of Science, expands economists' conventional focus on material riches, and looks at various kinds of wealth, such as hunting success, food sharing partners, and kinship networks.

The team found that some kinds of wealth, like material possessions, are much more easily passed on than social networks or foraging abilities. Societies where material wealth is most valued are therefore the most unequal, said Monique Borgerhoff Mulder, the UC Davis anthropology professor who coordinated the study with economist Samuel Bowles of the Santa Fe Institute.

The researchers also showed that levels of inequality are influenced both by the types of wealth important to a society and the governing rules and regulations. Hunter-gatherers rely on their wits, social connections and strength to make a living. In these economies, wealth inheritance is modest because wits and social connections can be transferred only to a certain degree. The level of economic inequality in hunter-gatherer societies is on a par with the most egalitarian modern democratic economies.

Sherlock

Ireland: Remains of 1,000 People Recovered at Medieval Site

The ancient bones have produced evidence of several suspected murders and one case of leprosy - an extremely rare occurrence in medieval times.

Osteoarchaeologist Carmelita Troy, of Headland Archaeology in Cork, said yesterday she has studied the ancient remains of nearly 1,300 individuals - adult males and females along with children - who were buried at the site at Ardreigh, Athy, in Co Kildare.

It is one of the largest skeleton assemblages in the country.

It is believed the site served as a huge regional cemetery for the south Kildare region from perhaps the 7th or 8th century, with classic Christian-style burials - bodies aligned west to east - taking place right up to the 1400s.

"Through the evidence gathered from the results of these excavations, it was clear Ardreigh was a highly significant medieval site, and one that can be considered to be of regional - and probably national importance," a preliminary report on the site suggested.

Bulb

Shrimp Eyes May Lead to Ultra-Quality DVDs

Mantis shrimp
© Roy CaldwellA juvenile Mantis shrimp. These shrimps have the most complex vision systems known to science.
The amazing eyes of a giant shrimp living on Australia's Great Barrier Reef could hold the key to developing a new type of super high-quality DVD player, British scientists said on Sunday.

Mantis shrimps, dubbed "thumb splitters" by divers because of their vicious claws, have the most complex eyes in the animal kingdom.

They can see in 12 primary colors, four times as many as humans, and can also detect different kinds of light polarization - the direction of oscillation in light waves.

Cow Skull

Extinct bison body could rewrite Canadian archaeological record

bison
© Quaternary Science ReviewsA steppe bison cranium specimen. A carcass of the now-extinct animal, discovered two years ago melting out of a cliff in the Northwest Territories, is shedding new light on the Ice Age species, and could rewrite the history of human migration in Canada
The carcass of an extinct steppe bison, discovered two years ago melting out of a cliff in a remote village in the Northwest Territories, is shedding new light on the Ice Age species - and could rewrite the history of human migration in Canada as glaciers began retreating in the region nearly 14,000 years ago.

An analysis of the super-sized beast, larger than both the plains and wood bison which inhabited North America following the demise of its steppe-cousin, showed the specimen was one of the last of its kind in ancient Beringia - the ice-free, northwest corner of the continent that was once linked to eastern Siberia.

But the rare find, documented by a team of Canadian, British and American scientists in the latest edition of the journal Quaternary Science Reviews, has wider implications for dating the retreat of the glaciers in northern Canada and the possible entry of human hunters from Asia - the ancestors of today's aboriginal Canadians - into the continental interior.

Blackbox

Multiplying universes: How many is the multiverse?

Image
© Time Life Pictures/NASA/GettySeeing double. It's getting crowded out there in the multiverse
How many universes are there? Cosmologists Andrei Linde and Vitaly Vanchurin at Stanford University in California calculate that the number dwarfs the 10500 universes postulated in string theory, and raise the provocative notion that the answer may depend on the human brain.

The idea that there is more than one universe, each with its own laws of physics, arises out of several different theories, including string theory and cosmic inflation. This concept of a "multiverse" could explain a puzzling mystery - why dark energy, the furtive force that is accelerating the expansion of space, appears improbably fine-tuned for life. With a large number of universes, there is bound to be one that has a dark energy value like ours.

Calculating the probability of observing this value - and other features of the cosmos - depends on how many universes of various kinds populate the multiverse. String theory describes 10500 universes, but that just counts different vacuum states, which are like the blank canvases upon which universes are painted. The features of each canvas determine what the overall painting will look like - such as the laws of physics in that universe - but not the details.