Top Stories Daily Listen Now
RawStory

Science

24 climate predictions for 2024

This story was originally published by Grist. Sign up for Grist's weekly newsletter here.

Last year, climate change came into sharp relief for much of the world: The planet experienced its hottest 12-month period in 125,000 years. Flooding events inundated communities from California to East Africa to India. A heat wave in South America caused temperatures to spike above 100 degrees Fahrenheit in the middle of winter, and a heat dome across much of the southern United States spurred a 31-day streak in Phoenix of 110 degree-plus temperatures. The formation of an El Niño, the natural phenomenon that raises temperatures globally, intensified extreme weather already strengthened by climate change. The U.S. alone counted 25 billion-dollar weather disasters in 2023 — more than any other year.

Keep reading... Show less

Keeping a streak alive can be strong motivation to stick with a chosen activity

Dick Coffee attended 781 consecutive University of Alabama football games. Meg Roh surfed through illness, storms and nightfall to maintain a seven-year daily surfing streak. Jon Sutherland ran at least 1 mile every day for over 52 years.

An activity streak has the power to compel behavior, and marketers have taken note. Marketing researchers Jackie Silverman and Alixandra Barasch recently documented 101 unique instances, including Snapchat, Candy Crush Saga, Wordle and the Duolingo language learning platform, of apps that have incorporated streaks into their architecture by tracking the number of consecutive days users complete a task. There are even apps dedicated solely to tracking streaks.

Keep reading... Show less

From the Moon’s south pole to an ice-covered ocean world, several exciting space missions

The year 2023 proved to be an important one for space missions, with NASA’s OSIRIS-REx mission returning a sample from an asteroid and India’s Chandrayaan-3 mission exploring the lunar south pole, and 2024 is shaping up to be another exciting year for space exploration.

Several new missions under NASA’s Artemis plan and Commercial Lunar Payload Services initiative will target the Moon.

Keep reading... Show less

Decimating Nemo: Why we are clowns for chasing Thailand's clownfish

Clownfish, with their little pouty mouths, mini fins and striking orange and white colours, are victims of their own cuteness.

The world discovered the anemonefish 20 years ago and has been eagerly pursuing them ever since.

Keep reading... Show less

Own a restaurant and can't find a waiter? Use a service robot.

"Here's your food," whispers the robot at the airfield restaurant in Gelnhausen, some 45 kilometers east of Frankfurt, Germany. "Please take the food from tray one."

The guest complies, reaching for the plate full of steaming meat, gravy and mashed potatoes.

Keep reading... Show less

U.S. Supreme Court's Roberts urges 'caution' as AI reshapes legal field

WASHINGTON — Artificial intelligence represents a mixed blessing for the legal field, U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts said in a year-end report published on Sunday, urging "caution and humility" as the evolving technology transforms how judges and lawyers go about their work.

Roberts struck an ambivalent tone in his 13-page report.

Keep reading... Show less

'Watching Sesame Street?' Marjorie Taylor Greene mocked for counting to three twice

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) faced backlash on Sunday after she joked about the last day of 2023.

In a social media post, Greene simply shared the number "123123." Presumably, the post was a play on the date of 12/31/23.

Keep reading... Show less

The link between climate change and a spate of rare disease outbreaks in 2023

This story was originally published by Grist. Sign up for Grist's weekly newsletter here.

A 16-month-old boy was playing in a splash pad at a country club in Little Rock, Arkansas, this summer when water containing a very rare and deadly brain-eating amoeba went up his nose. He died a few days later in the hospital. The toddler wasn’t the first person in the United States to contract the freshwater amoeba, Naegleria fowleri, this year. In February, a man in Florida died after rinsing his sinuses with unboiled water — the first Naegleria fowleri-linked death to occur in winter in the U.S.

Keep reading... Show less

Omega-3 supplements show promise in enhancing depression treatment in adolescents

An open-label study involving Chinese adolescents with depression compared the effects of treating depressive symptoms using the antidepressant Paxil alone to those of a combination of Paxil and omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acid supplements.

The results indicated that the group receiving omega-3 supplements exhibited more significant improvements in depressive symptoms, cognitive function, and memory than the group treated solely with Paxil.

Keep reading... Show less

‘God of Chaos’: NASA sends spacecraft to study asteroid approaching earth

A NASA spacecraft, recently returned from a mission to asteroid Bennu, has been relaunched to study another asteroid as it approaches Earth’s orbit: Apophis, named after the Egyptian god of Chaos. The space rock is expected to pass within 32,000 kilometres of the Earth's surface on April 13, 2029.

On December 22, NASA announced it had relaunched its OSIRIS-REx spacecraft to study a 370-meter-diameter asteroid approaching Earth's orbit named Apophis.

Keep reading... Show less

Want to get into stargazing? A professional astronomer explains where to start

There are few things more peaceful and relaxing than a night under the stars. Through the holidays, many people head away from the bright city lights to go camping. They revel in the dark skies, spangled with myriad stars.

As a child, I loved such trips, and they helped cement my passion for the night sky, and for all things space.

Keep reading... Show less