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Science news this week: Sinking cities and tree of life mysteries

Live Science logo Live Science 27.05.2023 13:32:41 Alexander McNamara
Science in the news this week: Sinking cities and tree of life mysteries

Between a cutting-edge gravitational wave detector roaring back to life and the discovery of a 3,000-year-old bakery still covered in flour, the world of science once again thrilled us with another week of groundbreaking news. And nothing is more groundbreaking right now than the combined mass of New York City's 1,084,954 buildings, which are literally causing the city to sink at the rate of about 0.08 inches (2.1 millimeters) per year.

Speaking of weighty objects, paleontologists in Argentina discovered the remains of a ginormous long-necked titanosaur, which measured about 100 feet (30 meters) long. The dinosaur's fossils were so heavy that when being transported to Buenos Aires for study they caused a traffic accident and smashed the asphalt on the road. Thankfully no bones, human or dinosaur, were broken.

Finally, we know that life is full of little mysteries (and we should know a thing or two about them), but what has been really taxing us this week are whether octopuses have nightmares, what China is dropping off in space, and whether we'll ever find evidence of a "dark matter star". However, one thing we are now a little more certain of is the answer to evolutionary scientists' chicken-or-egg equivalent - which came first, the comb jelly or the sea sponge?

This unusual little critter is an extremely rare albino echidna, one of two known mammals in the world (along with platypuses) in which females lay eggs but also produce milk. Spotted earlier this month on a road in New South Wales, Australia, this all-white, quill-covered creature has been named Raffie by local authorities. 

Albinism is a genetic condition that interferes with the body's production of melanin, the main pigment that colors animals' skin, fur, feathers, scales and eyes. When melanin cells don't function properly, it can make animals appear partially or completely white. 

"An albino echidna is a rare sight," representatives of Australia's Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO) wrote in a Twitter post on May 22, 2022. "Spotting a non-albino echidna is also pretty uncommon," officials added. 

The James Webb Space Telescope continues its impressive run of discovering secrets of our universe, spying a gargantuan geyser on Saturn's icy moon Enceladus blasting water hundreds of miles into space - could it contain chemical ingredients for life?

samedi 27 mai 2023 16:32:41 Categories: Live Science

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