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Sciworthy

Sciworthy

The Encyclopedia of Science's Frontier

Tag: sciworthy

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Evolutionary arms race via ancient viruses in primate evolution

Posted on September 29, 2014October 24, 2022 by Sciworthy

New findings by scientists at the University of California, Santa Cruz, suggest that an evolutionary arms race between rival elements within…

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    Huge galaxies grow by eating nearby smaller ones

    Posted on September 25, 2014June 24, 2025 by Sciworthy

    Massive galaxies in the Universe have stopped making their own stars and are instead snacking on nearby galaxies, according to research by…

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      Individual human microbe community linked to education and gender

      Posted on September 24, 2014October 24, 2022 by Sciworthy

      As scientists catalog the trillions of bacteria found in every nook and cranny of the human body, a new look by the University of Michigan…

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        Clear skies and water detected in Neptune-sized exoplanet

        Posted on September 24, 2014June 25, 2025 by Sciworthy

        Astronomers using data from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, the Spitzer Space Telescope, and the Kepler Space Telescope have discovered…

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          Colonization of new land drives the evolution of new hummingbird species

          Posted on September 23, 2014June 25, 2025 by Sciworthy

          The first comprehensive map of hummingbirds’ 22-million-year-old family tree — reconstructed based on careful analysis of 284 of…

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            Diversity of lake cichlid species due to unusually high gene duplication

            Posted on September 23, 2014June 25, 2025 by Sciworthy

            In an effort to understand the molecular basis of adaptation in vertebrates, researchers sequenced the genomes and transcriptomes of five…

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              Sloths may be slow but their body size evolved really fast

              Posted on September 17, 2014October 24, 2022 by Sciworthy

              Today’s sloths might be known as slow, small animals, but their ancestors developed large body sizes at an amazing rate, according to…

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                Deciduous trees flourished after dinosaur-killing meteor impact

                Posted on September 17, 2014October 24, 2022 by Sciworthy

                Some 66 million years ago, a 10-km diameter chunk of rock hit the Yukatan peninsula near the site of the small town of Chicxulub with the…

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                  Origin of vertebrate notochord seriously much older than previously thought

                  Posted on September 13, 2014October 24, 2022 by Sciworthy

                  Thoughts of the family tree may not be uppermost in the mind of a person suffering from a slipped disc, but those spinal discs provide a…

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                    Oxygen alone may not be enough to detect life on exoplanets

                    Posted on September 13, 2014October 24, 2022 by Sciworthy

                    Astronomers searching the atmospheres of alien worlds or exoplants for gases that might be produced by life can’t rely on the…

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                      Artist's impression of the planetary system around the red dwarf Gliese 581. Credit: ESO

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