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When Humans Learned to Live Everywhere

When Humans Learned to Live Everywhere

Geography is one of the things that sets apart modern humans.
Our closest living relatives — chimpanzees and bonobos — are confined to a belt of Central African forests. But humans have spread across every continent, even remote islands. Our species can thrive not only in forests, but in grasslands, swamps, deserts and just about every other ecosystem dry land has to offer.
In a study published on Wednesday, scientists pinpoint the origin of our extraordinary adaptability: Africa, about 70,000 years ago.
That's when modern humans learned to thrive in more extreme habitats. We've been expanding our range ever since. The finding could help resolve a paradox that has puzzled researchers for years.
Our species arose in Africa about a million years ago and then departed the continent a number of times over the past few hundred thousand years. But those migrants eventually disappeared, with no descendants.
Finally, about 50,000 years ago, one last wave spread out of Africa. All non-Africans can trace their ancestry to this last migration. The new study might explain why the final expansion was so successful.
In the new study, Eleanor Scerri, an archaeologist at the Max Planck Institute of Geoanthropology in Jena, Germany, and her colleagues sought to understand what sort of habitats early humans lived in across Africa.
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Archaeologists Unearth Viking-Era Burial With Incredibly Rare Casket
Archaeologists Unearth Viking-Era Burial With Incredibly Rare Casket

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time2 hours ago

  • Gizmodo

Archaeologists Unearth Viking-Era Burial With Incredibly Rare Casket

The 30 Viking graves range from richly furnished to bare-bones, hinting at a burial ground for both nobles and the people they enslaved. Archaeologists from Denmark's Moesgaard Museum have uncovered 30 Viking Age graves dating from 800 to 1050 CE, just under five miles north of Aarhus. Located near the town of Lisbjerg, the burial site has yielded a number of spectacular objects hinting at ties with Danish royalty. 'The burial site is most likely connected to the Viking-era manor in Lisbjerg, which is less than a kilometer from the burial site,' Mads Ravn, an archaeologist from Moesgaard and Viking Age expert, explained in the Moesgaard statement announcing the discovery. 'The objects we have found in the graves tell us that those buried here were people of high status—it could be the extended family from the farm that is buried here.' However, the varying grave sizes and grave goods also suggest that people of different social classes were laid to rest here, potentially nobles and the people they enslaved. According to the archaeologists, the graves are pagan and probably date to the 900s. In fact, Ravn told the AFP that the burial might include one of Harald Bluetooth's earls or stewards. The Viking Age saw Denmark's first kings rise to power and Aarhus become one of the region's most important royal and trade centers. Harald Bluetooth was king during the second half of the 10th century. He is best known for unifying Denmark, converting the country to Christianity, and conquering Norway—as well as inspiring the name of the familiar wireless technology. The Lisbjerg burial includes grave goods such as coins, ceramics, and a rare casket. Archaeologists left the casket within a block of soil in order to complete the excavation of the artifact in a laboratory, according to The History Blog. Nevertheless, X-ray images reveal that the wooden box is around 12.6 square inches, likely made of oak, and features fancy rivets, potentially silver-plated fittings, and a locking mechanism. It contains pearls, a pair of scissors around 5.5 inches long (14 centimeters), an intricate silver bead, a needle, gold thread, possibly a brooch and a ribbon with gold thread, as well as the teeth and bones of a deceased individual. The researchers suggest that the casket likely belonged to an important woman. It represents a rare specimen of just a few such objects known to scholars, including one unearthed in the town of Haldum, just 7.5 miles (12 km) from Lisbjerg. As reported by The History Blog, the fittings of the newly discovered casket are also similar to those of the beautiful ninth-century Bamberg Casket, an extremely ornate Viking box with a complex locking mechanism currently housed in the Bavarian National Museum in Munich. Overall, 'the finds in Lisbjerg are part of a series of previous fine finds in the Aarhus area,' said Kasper H. Andersen, a historian at Moesgaard also specialized in the Viking Age. 'Together, they paint the picture of an aristocratic environment that was linked to royal power, and which was part of the Vikings' vast and dynamic world.'

This Australian moth may be the 1st insect ever discovered to use stars for long-distance navigation
This Australian moth may be the 1st insect ever discovered to use stars for long-distance navigation

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time8 hours ago

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This Australian moth may be the 1st insect ever discovered to use stars for long-distance navigation

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Stand outside one spring night in southeastern Australia and you may be able to witness one of the biggest insect migrations in the world, as billions of brown Bogong moths (Agrotis infusa) flit across the sky. Each year in the spring, the moths migrate around 620 miles (1,000 kilometers) north to the Australian Alps, where they can avoid the heat by hiding in cool caves until the fall, when they return to their breeding grounds. While migration is not uncommon in insects, the Bogong moth's migration has been of particular interest to experts — how does a moth travel to a place it's never visited before? Researchers believe they now have the answer: stellar navigation. This would make the Bogong moth the first insect to use the stars for long-distance navigation as it makes its extended migratory journey. Stellar navigation has a long history for both humans and animals, from ancient Polynesians to migratory birds. Given the stars' dominance in the night sky, it's not surprising for experts to think that other animals, like insects, may also use these twinkling lights for navigating. "We knew from a previous study that the moths can use the geomagnetic field to navigate, but they only seemed to be able to do so in combination with visual landmarks, so we were thinking about what kind of landmarks these could be," explained Andrea Adden, a researcher at the Francis Crick Institute in the United Kingdom. "If you go to the Australian bush, where these moths live, and look around you at night, one of the most obvious visual landmarks is the Milky Way, which is always visible to some extent, independent of time of night and season," Adden said. "We know that daytime migratory insects use the sun, so testing the starry sky seemed an obvious thing to try." To test whether these moths are truly using the stars to navigate, the researchers captured several using a light-trap. This required the team to traverse into the dark, cold caves where the moths were resting during their migration, which, for some of the team, proved to be too challenging. According to Eric Warrant, a researcher at the University of Lund in Sweden and the leader of the project, "One of the most embarrassing [stories] was when Lena Nordlund from Swedish Radio (who was with us in Australia doing a documentary) asked why I always sent [the] youngsters in the cave and I always sat outside. I was forced to admit I was claustrophobic and was scared of going in — something that of course she included in the documentary." Though Warrant was not comfortable going into the caves, that didn't stop his collaborator, David Dreyer, also a researcher at the University of Lund, from challenging Warrant to a little competition to see who could catch the first Bogong moth of the migratory season. This competition lasted over a decade, with 20 different seasonal opportunities to compete. "[I] dominated this competition, [winning] 19 migratory seasons," Dreyer explained jokingly. "[My] 19 wins would remain unreported, until now. Justice at last." After capturing the moths, the team then placed them in a planetarium-like flight simulator, which included multiple projectors that could be programmed to give specific scenery. The simulator also blocked Earth's magnetic field, forcing the moths to try to navigate in the simulation by their eyesight alone. The researchers also attached electronic sensors to the moths to measure their brain activity. As Bogong moth brains are around the size of a grain of rice, adding the sensors was incredibly time-consuming. "Studying the neural basis of how these moths navigate reveals new processing mechanisms in the insect brain," Adden noted. "Even though human brains and insect brains are obviously very different, it often turns out that the computational principles are remarkably similar, so perhaps we can even learn something from moths that, one day, helps reveal something about the human brain." Once the moths were prepared, the researchers waited for evening in the outback, and then began to test the moths by recording their virtual flight paths in the simulator. "We continued this process until we had used all the prepared moths," Dreyer said. "The following morning was dedicated to data analysis. This routine continued until every moth from the previous catch had been tested — after which we would head out to catch a new batch." While studying the Bogong moths, the COVID-19 pandemic hit Australia, forcing a lockdown. For Adden, this meant being stuck out in the field. "A colleague and I were just wrapping up the field season in early 2020 when Australia entered its first Covid-19 lockdown, and the two of us were locked down at the field station for about a month," she said. "This wasn't as bad as it might seem — with no other humans in sight, we spent our days analyzing data, watching local wildlife and learning to sew." Adden even took the time to practice her astrophotography skills, taking photos of the very night sky her research subjects leveraged to navigate. After years of analysis, the researchers found that the Bogong moths fly in the seasonally appropriate direction (north or south) depending on the stars in the night sky, suggesting that they do in fact use the stars to guide them. "The stars are a very consistent cue. Even though the starry sky rotates throughout the night, the brightest part of the Milky Way is always in the South of the Southern celestial hemisphere," said Adden. "That makes it a very stable compass cue that is reliable not just across nights and seasons, but across centuries." From the moth's brain activity, the team also saw responses specific to certain rotations of the night sky in the flight simulator, and determined that their brains were the most active when they were "flying" in the right direction of their migration. While the Bogong moth is not the only insect to use the stars for guidance, it is the first to do so for long-distance journeys, scientists said. 'A previous study established that dung beetles use the stars to guide short-distance movements, but the beetles only travel a short distance (maybe 5-20 meters) as opposed to flying 1,000 km during a migration,' Ken Lohmann, a researcher at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill who was not involved in the study, told Studying how animals like moths navigate is not only fascinating, but can also help ensure the moth populations remain at a healthy level. "The Bogong moth population declined dramatically after the recent drought and 2020 bushfires," explained Adden. "Understanding how their migration works, and which cues they use to navigate, may help us protect these insects, which in turn helps the entire alpine ecosystem of which the moths are an integral part — e.g., as food for pygmy possums and all sorts of birds during the summer months." Part of that conservation work is looking at the role urbanization and, more specifically, light pollution plays in affecting the moths' migratory path. "Light pollution may well be a problem for Bogong moths during their migration,' Adden said. 'On their way from Southern Queensland to the Australian Alps, they pass several major cities, such as Canberra, which can be disorienting and trap the moths. In fact, this happened several years ago, when a cloud of moths briefly took over the Australian Parliament." While the Bogong moth shows the ingenuity of animals, for researchers and conservationists alike, understanding the animal navigation process as a whole is key to understanding their lifestyle, and therefore being able to protect them further. "A central lesson of animal navigation is that species almost always have multiple ways to guide themselves," said Lohmann. This study was published online today (June 18) in the journal Nature.

Our Galaxy's Monster Black Hole Is Spinning Almost as Fast as Physics Allows
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The colossal black hole lurking at the center of the Milky Way galaxy is spinning almost as fast as its maximum rotation rate. That's just one thing astrophysicists have discovered after developing and applying a new method to tease apart the secrets still hidden in supermassive black hole observations collected by the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT). The unprecedented global collaboration spent years working to give us the first direct images of the shadows of black holes, first with M87* in a galaxy 55 million light-years away, then with Sgr A*, the supermassive black hole at the heart of our own galaxy. These images are incredible – but also difficult to interpret. So, to figure out what we're looking at, scientists turn to simulations. They build a bunch of virtual characteristics, and figure out which of them most resemble the observational data. This technique has been used a lot with the EHT images, but now it's been kicked up a notch. A team led by astronomer Michael Janssen of Radboud University in the Netherlands and the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy in Germany used high-throughput computing to develop millions of simulated black holes. Then, they used that data to train a neural network to extract as much information as possible from the data, and identify the properties of the black holes. Their results show, among other things, that Sgr A* is not only spinning at close to its maximum speed, but that its rotational axis is pointed in Earth's direction, and that the glow around it is generated by hot electrons. Perhaps the most interesting thing is that the magnetic field in the material around Sgr A* doesn't appear to be behaving in a way that's predicted by theory. M87*, they discovered, is also rotating rapidly, although not as fast as Sgr A*. However, it is rotating in the opposite direction to the material swirling in a disk around it – possibly because of a past merger with another supermassive black hole. "That we are defying the prevailing theory is of course exciting," Janssen says. "However, I see our AI and machine learning approach primarily as a first step. Next, we will improve and extend the associated models and simulations. And when the Africa Millimetre Telescope, which is under construction, joins in with data collection, we will get even better information to validate the general theory of relativity for supermassive compact objects with a high precision." The team has detailed their methodology and findings in three papers published in Astronomy & Astrophysics. They can be found here, here, and here. Did a Passing Star Cause Earth to Warm 56 Million Years Ago? A Game-Changing Telescope Is About to Drop First Pics. Here's How to Watch. Trailblazing Satellite Mission Delivers Its First Artificial Solar Eclipse

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