Top Stories Daily Listen Now
RawStory

Science

Ancient DNA is revealing the genetic landscape of people who first settled East Asia

The very first human beings originally emerged in Africa before spreading across Eurasia about 60,000 years ago. After that, the story of humankind heads down many different paths, some more well-studied than others.

Keep reading... Show less

The detection of phosphine in Venus' clouds is a big deal – here's how we can find out if it's a sign of life

On Sept. 14, 2020, a new planet was added to the list of potentially habitable worlds in the Solar System: Venus.

Keep reading... Show less

Swedish scientists are working on a radical COVID-19 blocker involving alpacas

Tyson the alpaca could hold the key to developing a process to block the coronavirus. FRANCE 24's Catherine Norris-Trent and James André report from the prestigious Karolinska Institute in Stockholm.

Keep reading... Show less

Ham-handed Trump botched his own plan to position himself as the pro-science candidate: columnist

President Donald Trump created a plot to lead former Vice President Joe Biden into looking like the anti-science guy when he announced he didn't trust any vaccine Trump rushed out the door without proper testing and development.

Keep reading... Show less

Vikings not as blond and blue-eyed as previously thought: study

In the popular imagination, the Viking warriors who plundered northern Europe from the 8th century were as tall, fair and Scandinavian as they were murderous. In fact, according to a new study, they were far more diverse than previously thought.

Keep reading... Show less

Salvador vet's painstaking surgery helps mutilated bird fly again

Veterinary surgeon Jose Coto's clinic at the El Salvadoran environment ministry has its hands full as it cares for a wide array of injured, neglected or abused wild animals in the Central American country.

Keep reading... Show less

T-rex skeleton could fetch record price at New York auction

The skeleton of a 40-foot (12-meter) dinosaur nicknamed "Stan", one of the most complete Tyrannosaurus rex specimens ever found, will be auctioned in New York next month and could set a record for a sale of its kind.

Keep reading... Show less

Scientists find world's oldest sperm in Myanmar amber

A team of paleontologists have discovered what they believe is the world's oldest animal sperm, frozen 100 million years ago inside a tiny crustacean in tree resin in Myanmar.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump randomly blames China after he’s asked if he believes in global warming

Like a game of MadLibs, President Donald Trump shouted about China when he was asked whether he believed that global warming was real.

Keep reading... Show less

'Yet another alarm bell': Ice chunk twice the size of Manhattan breaks off Greenland glacier Amid Record Arctic Warming

News of the development came as the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration declared this summer the hottest ever recorded in the Northern Hemisphere.

Keep reading... Show less

'A matter of life and death': America's top science magazine gives Biden its first-ever presidential endorsement

America's top science magazine has broken 175 years of tradition and has made its first-ever endorsement for president of the United States.

Keep reading... Show less

China COVID-19 vaccine may be ready for public in November, say officials

Coronavirus vaccines being developed in China may be ready for use by the general public as early as November, an official with the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said.

Keep reading... Show less

'I don't think science knows': Trump bickers about the Earth getting 'cooler' at wildfire roundtable

President Donald Trump on Monday asserted that he expects the Earth to begin cooling despite a scientific consensus that the planet is getting warmer overall.

Keep reading... Show less