
science
Poems spanning 1,400 years tell the tale of a revered porpoise
Laura Baisas
A team of scientists in China turned to an unusual source to track the population of the Yangtze Rivers finless porpoises: ancient poems. The writings samples written over the past 1,400 years indica ...[Continue Reading]
Popular Science
1 day ago
Recent News (Science)
science
ESA unveils longest-ever dataset on forest biomass
European Space Agency
As the new Biomass satellite settles into life in orbit following its launch on April 29, ESA has released its most extensive satellite-based maps of above-ground forest carbon to date. Spanning near ...[Continue Reading]

Phys.Org
1 day ago
science
What Are Electromagnetic Fields And Do They Really Cause Harm To Humans?
Michael Levanduski
Shutterstock If youve been online at all over the past year or so, you have almost certainly seen videos and advertisements where people claim that electromagnetic fields are all around us and that ...[Continue Reading]

Twistedsifter.com
1 day ago
science
Inside S&P Globals Data-Driven Transformation With AI At The Core
Peter High, Contributor, Peter High, Contributor https://www.forbes.com/sites/peterhigh/
S&P Global offices Getty Images S&P Global sits at the intersection of finance, data and technology. With over 160 years of history and more than $14 billion in annual revenue, the company ...[Continue Reading]

Forbes
1 day ago
science
Possibly a Serious Possibility
Adam Kucharski
Sherman Kent was rattled. It was March 1951 and Kent, a CIA analyst, had found himself in a troubling conversation about some recent intelligence. A few days earlier, Kent's team had released a repor ...[Continue Reading]

Substack.com
1 day ago
science
NASA Data Helps Map Tiny Plankton That Feed Giant Right Whales
Emily DeMarco
In the waters off New England, one of Earths rarest mammals swims slowly, mouth agape. The North Atlantic right whale filters clouds of tiny reddish zooplankton called Calanus finmarchicus from the s ...[Continue Reading]

NASA
1 day ago