Google is committing $20 million in cash and $2 million in cloud credits to a new funding initiative to help scientific breakthroughs. Original Image Link Source:techcrunch.com
This flatworm species has the most extreme soldiers yet among parasites. When the nest of Haplorchis puilio is threatened, the soldiers crawl up to the foreign trematodes, attach their mouths, and expand their throats. The resulting vacuum blows a hole in the larger parasites, allowing the soldiers to suck out their guts.
Video by: Sierra Boucher/Science
Footage: Daniel Metz
Music: Chris Burns/Science
Published: 22nd Nov 2024 05:00:10 By: Science Magazine
Science News Video: These seals are mapping their changing habitat
Northern elephant seals are invaluable partners in oceanographic research. By mounting sophisticated sensors on these large, round marine mammals, scientists gather crucial data on hard-to-access marine ecosystems.
00:00 Intro to UC Santa Cruz northern elephant seal research program
01:21 Monitoring seal health and foraging
02:03 Seals as smart sensors
03:14 Instruments to observe seal habitat
05:06 Studying foraging behavior
06:04 Sonar tags to detect prey
06:54 Whisker analysis
07:59 New technologies and re-analyzing old data
Additional footage credit: The David and Lucile Packard Foundation
#climatechange #ecology
Published: 11th Nov 2024 02:00:06 By: Science Magazine
Science News Video: Documenting drought in the #amazon
The amazon River maybe altered forever by #climatechange
Photographer Dado Galdieri offers insight on how he approached covering the drought in the amazon for a news feature in the February 16, 2024 issue of Science.
Footage: Patric Vanier and Dado Galdieri
Music: Ruben Lozano/Pond5
Published: 8th Nov 2024 05:00:19 By: Science Magazine
Science News Video: Training a #robot to work in our world #science
Ten seconds before it charges, a marlin "turns on" its stripes. Then, when the attack is done, the marlin dials the contrast back down. Layers of colorful cells in their skin rapidly change shape to create the strong pattern.
Read the article: https://www.science.org/content/article/watch-marlin-flash-bright-stripes-deadly-strike
Footage: Alicia Burns
Script: Sierra Boucher
Published: 25th Oct 2024 04:00:20 By: Science Magazine
Science News Video: Your Gorgeous Hair Evolved From Frog Toes
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Frogs aren't known for their fabulous manes, but the claws of frogs are helping us learn why humans have hair -- thanks to a homeobox gene and a weird evolutionary shift.
Hosted by: Hank Green (he/him)
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Published: 22nd Nov 2024 06:00:18 By: SciShow
Science News Video: Hobbits Were Real. Why Were They So Small?
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You may have heard of the Hobbits -- no, not the Tolkien ones. Our cousins, Homo floresiensis! But have you ever wondered why this enigmatic mini species was so little? Let's talk about the decades of research into what made the hominins from Liang Bua Island in Flores, Indonesia so tiny.
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Published: 21st Nov 2024 06:00:32 By: SciShow
Science News Video: Should the Earth Even Have Water?
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"Water, water, every where"...or so that one poem goes. And it's kinda right, because there's way more water INSIDE the Earth than on the surface. But scientists still don't know with certainty exactly how Earth got all of that H2O.
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Published: 20th Nov 2024 06:00:33 By: SciShow
Science News Video: Space, Goats, and Climate Change
90% of the world's cashmere, the wonderfully soft fiber used in scarves and sweaters, comes from China and Mongolia. Cashmere goats are raised by nomadic pastoralists on marginal habitat in the Gobi Desert. These herders are fighting the effects of the climate crisis... with a little help from NASA.
Support for this video provided by Gates Ventures.
Hosted by: Reid Reimers (he/him)
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Published: 19th Nov 2024 06:00:08 By: SciShow
Science News Video: We Can't Find the Most Important Fossils Ever
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About 360-ish million years ago, some tetrapods moved onto land and changed the course of history. So we'd love to know more about these guys, and what it took to get there. But the thing is, the fossils we need to understand this mystery... are missing. Here's the story of Romer's Gap and how researchers at places like Willie's Hole are filling it in.
Hosted by: Stefan Chin (he/him)
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Published: 18th Nov 2024 06:00:39 By: SciShow
Science News Video: See a vampire bat treadmill workout | Science News
Researchers put vampire bats through their paces to discover what fuels their metabolism. After a fine meal of cow blood, bats were put into a closed mini-gym with a moving floor. As the bats walked and then — as the treadmill sped up — ran, researchers checked bat breath for signs that amino acids from the cow blood were getting metabolized in the workout. Unlike most mammals burning carbs and fats during exercise, bats metabolize more amino acids.
Read more: https://www.sciencenews.org/article/vampire-bats-treadmills-metabolism
Video Credit: Giulia Rossi
Published: 6th Nov 2024 04:39:39 By: Science News
Science News Video: See how a male Victoria’s riflebird courts a female | Science News
A sit-and-wait flirter, a male riflebird (left in the first clip) puts on a high-energy — and noisy — show for a female visiting his perch. The most flexible wrist joints yet measured in a bird let him curve his dark wings like a flaring cape. Opening and closing his beak, as seen in the first slow motion clip, adds flashes of gold from the mouth and throat lining. Between flashes, he closes his beak to scrape it over the spread feathers for the show’s thwackity-thwack soundtrack, as seen in the second slow motion clip. Scientists previously thought the birds somehow clapped their wings together to make the sounds.
Video: Thomas MacGillavry and Joris De Raedt
Published: 16th Oct 2024 03:27:53 By: Science News
Science News Video: Take a close look at a fruit fly's neurons | Science News
In this fruit fly brain, there are precisely two neurons called CT1 neurons that span the width of the eye. Each of these neurons makes over 140,000 synapses and uses its unique position to help the fly sense light and motion.
Read more:
Video: Amy Sterling, Murthy and Seung Labs/Princeton University
Published: 2nd Oct 2024 01:53:07 By: Science News
Science News Video: Watch bacteria found on our teeth rapidly divide and grow | Science News
The filamentous bacterium Corynebacterium matruchotii, found in human dental plaque, has a superpower. It can divide into as many as 14 daughter cells at once, allowing it to rapidly expand its territory. In this video, a single cell divides into many, which also divide into many, and so on until the colony rapidly fills the field of view.
Read more: https://www.sciencenews.org/article/bacteria-unique-mouth-division
Video: Scott Chimileski/Marine Biological Laboratory
This animation shows how the ambipolar electric field works. The most abundant gas in the lower atmosphere, the part we live in, is nitrogen (N2, shown around seven seconds). Pan up to the ionosphere (14 seconds), though, and you’ll find more atomic oxygen. Photons from the sun can collide with oxygen and knock one of their electrons loose, leaving a positively charged oxygen ion behind. The pull between those ions and their lost electrons is the ambipolar electric field, which ties them together.
Read more: https://www.sciencenews.org/article/electric-field-in-earths-atmosphere
Video: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center
What was once the largest Soviet military base in East Germany is now a deserted assortment of shops, homes, theaters, and more.
#ScienceChannel #MysteriesOfTheAbandoned
About Mysteries of the Abandoned:
The world's most incredible engineering projects are revisited to uncover why places full of mysteries and untold secrets are now abandoned ruins.
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Published: 12th Nov 2024 04:00:49 By: Science Channel
Science Channel Video: The Unexpected Process Behind Heather Gems | How It's Made | Science Channel
Wanna hurdy-gurdy anyone?!?!
Chapters
00:00 Aerogel - Originally aired 2014
05:08 Promotional Origami - Originally aired 2018
10:04 Astrolabes - Originally aired 2009
15:04 Heather Gems - Originally aired 2011
20:05 Hurdy-Gurdies - Originally aired 2017
25:12 Calissons - Originally aired 2014
29:57 Horse Exercisers - Originally aired 2018
35:01 Tetra Pak Containers - Originally aired 2008
40:01 Haggis - Originally aired 2010
45:02 Blast Doors - Originally aired 2013
50:02 Pasta Dies - Originally aired 2016
55:00 Chisteras - Originally aired 2014
#ScienceChannel #HowItsMade
About How It's Made:
Explore the fascinating world of how everyday items are manufactured and produced.
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Published: 8th Nov 2024 08:00:33 By: Science Channel
Science Channel Video: San Francisco's Forgotten Sutro Baths | Mysteries of the Abandoned | Science Channel
The Sutro Baths opened to the public on March 14, 1896. At time of opening, the baths reigned as the world's largest indoor swimming pool complex until its fiery demise in 1966.
#ScienceChannel #MysteriesOfTheAbandoned
About Mysteries of the Abandoned:
The world's most incredible engineering projects are revisited to uncover why places full of mysteries and untold secrets are now abandoned ruins.
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Published: 7th Nov 2024 11:00:00 By: Science Channel
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