
Ancient DNA pulls back curtain on the Sahara Desert's greener past
That's largely the case today, but 7,000 years ago the vast desert was an altogether different place: a verdant world of trees and rivers and home to megafauna such as hippos and elephants.
Over the past decades, scientists have gleaned details of the 'green Sahara.' Now, with the help of ancient DNA from mummified remains, geneticists are figuring out who once lived there.
The Takarkori rock shelter — situated in southwestern Libya's Tadrart Acacus mountains — offers a remarkable glimpse into the Sahara's greener past.
Archaeologists uncovered the remains of 15 women and children at the site two decades ago.
Initial attempts to extract ancient DNA from the remains fell flat. Cool and constant conditions — the opposite of the extreme temperature swings of today's Sahara — yield the best preserved DNA.
New techniques made it possible to sequence the genome — a complete set of genetic material — of two mummified women. The analysis revealed intriguing information about the ancestry of the Takarkori people and how they adopted a herding way of life.
Dark energy is a mysterious force that accelerates the expansion of the universe, and it's thought to represent about 70% of the energy in the cosmos.
New clues from the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument collaboration, known as DESI, suggest dark energy may be behaving in unexpected ways and may even be weakening over time.
The collaboration, now in its fourth year of surveying the sky, has released its latest batch of data. While it's not the final word, the information has space scientists excited.
'We're in the business of letting the universe tell us how it works, and maybe the universe is telling us it's more complicated than we thought it was,' said Andrei Cuceu, a postdoctoral researcher at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, which manages DESI.
A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket sent four tourists in a Crew Dragon capsule on a polar orbit never attempted before.
Spearheading the Fram2 mission was Malta resident Chun Wang, who made his fortune running Bitcoin mining operations. He paid SpaceX an undisclosed sum for this trip.
Watch a video of the spacecraft's splashdown off California's coast on Friday after Wang and his crewmates — film director Jannicke Mikkelsen, robotics researcher Rabea Rogge and adventurer Eric Philips — spent 3.5 days in low-Earth orbit.
It was the first journey to space for each of the four crew members, who all have ties to polar land exploration.
Meanwhile, NASA's Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore spoke out this week for the first time following a protracted nine-month mission to space. Here's what they had to say.
To the untrained eye, stone tools may look like ordinary rocks, but to specialists they have fascinating stories to tell.
Researchers have found stone artifacts crafted in a style closely associated with Neanderthals in East Asia for the first time at a site in southwestern China's Yunnan province.
The discovery, dating back 60,000 to 50,000 years, has puzzled archaeologists, who have come up with competing hypotheses to explain the stone tools.
Perhaps Neanderthals could have migrated east and reached what's now China, or a different species of ancient human possibly made tools uncannily similar to those unearthed in Europe.
Either way, the answer could shake up what's known about human origins during the Stone Age.
Ancestors of T. rex and their plant-eating prey would have congregated to drink water from a lagoon on what's now Scotland's Isle of Skye, according to an analysis of newly identified dinosaur footprints.
Lead study author Tone Blakesley said he was among a small group that recognized an initial three footprints at the remote site on the isle's Trotternish Peninsula in 2019 when he was a graduate student at the University of Edinburgh.
'It was very exciting,' Blakesley said. Documenting a total of 131 footprints, he used a drone to take thousands of overlapping images of the site before producing digital 3D models of the tracks. They are preserved in 'exquisite detail,' he added.
Dive into these remarkable stories.
— The discovery of a mystery king's tomb in Abydos, Egypt, is revealing fresh clues about a long-lost dynasty notoriously missing from records of pharaohs who once ruled the region.
— Scientists sent a container of cooked soybean paste to the International Space Station, where it was left to ferment before returning to Earth as miso. Here's how it tasted.
— An eerie spiral recently lit up European skies, and it's becoming a more common sight.
— Archaeologists excavating a massive tomb in Pompeii unearthed extremely rare, nearly life-size marble statues that shed new light on the power held by priestesses in the ancient city.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Scientists want to send tiny, solar-powered spacecraft to Mars
Scientists want to send tiny, solar-powered spacecraft to examine difficult-to-reach parts of Earth's atmosphere – and eventually other planets too. The small devices are able to float in the air and could carry sensing instruments to monitor our climate as well as explore Mars, the researchers behind them suggest. Unlike conventional spacecraft, they do not need fuel to stay floating in the atmosphere. Instead, they use energy from light, through a process known as photophoresis that has been used to make objects levitate for 150 years. Despite that long history, the practical use of photophoresis has been limited to truly tiny objects or very powerful artificial light, and practical devices have not worked out. Now, however, researchers believe that they have made a centimetre-long flying device out of perforated sheets that can use natural sunlight to stay afloat. The flying structure is made from two thin, perforated membranes that are attached together by tiny supports. They can be used to create a tiny disc that is then able to leveitate. They could be sent up to the upper layers of the Earth's atmosphere. If they can be scaled up slightly, they would be able to carry antennae and circuits that would allow them to be used to monitor the atmosphere and for other science work. Eventually, the same design could be taken to other planets, they suggest. It is currently almost prohibitively expensive to send satellites to Mars, for instance – but doing so with the tiny spacecraft could allow researchers to monitor conditions on that planet, they say. 'If the full potential of this technology can be realized, swarms or arrays of such photophoretic flyers could be collecting high-resolution data on the temperature, pressure, chemical composition and wind dynamics of the mesosphere within the next decade,' Igor Bargatin from Penn University wrote in an article accompanying the new research. The work is described in a paper, 'Photophoretic flight of perforated structures in near-space conditions', published in the journal Nature.
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Moon phase today: What the moon will look like on August 15, 2025
The moon goes through a repeating cycle of phases each month, changing what we see every night. This is called the lunar cycle. The lunar cycle is a series of eight unique phases of the moon's visibility. The whole cycle takes about 29.5 days, according to NASA, and these different phases happen as the Sun lights up different parts of the moon whilst it orbits Earth. So, what's happening with the moon tonight, Aug. 15? What is today's moon phase? As of Friday, Aug. 15, the moon phase is Waning Gibbous, and it is 58% lit up to us on Earth, according to NASA's Daily Moon Observation. Alongside this, with no visual aids on the moon, you can spot the Mare Imbrium, Copernicus Crater, and the Oceanus Procellarum, an "Ocean of Storms" that covers more than 10% of the moon's surface. With binoculars, enjoy glimpses of the Gassendi Crater, Alphonsus Crater, and the Alps Mountains. If you have a telescope, the Apollo 12, Caucasus Mountains, and the Schiller Crater will all be in view too. When is the next full moon? The next full moon will be on Sept. 7. The last full moon was on Aug. 9. What are moon phases? According to NASA, moon phases are caused by the 29.5-day cycle of the moon's orbit, which changes the angles between the Sun, Moon, and Earth. Moon phases are how the moon looks from Earth as it goes around us. We always see the same side of the moon, but how much of it is lit up by the Sun changes depending on where it is in its orbit. This is how we get full moons, half moons, and moons that appear completely invisible. There are eight main moon phases, and they follow a repeating cycle: New Moon - The moon is between Earth and the sun, so the side we see is dark (in other words, it's invisible to the eye). Waxing Crescent - A small sliver of light appears on the right side (Northern Hemisphere). First Quarter - Half of the moon is lit on the right side. It looks like a half-moon. Waxing Gibbous - More than half is lit up, but it's not quite full yet. Full Moon - The whole face of the moon is illuminated and fully visible. Waning Gibbous - The moon starts losing light on the right side. Last Quarter (or Third Quarter) - Another half-moon, but now the left side is lit. Waning Crescent - A thin sliver of light remains on the left side before going dark again. Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
7 hours ago
- Yahoo
Moon phase today: What the moon will look like on August 16, 2025
The moon is half lit up tonight, which means a lot of things. Namely, we're in a new lunar cycle. The lunar cycle is a series of eight unique phases of the moon's visibility. The whole cycle takes about 29.5 days, according to NASA, and these different phases happen as the Sun lights up different parts of the moon whilst it orbits Earth. So, what's happening with the moon tonight, Aug. 16? What is today's moon phase? As of Saturday, Aug. 16, the moon phase is Third Quarter (also known as the Last Quarter) and it is 46% lit up to us on Earth, according to NASA's Daily Moon Observation. From this point onwards, the moon will be less and less visible, as we're now on day 23 of the lunar cycle. But there's still plenty to spot on the moon's surface, if you look hard enough. With your naked eye, catch a glimpse of the Aristarchus Plateau, the Tycho Crater, and the Copernicus Crater. With binoculars, see even more, including the Archimedes Crater, Alphonsus Crater, and the Clavius Crater. If you have a telescope, look out for the Apollo 12, Reiner Gamma, and the Schiller Crater, too. When is the next full moon? The next full moon will be on Sept. 7. The last full moon was on Aug. 9. What are moon phases? According to NASA, moon phases are caused by the 29.5-day cycle of the moon's orbit, which changes the angles between the Sun, Moon, and Earth. Moon phases are how the moon looks from Earth as it goes around us. We always see the same side of the moon, but how much of it is lit up by the Sun changes depending on where it is in its orbit. This is how we get full moons, half moons, and moons that appear completely invisible. There are eight main moon phases, and they follow a repeating cycle: New Moon - The moon is between Earth and the sun, so the side we see is dark (in other words, it's invisible to the eye). Waxing Crescent - A small sliver of light appears on the right side (Northern Hemisphere). First Quarter - Half of the moon is lit on the right side. It looks like a half-moon. Waxing Gibbous - More than half is lit up, but it's not quite full yet. Full Moon - The whole face of the moon is illuminated and fully visible. Waning Gibbous - The moon starts losing light on the right side. Last Quarter (or Third Quarter) - Another half-moon, but now the left side is lit. Waning Crescent - A thin sliver of light remains on the left side before going dark again. Solve the daily Crossword