Ancient DNA pulls back curtain on the Sahara Desert's greener past
Picture the Sahara, and an inhospitable landscape of endless sand dunes and barren rock comes to mind.
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.
Like what you've read? Oh, but there's more. Sign up here to receive in your inbox the next edition of Wonder Theory, brought to you by CNN Space and Science writers Ashley Strickland, Katie Hunt and Jackie Wattles. They find wonder in planets beyond our solar system and discoveries from the ancient world.
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USA Today
5 minutes ago
- USA Today
SpaceX gives Starship megarocket a redesign ahead of next flight. When will it launch?
SpaceX's 10th test of the 400-foot Starship will be another critical test of a vehicle that could be the centerpiece of future astronaut missions. A new-and-improved Starship is due to soar halfway across the world in a matter of days. SpaceX has announced a target launch date for a mission referred to as flight 10, which will undoubtedly be a critical test for the gigantic 400-foot Starship spacecraft. For one thing, it's been nearly three months since SpaceX last conducted an uncrewed flight test from Texas for a vehicle that was intended to begin launching more frequently in 2025. And for another, the commercial spaceflight company founded by billionaire Elon Musk has struggled this year to repeat the successes of previous Starship test flights. The first two Starship launches of 2025 ended with the vehicle's upper stage, where astronauts would one day ride, exploding mere minutes into the missions. While Starship streaked further through suborbital space during the most recent May 27 launch, the vehicle still met an untimely end when it spun out of control about halfway through its flight without achieving some of its most important objectives. SpaceX's 10th flight test since April 2023 was then delayed June 18, when the upper stage, simply known as Starship, unexpectedly exploded on the test stand before it was mounted to the rocket booster. As SpaceX gears up for the highly anticipated Starship mission, here's what to know about how the company is redesigning the spacecraft for better performance. When is the next Starship launch from Starbase in Texas? SpaceX has announced plans to conduct the 10th flight test of its Starship spacecraft Sunday, Aug. 24, with a target liftoff time of 6:30 p.m. CT. SpaceX conducts Starship test flights from the company's Starbase headquarters in South Texas, located about 23 miles from Brownsville near the U.S.-Mexico border. Starbase, which Texas voters in Cameron County approved in May to become its own town, attracted some controversy in June when commissioners with the city of Starbase voted unanimously to close several of the city's public streets to outsiders, angering longtime residents and property owners. Musk had long been hinting on social media that a flight test for Starship was due in August. Most recently, the tech mogul had suggested Aug. 1 on X, the social media platform he owns, that the launch could take place in the middle of the month. SpaceX redesigns Starship ahead of flight 10 SpaceX also revealed a redesign to Starship earlier in August after the first three test flights of 2025 all ended in dramatic explosions in the sky. This time around, the Super Heavy booster will feature three grid fins used to help it land instead of four, which SpaceX said in a post on X will improve "vehicle control while enabling the booster to descend at higher angles of attack." The fins are 50% larger and "higher strength" than previous versions, according to SpaceX. Though SpaceX does not have plans to attempt to return the booster to the launch site during flight 10, the company added that the new fins are positioned lower on the booster to align with the mechanical "catch arms" on the tower that has caught Super Heavy in three different demonstrations. What is Starship? What to know about explosions in 2025 SpaceX is developing Starship to be a fully reusable transportation system, meaning both the rocket and vehicle can return to the ground for additional missions. In the years ahead, Starship is set to serve a pivotal role in future U.S. spaceflight. Starship is the centerpiece of Musk's vision of sending the first humans to Mars, and is also critical in NASA's plans to return astronauts to the moon's surface. But the next-generation spacecraft has yet to reach orbit on any of its nine uncrewed flight tests, which began in 2023. SpaceX received key regulatory approval earlier in 2025 to conduct up to 25 Starship tests a year, after which Musk took to social media to proclaim that the vehicle's next three launches would occur much faster than normal – at a cadence of one "every 3 to 4 weeks." How big is Starship? The Starship, standing nearly 400 feet tall when fully stacked, is regarded as the world's largest and most powerful launch vehicle ever developed. When fully integrated, the launch system is composed of both a 232-foot Super Heavy rocket and the 171-foot upper stage Starship itself, the spacecraft where crew and cargo would ride. That size makes Starship large enough to tower over SpaceX's famous 230-foot-tall Falcon 9 – one of the world's most active rockets. Super Heavy alone is powered by 33 of SpaceX's Raptor engines that give the initial burst of thrust at liftoff. The upper stage Starship section is powered by six Raptor engines that will ultimately travel in orbit. Eric Lagatta is the Space Connect reporter for the USA TODAY Network. Reach him at elagatta@


CNBC
36 minutes ago
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Musk's Starlink suffers apparent outage as SpaceX launches more satellites
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Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Crew-10 astronauts to depart ISS: How the Florida launch helped Starliner crew return
In mid-March, four spacefarers arrived at the International Space Station on a mission that at any other time would have been relatively routine and unremarkable. NASA astronauts Nichole Ayers and Anne McClain were joined by Japanese astronaut Takuya Onishi and Russian cosmonaut Kirill Peskov on a mission known as Crew-10 that took on far more significance than most of the regular ventures jointly carried out by NASA and SpaceX. As expected, awaiting the Crew-10 contingent at the orbital outpost were months of scientific experiments tailored to be conducted in microgravity. Crucially, though, the mission also attracted plenty of headlines and fanfare as it cemented its place in spaceflight history for its role in ending the infamous Starliner saga. The Crew-9 team may have arrived in September on a spacecraft with room for the two astronauts who crewed the doomed Boeing Starliner to hitch a ride home. 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The U.S. space agency had originally been working toward a February liftoff before announcing in December 2024 that the mission had been pushed to late-March to give SpaceX more time to prepare a new Dragon capsule. The launch date was then moved back up to mid-March – most likely due to pressure from President Donald Trump and SpaceX founder Elon Musk – when NASA decided to instead use a "previously flown" Dragon. The Dragon spacecraft docked at the orbital outpost following a 28-hour journey, allowing the crew to exit the vehicle and enter the space station through its Harmony module. Once aboard, the four Crew-10 spacefarers officially greeted the Expedition 72 crew members, including the astronauts who flew aboard the Starliner. What happened with the Boeing Starliner after launch from Florida? Selected for the inaugural crewed flight of the Boeing Starliner, Wilmore and Williams became fixtures of the news cycle when the vehicle they flew to the space station in June 2024 encountered a series of technical issues. NASA and Boeing ultimately decided that the troubled Starliner capsule wasn't safe enough to crew, and would instead undock and return to Earth with them. On Sept. 28, 2024, NASA launched the SpaceX Crew-9 mission as planned, but with one crucial change: Just two astronauts – Nick Hague of NASA and Russian cosmonaut Aleksandr Gorbunov – headed to the space station on a Dragon instead of four to leave two empty seats on their vehicle reserved for Wilmore and Williams. NASA opted to keep Williams and Wilmore at the station a few extra months rather than launch an emergency mission to return them to Earth to avoid having the station be understaffed. Williams and Wilmore eventually departed the space station with the Crew-9 team and safely landed March 17 off the Florida coast following the arrival of the Crew-10 mission. When will SpaceX launch Crew-11 astronauts from Kennedy Space Center? Now, the astronauts of the Crew-10 mission are due to return to Earth themselves following the impending arrival of their own replacements. The Crew-11 mission is due to get off the ground no earlier than 12:09 p.m. ET Thursday, July 31, from near Cape Canaveral, Florida, according to NASA. As the name suggests, Crew-11 is NASA and SpaceX's 11th science expedition to the International Space Station. The missions, most of which last about six months, are contracted under NASA's commercial crew program. The program allows the U.S. space agency to pay SpaceX to launch and transport astronauts and cargo to orbit aboard the company's own vehicles, freeing up NASA to focus on its Artemis lunar program and other spaceflight missions, including future crewed voyages to Mars. Selected for the mission are NASA astronauts Zena Cardman and Mike Fincke, Japanese astronaut Kimiya Yui with the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) and Russian Oleg Platonov, a Roscosmos cosmonaut. SpaceX uses its Falcon 9 rocket – one of the most active in the world – to launch the crew missions from Launch Complex 39A at NASA's Kennedy Space Center. The astronauts themselves ride a Dragon crew capsule – the only U.S. spacecraft capable of carrying astronauts to and from the space station – which separates from the rocket in orbit. Ahead of the planned launch, the Dragon has been stacked atop the Falcon 9 rocket, which was rolled out Sunday, July 27 to the launch pad before being raised to a vertical position, according to NASA. When will the Crew-10 astronauts depart ISS, return to Earth? The arrival of Cardman, Fincke, Yui and Platonov will ultimately pave the way for their predecessors, the Crew-10 contingent, to depart the space station and head back to Earth. But the Crew-10 astronauts won't leave right away. What follows upon the arrival of any astronauts is a brief handover period in which the new crew members are familiarized with the orbital laboratory and station operations. McClain, Ayers, Onishi and Peskov will then depart a few days later on the same Dragon capsule that transported them to the space station. Mission teams will also have to review weather conditions off the coast of California, where the Dragon will eventually make a water landing. Who else is at the International Space Station? Another three spacefarers are also living and working about the International Space Station as members of Expedition 73. That includes NASA astronaut Jonny Kim, who reached the outpost in April 2025 with cosmonauts Sergey Ryzhikov and Alexey Zubritsky. Eric Lagatta is the Space Connect reporter for the USA TODAY Network. Reach him at elagatta@ This article originally appeared on Florida Today: SpaceX launched Crew-10 from Florida to relieve 'stuck' astronauts Solve the daily Crossword