Science & Technology
Professor Ralph Baric, an epidemiologist at the UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health and professor of immunology and microbiology at the UNC School of Medicine, has been studying coronaviruses for 30 years. In a video interview last year with Italian outlet Presa Diretta, Baric was extremely direct about his controversial work, and the implications for COVID19.
Scientists have discovered a new type of star dust whose composition indicates that it formed during a rare form of nucleosynthesis (the process through which new atomic nuclei are created) and could shed new light on the history of water on Earth.
A team led by cosmochemists from Caltech and Victoria University of Wellington in New Zealand studied ancient minerals aggregates within the Allende meteorite (which fell to Earth in 1969) and found that many of them had unusually high amounts of strontium-84, a relatively rare light isotope of the element strontium that is so-named for the 84 neutrons in its nucleus.
"Strontium-84 is part of a family of isotopes produced by a nucleosynthetic process, named the p-process, which remains mysterious," says Caltech's François L. H. Tissot, assistant professor of geochemistry. "Our results points to the survival of grains possibly containing pure strontium-84. This is exciting, as the physical identification of such grains would provide a unique chance to learn more about the p-process."
The cave of Satsurblia was inhabited by humans in different periods of the Paleolithic: Up to date a single human individual dated from 15,000 years ago has been sequenced from that site. No other human remains have been discovered in the older layers of the cave.
The innovative approach used by the international team led by Prof. Ron Pinhasi and Pere Gelabert with Susanna Sawyer of the University of Vienna in collaboration with Pontus Skoglund and Anders Bergström of the Francis Crick Institute in London permits the identification of DNA in samples of environmental material, by applying extensive sequencing and huge data analysis resources. This technique has allowed the recovery of an environmental human genome from the BIII layer of the cave, which is dated before the Ice Age, about 25,000 years ago.
My subsequent article, "Most Scientific Findings Are False or Useless," which reported the conclusions of Arizona State University's School for the Future of Innovation in Society researcher Daniel Sarewitz's distressing essay, "Saving Science," also did not consider the possibility of extensive scientific dishonesty as an explanation for the massive proliferation of false positives. In his famous 2005 article, "Why Most Published Research Findings Are False," Stanford University biostatistician John Ioannidis cited conflicts of interest as one factor driving the generation of false positives but also did not suggest that actual research fraud was a big problem.
Comment: "Researchers" who engage in fraud should be drummed out of their fields post haste. If that means entire fields such as sociology and other "studies" diminish or vanish entirely, so be it. By promoting false data which leads to false conclusions, they corrupt the essential goal of science: the impartial observation, identification, description, experimental investigation, and theoretical explanation of phenomena.
- Fraud is growing more rampant in scientific studies
- US scientists significantly more likely to publish fake research
- Medical ethicist outs scientific community for widespread 'plagiarism, fraud, and predatory publishing'
- Corrupt Science: Cancer Research of 10 Years Useless: Fraudulent Studies, Says Mayo Clinic
- Widespread Ghostwriting of Drug Trials Means "Scientific" Credibility of Pharmaceutical Industry is a Sham
- Allegations of climate science fraud at Albany - the Wang case
- Dr. Andrew Wakefield breaks silence on CDC scientist's admission of vaccine research fraud
- China cracks down after research papers investigation finds massive peer-review fraud
The rocky material that fell to Earth in a blazing fireball over the Cotswold town of Winchcombe in February has had its classification formally accepted.
Details have just been published by the international Meteoritical Society in its bulletin database.
Comment: It's perhaps a sign of the documented uptick in fireball activity that meteorite recoveries are in the news more often in recent years:
- 30-pound meteorite that recently crashed in Sweden recovered in local village
- Two meteorites found in Madura, US, in just two weeks
- Suspected meteorite crashes into rice field in India
- Loud blast recorded on dashcam as meteorite explodes over Sarawak, Indonesia - Locals felt earth shake
- HUGE meteor fireball lights up western China's dark morning skies
- Video shows meteor fireball blazing over Derbyshire, UK
- Chelyabinsk meteorite fragments reveal potential space collision
- Another new moon discovered around Jupiter

Overlaid images of Jupiter's pole from NASA's satellite Juno and NASA's Chandra X-ray telescope. Left shows a projection of Jupiter's Northern X-ray aurora (purple) overlaid on a visible Junocam image of the North Pole. Right shows the Southern counterpart.
Like Earth, Jupiter displays spectacular light shows at its poles, where charged particles from the Sun (as well as from giant volcanoes on the moon Io) are channelled by the planet's magnetic field into the atmosphere. Here, these ions collide with gas atoms and produce bursts of light.
Jupiter's aurorae are much more powerful than our own, generating X-rays as well as visible light. These are produced like clockwork - but how does the planet accelerate these charged particles to high enough speeds to produce X-rays?
"We have seen Jupiter producing X-ray aurora for four decades, but we didn't know how this happened," says William Dunn from the University College London. "We only knew they were produced when ions crashed into the planet's atmosphere."
Now, Dunn and colleagues from the Chinese Academy of Sciences have discovered that these X-ray flares are triggered by periodic vibrations in Jupiter's magnetic field lines, which create waves of plasma that allow ions to "surf" down into the atmosphere, where they collide at high speed and generate X-rays.
Subglacial lakes are bodies of freshwater, a majority of which are found in Antarctica, trapped between Earth's crust, or bedrock, and thick sheets of ice — sometimes several miles thick. These lakes are teeming with diverse microbes that feed off nutrients in the water. However, until now researchers were unsure exactly where these nutrients came from.
Subglacial lakes naturally erode over time as their water levels rise and fall. In a new study, researchers replicated this erosion in the lab by crushing up sediment samples taken from Lake Whillans — a 23-square-mile (60 square kilometers) subglacial lake buried beneath 2,600 feet (800 meters) of ice in Antarctica — and revealed how vital chemicals needed to sustain microbial communities are created.
Comment: It appears that there are few areas on our planet (and likely elsewhere) that aren't teaming with life of some kind:
- Darwinism, Creationism... How About Neither?
- Microorganisms in parched regions extract needed water from colonized rocks
- 'Electric mud' teems with new, mysterious bacteria that may rewrite textbooks
- Dead Zone? Area with no life found on Earth
- Fungi that absorbs radiation has been growing all over Chernobyl plant
- Microbes that feed on hydrogen found living beneath glaciers - but where's the hydrogen coming from?
- MindMatters: Interview with Ken Pedersen: Quarks, DNA, Consciousness - It's All Information, Always Has Been
- The Truth Perspective: Mind the Gaps: Locating the Intelligence in Evolution and Design
- The Truth Perspective: Are Cells the Intelligent Designers? Why Creationists and Darwinists Are Both Wrong
Did you hear the one about 14 firefighters walking away after a 110-storey building supposedly toppled down on them?
It sounds like a gag. But it really happened.
Twenty years ago this September, on 9/11, a group of firefighters were trapped in the ground level of a stairway in the centre of the half-mile-high World Trade Center North Tower (WTC1). When the dust cleared, beams of sun shone down on them.
Comment: For more on Dr. Judy Wood's work, see:
- Dr. Judy Wood: Where did the World Trade Center go on 9/11?
- Where Did The Towers Go? A Presentation by Dr. Judy Wood
- Dr. Judy Wood - Where Did the Towers Go?

Skulls: Left: Amud 1, Neanderthal, 55.000 years ago, ~1750 cm³, Middle: Cro Magnon, Homo sapiens, 32.000 years ago, ~1570 cm³, Right: Atapuerca 5, Middle Pleistocene Homo, 430.000 years ago, ~1100 cm³. Femora: Top: Middle Pleistocene Homo, Trinil, 540.000 years ago, ~50 kg- Bottom: Neanderthal, La Ferrassie 1, 44.000 years ago, ~90 kg.
The study reveals that the average body size of humans has fluctuated significantly over the last million years, with larger bodies evolving in colder regions. Larger size is thought to act as a buffer against colder temperatures: less heat is lost from a body when its mass is large relative to its surface area. The results are published today in the journal Nature Communications.
Comment: See also:
- The Golden Age, Psychopathy and the Sixth Extinction
- Did Earth 'Steal' Martian Water?
- Darwinism, Creationism... How About Neither?
- Humans were in Europe earlier and had cultural interactions with Neanderthals, new fossil finds in Bulgaria reveal
- Dishing the dirt on Denisova cave: A refuge for hominins and a home to bears, wolves and hyenas
- Dragon Man: Large ancient skull from China could be new human species
- MindMatters: Interview with Ken Pedersen: Quarks, DNA, Consciousness - It's All Information, Always Has Been
- The Truth Perspective: Mind the Gaps: Locating the Intelligence in Evolution and Design
- The Truth Perspective: Are Cells the Intelligent Designers? Why Creationists and Darwinists Are Both Wrong
The amateur astronomer who last year recovered four lost Jovian moons has become the first amateur to discovery a previously unknown moon. Kai Ly reported the discovery to the Minor Planet Mailing List on June 30th and has submitted it for publication as a Minor Planet Electronic Circular.
Ly began planning the quest in May, but their real work began in June, when they began examining data taken in 2003 with the 3.6-meter Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope (CFHT). David Jewitt and Scott Sheppard (University of Hawai'i) had led a group that used these images to discover 23 new moons. The images remain available online, and Sheppard later used them to discover other Jovian moons, including Valetudo, Ersa, and Pandia.

Jupiter has 79 moons acknowledged by the International Astronomical Union's Minor Planet Center, but an amateur astronomer has just discovered another one (not shown here). Most of the planet's prograde moons (purple, blue) orbit relatively close to Jupiter, while its retrograde moons (red) orbit farther out. One exceptions is Valetudo (green), a prograde-moving body discovered in 2018 that's far out.












Comment: See also: