Nares Lapoiya
Stories (18/0)
Scientists Discover 'Alien World' that Upends Understanding of Life
Could alien life exist? This question has been explored for many years. Before we used telescopes or probes to explore other planets, many people would have assumed that alien life and alien civilizations were common, because we didn't know much about those planets. A very simple example, we humans have thought that recently more than 55 million kilometers from earth, as far as 400 million kilometers of the Mars may be in like the earth's ecosystems, until July 1965, the first successful over Mars probe "mariner 4," returned the first a picture on the surface of Mars, stunned the scientific community. That's because the images from the probe show Mars as a cratered, lifeless world, devoid of life and unlikely to support an intelligent civilization like Earth.
By Nares Lapoiya2 years ago in Earth
Will Japan become more dependent on US after Abe? Spend billions of dollars to buy islands, Japan to pave the way for the US military
Recently, Japan's Kagoshima Prefecture launched an investigation into plans to build a self-defense Force base and a US military training base on Mamao Island.
By Nares Lapoiya2 years ago in The Swamp
Does a sawfish cut a man in half? Knife-sharp "shark swords" sell for hundreds of thousands of dollars each
In the ocean full of mystery, there are a lot of strange water creatures, one of them is a fish, because of the appearance of strange, and human attention, it is sawfish. Although saw rays look a bit like sharks, they are actually rays.
By Nares Lapoiya2 years ago in FYI
A frog that died mating, fossil buried 45 million years later, drowned during mating, study says
The world is so big that there is no wonder. Among the fossils discovered by human beings, frogs that were mating tens of millions of years ago were found to be fossilized, and when they were discovered by human beings, they still kept mating posture.
By Nares Lapoiya2 years ago in Earth
"Artificial life" topped a list of the top 10 science stories of 2007 in the latest edition of Scientific American's Chinese edition.
NO.1 Artificial life was born On 21 June 2007, Craig Venter, an American biologist, reported in the journal Science that his team had for the first time transplanted an entire genome from one species to another, taking a key step towards building a simple genome from scratch. In early October, Dr. Venter again announced that his team had chemically synthesized Artificial chromosomes and successfully transplanted them into another cell-free cell, creating the first ever Artificial Life. Researchers can customize artificial chromosomes to make these artificial microbes useful for everything from making biofuels to cleaning up toxic waste to cleaning up carbon dioxide. The emergence of artificial microorganism is a milestone in the development of bioengineering.
By Nares Lapoiya2 years ago in Futurism