Science & Technology
The samples revealed rings of cells characteristic of wood, a team of scientists observed.
They also suggested that the woody substance appeared to be a mechanism to transport water rather than acting as a support to allow plants to grow taller.
Phillipe Gerrienne, a geologist from the University of Liege, Belgium, told BBC News that the samples are the first and, to date, only samples of woody plants that had been placed in the Early Devonian period.
Scientists have undone the progress made by evolution by altering chicken DNA to create embryos with alligator-like snouts instead of beaks.
Experts changed the DNA of chicken embryos in the early stage of their development, enabling them to undo evolutionary progress and give the creatures snouts which are thought to have been lost in the cretaceous period millions of years ago.
The scientific revelation of 'rewinding' evolution could pave the way for scientists altering DNA in the other direction and use the same process to create species better able to adapt to Earth's climate.

Some scientists think a brown dwarf or gas giant bigger than Jupiter could be at the outer reaches of the solar system. In this image showing relative size, the white object at the upper left edge represents the sun.
And when we say giant, we mean GIANT.
Evidence is mounting that either a brown dwarf star or a gas giant planet is lurking at the outermost reaches of our solar system, far beyond Pluto. The theoretical object, dubbed Tyche, is estimated to be four times the size of Jupiter and 15,000 times farther from the sun than Earth, according to a story in the British paper The Independent.
Astrophysicists John Matese and Daniel Whitmire from the University of Louisiana at Lafayette think data from NASA's infrared space telescope WISE will confirm Tyche's existence and location within two years.

Solar storms—when explosions from the sun send blasts of charged particles toward Earth—can cause satellites to malfunction, threaten spacewalkers, and wipe out power grids
The young and fit couldn't care less, but those who are older, may develop problems. They have to consider the state of magnetosphere in their daily plans. Before, people were glued to weather forecasts. Now they are obsessed with the geomagnetic situation.
A pair of brain-inspired cognitive computer chips unveiled today could be a new leap forward - or at least a major fork in the road - in the world of computer architecture and artificial intelligence.
About a year ago, we told you about IBM's project to map the neural circuitry of a macaque, the most complex brain networking project of its kind. Big Blue wasn't doing it just for the sake of science - the goal was to reverse-engineer neural networks, helping pave the way to cognitive computer systems that can think as efficiently as the brain. Now they've made just such a system - two, actually - and they're calling them neurosynaptic chips.
Built on 45 nanometer silicon/metal oxide semiconductor platform, both chips have 256 neurons. One chip has 262,144 programmable synapses and the other contains 65,536 learning synapses - which can remember and learn from their own actions. IBM researchers have used the compute cores for experiments in navigation, machine vision, pattern recognition, associative memory and classification, the company says. It's a step toward redefining computers as adaptable, holistic learning systems, rather than yes-or-no calculators.
It terms the machines built with these chips "cognitive computers", claiming that they are able to learn through experience, find patterns, generate ideas and understand the outcomes.
In building this new generation of chip, IBM combined principles of nanoscience, neuroscience and supercomputing.
It has been awarded $21m (£12.7m) of new funding by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) for the next phase of the project, which it terms "Systems of Neuromorphic Adaptive Plastic Scalable Electronics" (SyNAPSE).
"This is a major initiative to move beyond the von Neumann paradigm that has been ruling computer architecture for more than half a century," said Dharmendra Modha, project leader for IBM Research.
The finding suggests that the Moon itself may turn out to be 4.36 billion years old, up to 200 million years younger than previously thought. The study was detailed in Aug. 17 issue of the journal Nature.
On the surface of the Moon, a group of rocks called ferroan anorthosites (FANs) are thought to have been one of the last things to crystallize out of the magma oceans, forming the first lunar crust. Though FANs have been difficult date, the new research uses improved methods to calculate the ages of FANs with unprecedented precision, through analyzing isotopes of lead, samarium and neodymium within carefully purified samples of these rocks.
This animation of a Lyman-alpha blob begins with a close-up view of a supermassive black hole in the center of a galaxy. Material falls into the black hole via a hot, rotating disk, and powers an outflow that pushes out into the galaxy:
Lyman-alpha blobs are huge gaseous structures emitting Lyman-alpha frequency light. Some of these are more than 400,000 light years across in size. The ESO team found that the light coming from one of these blobs is polarized. This is the first time that polarization has ever been found in a Lyman-alpha blob, and this observation will help unlock the mystery of how the blobs shine.
"We have shown for the first time that the glow of this enigmatic object is scattered light from brilliant galaxies hidden within, rather than the gas throughout the cloud itself shining." explains Matthew Hayes of the University of Toulouse in France, lead author of the paper.

An artist's concept of graphene and other forms of carbon superimposed on an image of the Helix planetary nebula, a puffed-out cloud of material expelled by a dying star
Graphene, which is arranged like chicken wire in flat sheets that are one atom thick, was first synthesized in a lab in 2004, and a Nobel prize was awarded for subsequent research on its unique properties.
Graphene is as strong as it is thin, conducts electricity as well as copper and is considered by many the "material of the future" with applications in computers, electrical devices, solar panels and more, a NASA release said Tuesday.
Now, a new study hints at how T. gondii, or "toxo," makes this strangely specific fearlessness happen: In infected rats, the smell of cat urine activates sexual attraction pathways in the brain, spurring the animals to approach the odor rather than run away.
Although T. gondii can infect many mammals, including humans, this rodent mind control is likely an adaption by the parasite to ensure it gets into the intestines of a cat, the only place it can reproduce sexually.
"Something is perturbing these pathways, and it looks like that something is toxo," said study researcher Patrick House, a neuroscientist at Stanford University.











Comment: From wikipedia:
The U.S. NHANES (1999--2004) national probability sample found that 10.8% of U.S. persons 6--49 years of age, and 11.0% of women 15--44 years of age, had /Toxoplasma/-specific IgG antibodies, indicating that they were infected with the organism.
It is estimated that between 30% and 65% of all people worldwide are infected with toxoplasmosis. However, there is large variation between countries: in France, for example, around 88% of the population are carriers, probably due to a high consumption of raw and lightly cooked meat. Germany, the Netherlands and Brazil also have high prevalences of around 68%, over 80% and 67% respectively.
In Britain about 22% are carriers, and South Korea's rate is 4.3%.
See also:
The Return of the Puppet Masters
Research supports toxoplasmosis link to schizophrenia
Toxoplasmosis infection trick revealed by scientists
Toxoplasmosis found more severe in Brazil compared to Europe
Toxoplasmosis Parasite May Trigger Schizophrenia And Bipolar Disorders
A curious clue? Women infected with toxoplasmosis are more likely to have boys
Toxo: A Conversation with Robert Sapolsky about Toxoplasmosis