Monday, September 16, 2024

Live Science Newsletter

"Sahara desert hit by extraordinary rainfall event that could mess with this year's hurricane season."

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.  Accessed on 17 September 2024, 0051 UTC.

Content and Source:  https://www.livescience.com

Please check link or scroll down to read your selections. Thanks for joining us today.

Russ Roberts (https://hawaiisciencejournal.blogspot.com).

 

September 16, 2024
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TOP SCIENCE NEWS
Sahara desert hit by extraordinary rainfall event that could mess with this year's hurricane season
(NASA Worldview)
The world's largest hot desert, the Sahara, is being hit with unusually heavy rain. Scientists are unclear why, but it may be linked to a subdued Atlantic hurricane season.
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HISTORY & ARCHAEOLOGY
4 silver Viking Age bracelets discovered 'untouched' on Norway mountainside after more than 1,000 years
(Volker Demuth, Archaeological Museum, University of Stavanger)
Archaeologists have unearthed a set of uniquely decorated bracelets on the site of a "large and powerful" Viking Age farm.
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PLANET EARTH
'Mountain of God' volcano in Tanzania is bulging, study finds
(Jean-Denis JOUBERT via Getty Images)
Satellite data suggest a volcano in Tanzania that expels extremely runny lava could be creeping toward an eruption.
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LIFE'S LITTLE MYSTERIES
Why do we forget things we were just thinking about?
(Peter Cade via Getty Images)
When the brain "juggles" information, things can fall through the cracks.
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ANIMALS
Parasitic 'horror' wasp that bursts from a fly's abdomen like an 'Alien' xenomorph discovered in Mississippi backyard
(Matthew Ballinger)
Scientists accidentally discover new species of wasp that lays eggs inside living, adult fruit flies, which then burst from the hosts' abdomens while they're still alive.
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TECHNOLOGY
AI models believe racist stereotypes about African Americans that predate the Civil Rights movement — and they 'try to hide it when confronted'
(400tmax/Getty Images)
When exposed to terms common in different racial dialects, large language models make inherently racist assumptions about people from particular racial groups, even without explicitly knowing their race.
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