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High up on the Colorado Plateau, in what is today the state of New Mexico, sit the remains of what was once a city of ep...
12/03/2023

High up on the Colorado Plateau, in what is today the state of New Mexico, sit the remains of what was once a city of epic proportions.

From the 9th to the 12th century CE, the tens of thousands of ancestral Puebloan people who lived in Chaco Canyon occupied massive buildings stretching up to four stories high, many of which feature hundreds of rooms.

Made from sandstone blocks and heavy timbers, the buildings in and around Chaco Canyon were the largest structures ever built in North America prior to the 19th century. And yet without the assistance of wheels or draft animals, the transport of such massive pieces of material from nearby mountains would have been a challenge many find hard to imagine.

Researchers at Colorado University (CU), Boulder have now put their heads together to figure out the mystery… quite literally.

The team showed the human skull, neck, and spine are more than capable of acting together to support a 60-kilogram (130-pound) wooden beam 100 kilometers (60 miles) or more.

All that's required to schlep this impressive load is a pair of willing humans, a couple of head straps, and a bit of determination.

"Some people baked sourdough bread during COVID. Instead, we carried sand and heavy logs around using our heads," laughs Rodger Kram, an integrative physiologist at CU Boulder.

In today's world, where backpacks are ubiquitous, you might be wondering how scientists settled on head-packs for such heavy timber loads.

At first, Kram and two of the study's co-authors, neurophysiologist Joseph Carzoli and biochemist James Wilson, tried to heft the logs on their shoulders, but they quickly came to realize how inefficient that was.

"It was just debilitating," Kram recalls. "It's just a dumb way to carry a heavy object."

Humans have known that for millennia, yet today, this ancient hack is too often overlooked. Waist straps are instead regularly attached to hiking backpacks to help give our shoulders a break and redistribute some of the weight to our core.

A much easier option, as it turns out, is to strap the weight to the top of your head using a tumpline.

Tumplines are simple tools with ancient roots that have been used around the world for millennia.

In and around Chaco Canyon, archaeologists have found ceramic effigies illustrating Puebloan people using tumplines to carry resources, as well as yucca fiber wraps that could be the remains of ancient tumplines.

The authors mention that sherpas in Nepal still use tumplines to carry loads as heavy as 111 kilograms, all the while guiding tourists whose shoulders are likely burning with much lighter packs.

"Tumplines allow one to carry heavier weights over larger distances without getting fatigued," explains Wilson.

After months of practice, under the guidance of Carzoli, Wilson and Kram could work together to transport a 60-kilogram ponderosa pine up and down a hilly road at a rate of about 25 kilometers a day.

That's not much slower than a burden-less walking pace, and researchers say it was achieved with "surprising" comfort.

"Based on our test of concept, we conclude that it is entirely feasible that Chacoans could have used tumplines to transport heavy timbers," the authors write.

Perhaps that is why the ancient roads that lead to Chaco Canyon are as wide as 9 meters, allowing for heavy timber to be carried horizontally by a line of workers, each strapped in by their foreheads.

"Verbal communication between subjects was critical for properly timing of the lifting and timber positioning movements," Kram and his colleagues write.

"Subjects quickly learned to "walk in step" to mitigate timber swaying and loss of control."

The determined scientists also carried T-shaped sticks to lean the timber against when they took breaks – that way they didn't need to constantly load and unload the tumplines. They got this idea from sherpas in Nepal.

Based on their efforts, the team estimates three humans could feasibly carry an 85-kilogram timber roof beam from the forests of the Chuska Mountains down to the Chaco desert. The trip would take about four days in total, with time for rest and refueling.

It's estimated that something like 200,000 timber beams would be needed to build the entire city. That's no small amount of work, but a task that now seems feasible with enough time and human resources.

Who made this arduous journey is unclear, but since mountains are sacred places in descendant Pueblo society, researchers think the trip could have been a ceremonial act, designed to inspire teamwork, cohesion, trust, and faith.

There is also the possibility that slaves were employed to build the great houses of Chaco Canyon, as some oral traditions have it.

"We lack definitive evidence that tumplines were actually used to transport timbers to Chaco," the scientists admit, "but we have demonstrated that this method would have been highly effective."

The next step, researchers say, is to conduct a modern re-enactment of the entire trip to see if it is, in fact, possible.

Prehistoric stone tools found in a cave in Poland 50 years ago were recentlyidentified as some of the oldest ever discov...
12/03/2023

Prehistoric stone tools found in a cave in Poland 50 years ago were recentlyidentified as some of the oldest ever discovered in the region.

The tools from the Tunel Wielki cave in Małopolska are between 450,000 and 550,000 years old. This dating may allow scientists to learn more about the humans who made them, and their migration and habitation in Central Europe across prehistory.

For example, the timeframe likely means that the tools were made by extinct human species Homo heidelbergensis, usually considered the last common ancestor of Neanderthals and modern humans (us). And it means the region was inhabited by humans at a time that Central Europe's harsh climate would have required significant physical and cultural adjustment.

"This is an extremely interesting aspect of analyses for us," archaeologist Małgorzata Kot of the University of Warsaw in Poland explained to Science in Poland back in October 2022 when the research was released.

"We can examine the limits of the possibilities of survival of Homo heidelbergensis, and thus observe how he adapted to these adverse conditions."

Tunel Wielki cave was excavated in the 1960s, with archaeologists returning again to the site in 2016. Layers of material were dated to the Holocone, dating back to around 11,700 years ago, and the Middle Paleolithic, stretching as far as 40,000 years ago.

But archaeologist Claudio Berto of the University of Warsaw thought the dating was at odds with what he was observing. Animal bones recovered from the site, he concluded, were almost certainly older than 40,000 years.

So, in 2018, Kot and her team returned to the cave. They reopened and extended one of the trenches, carefully examining the different layers of material accumulated over the years, and collecting more bone material to analyze.

They found that the upper layers did indeed contain the bones of animals that lived in the Late Pleistocene and the Holocene. But the bottom layer was distinctly older. It contained the bones of several species that lived half a million years ago: the European jaguar, Panthera gombaszoegensis; the Mosbach wolf, ancestor to modern gray wolves, Canis mosbachensis; and Deninger's bear, Ursus deningeri.

The layer that yielded the bones also contained evidence of flint knapping, including flint flakes, the "blanks" from which other tools can be shaped, and the cores from which they are struck. There were also some finished tools, such as knives.

"Since these items come from the same layer as the bones, it means that their age is very similar," Kot explained. "This assumption was confirmed by excavations carried out in the cave in 2018. They confirmed the arrangement of layers described by researchers half a century ago. We also discovered more production waste and animal bones."

Previously, she added, there were only two known sites in Poland with tools from around the same time period: Trzebnica and Rusko. But the Tunel Wielki cave artifacts are different. Several archaeological sites in the area show evidence of ancient human habitation – but they are all open-air sites.

To find artifacts dating from that time in a cave is, according to Kot, very unexpected.

"We were surprised that half a million years ago people in this area stayed in caves, because those were not the best places to camp," she noted.

"Moisture and low temperature would discourage that. On the other hand, a cave is a natural shelter. It is a closed space that gives a sense of security. We found traces that may indicate that the people who stayed there used fire, which probably helped tame these dark and moist places."

Also of interest was the technique used to knap the flint found in the cave. This technique is the simplest used by ancient humans, and, at the time the tools were created, rarely used as a primary mode; usually, it was only used on poor-quality materials, or when flint was in short supply.

Only one other site, Isernia La Pineta in Italy, was using the technique as the primary one. The Tunel Wielki flint was not poor quality, nor was it scarce, being locally obtained. This was also the case for Isernia La Pineta; finding a second site with the same characteristics might help archaeologists work out the reason these ancient humans used that specific technique.

The team hopes to return to the cave to search for bones of Homo heidelbergensis.

Imagine this: you are walking down Fifth Avenue in New York City and you spot a hip coffee shop. It's cold so you decide...
10/03/2023

Imagine this: you are walking down Fifth Avenue in New York City and you spot a hip coffee shop. It's cold so you decide to pop in for a hot chocolate.

As you wait in line, you notice that no one is pulling out their wallet to pay. Instead they tap their phone and voila, there's their macchiato. You realise the app everyone is using to pay is Facebook.

But you deactivated your Facebook account months ago. They don't accept cash. No hot chocolate for you.

A week later, you're at lunch with a friend and she tells you all of your friends went to a club last weekend. You ask her why she didn't invite you. She says she forgot. You don't use WhatsApp, which Facebook owns, and that's where they made the plans.

The bill comes and you two decide to split it. She pays with Facebook on her phone. When it comes time to give her your share, you fumble. You don't use Facebook anymore and can't use its built-in "Bill Splitter". Now you have to go to the ATM to get cash.

You head to the train station to catch the commuter rail to your parents' house. Everyone is walking directly onto the train, swiping the ticket they bought on Facebook. You get into the long line to buy one from the only agent still working the station and nearly miss the train.

If it sounds far-fetched that an app could be this ubiquitous and essential to daily life, think again. It already exists in China.

WeChat, or Weixin as its known in Chinese, has been described by The New York Times, in a video about Western firms copying Chinese apps, as a "Swiss Army knife".

Over the course of six weeks in China last spring, I saw firsthand how essential WeChat is to modern Chinese life.

Each of those scenarios I just described actually happened to me in China.

China's 'Swiss Army Knife' app is everywhere
5b065f011ae66218008b45ce 1200
(Harrison Jacobs/Business Insider)

As one Chinese person described it to me, everyone uses WeChat. It's more than an app or service, it is modern life. More than 1 billion people use the app, and it has been China's most popular for some time.

While WeChat is first and foremost parent company Tencent's messaging service, the app serves a variety of functions from messaging, social networking, and e-commerce to taxi-hailing, bike-sharing and travel booking.

If you want to talk to someone in China – for work or personal – you don't use email, you don't call their phone, you send them a message on WeChat.

When I first started reporting in China, I found it impossible to find email addresses and, even when I did, I often didn't get responses. Then I downloaded WeChat and suddenly found myself in direct contact with every source I could want.

It was like being able to see after spending a week blind.

What's amazing is how many people use WeChat's various services – not just young tech-savvy millennials.

My partner's grandmother, who is Chinese, doesn't know how to use the internet, but she has WeChat on her phone and she's an expert at it.

When you meet someone at a business meeting in China, no one asks for your phone number or hands out a business card; you scan each other's QR codes so you can trade WeChat IDs.

When you wander through a city, busking musicians and panhandlers don't ask for coins or cash; they have signs with their WeChat Pay QR code on it.

I remember the first time I saw this phenomenon play out. I was standing in front of the ancient city walls of Xi'an, a city of 13 million in northwestern China, when I happened upon a group of Chinese students gathered to listen to a few musicians sing on a Saturday night.

The musicians had no open guitar case to take tips. But every couple of songs, one of their friends held up two cards printed with QR codes – one for Alipay, WeChat Pay's competitor, and the other for WeChat Pay.

Dozens of the attendees lifted up their phones and, in seconds, had scanned the QR code and sent a few yuan to the performers.

Mark Zuckerberg's dream also means getting more user data
This is the kind of ubiquity Mark Zuckerberg seemed to be alluding to in his most recent blog post on Facebook's future.

As BI's Shona Ghosh wrote, Zuckerberg "appears to be envisaging a future where people touch a Facebook-owned service for every aspect of their daily lives, just like WeChat in China."

Make no mistake, despite Zuckerberg's recent overtures to protect user privacy, this kind of business plan is about getting more invasive user data, not less.

The Chinese tech industry's greatest innovation is the mass adoption of ecosystem-based technology platforms, including WeChat and Alibaba.

Most often likened to the Amazon of China, Alibaba began as an e-commerce platform but has expanded into travel booking, movie tickets, social networking, live-streaming, food delivery, and entertainment.

Alipay's data and services deeply are integrated into its main app, linking accounts to a money market fund, loan products, and a credit-scoring business.

The consumer data from these services is used to build detailed profiles of each user, which companies can then monetise for marketing purposes directly within their apps in ways that even Facebook and Google would salivate over.

One Chinese tech exec told me how consumer data they'd gathered was so targeted and specific that they were helping brands determine what products they should be building or selling in the future and what consumers to target, not just how to advertise right now.

That kind of data is the long play that it sounds like Facebook has in mind.

In China, many Chinese are ok with the ubiquity of apps like WeChat because it comes down to a trade-off between convenience and privacy. Chinese internet services have developed rapidly through widespread access to the user data generated by mobile payments, food deliveries, ride-hailing, messaging, and other services.

It's made people's lives easier. With little history of privacy in Chinese culture, many Chinese have shrugged at WeChat's ubiquity.

Whether America's tech industry follows the same path will likely come down to whether Americans make the same choice.

Harrison Jacobs is Business Insider's international correspondent covering global issues, international technology industries, and travel.

Opinions expressed in this article don't necessarily reflect the views of ScienceAlert editorial staff.

George, a Hawaiian tree snail – also a 14-year-old local celebrity and the last known snail of his kind – will no longer...
08/03/2023

George, a Hawaiian tree snail – also a 14-year-old local celebrity and the last known snail of his kind – will no longer be able to entertain school children, or eat tree fungus.

He died on New Year's Day, according to the Hawaii Department of Land and Natural Resources (DLNR).

The death of George, and the resulting extinction of this species of tree snail (Achatinella apexfulva), should serve as a wake-up call, highlighting a much larger issue in Hawaii's forests that's been going on for a century.

George the snail, named after the Pinta Island tortoise Lonesome George, never lived in a forest, being born in captivity and growing up in a lab.

As it happens, George was a hermaphrodite, but it seems that two snails of Achatinella apexfulva are required to produce offspring.

In times passed, these snails had a long adolescence, only reproducing a couple of times a year after the age of 4 or 5, and living relatively long lives (for snails).

"In 1997, the last 10 known Achatinella apexfulva were brought to a laboratory at the University of Hawaii for captive rearing," explains Hawaii DLNR on their page announcing the sad news.

"A few babies were born, but when the lab experienced a die-off for unknown reasons, all the Achatinella apexfulva perished except for one lone individual, and that was George."

As unfortunate as it was, this mysterious die-off is just another entry in a long line of human errors and environmental catastrophes that have decimated snail populations in Hawaii.

According to David Sischo, a snail extinction prevention program coordinator for the Hawaii Invertebrate Program, the first snail species that was ever written about by a non-native scientist was in fact Achatinella apexfulva, all the way back in 1780.

In those times, and even a hundred years later, snails were everywhere on Hawaii. According to National Geographic, there are 19th century records boasting how up to 10,000 snails could be collected in just one day.

Snails fulfilled a variety of purposes on the island, like helping plant matter decompose, or eating fungi on leaves – which may have protected their tree hosts from disease.

"Anything that is abundant in the forest is an integral part of it," Michael Hadfield, an invertebrate biologist who used to run the captive breeding program for rare native Hawaiian snails, told National Geographic.

But by the early 1900s, some snail species became extinct, due to Europeans collecting them like they were baseball cards (why did you think they knew they could collect 10,000 in a day?).

Alas, the Hawaiian snails had seen nothing yet. In 1955, the rosy wolfsnail (Euglandina rosea) was introduced into Hawaii to control for another invasive snail, the African land snail (Achatina fulica).

But as many of these introductions go, nothing went to plan. The wolfsnail eats other snails, and although it did munch through the African land snail population to a limited extent, it had a much larger appetite for native snails.

"We were just watching snails disappear, disappear, disappear," biologist Michael G Hadfield from the University of Hawaii told The Guardian.

"We could see them vanishing before our eyes."

Hadfield began studying the snails in the 1970s, and by the early 1980s, the populations had been decimated, and the scientists began conserving the snails, by bringing them into their labs.

It is thought that the rosy wolfsnail is responsible for the extinction of up to a third of the native gastropods.

Although this is a terrifying picture if you're a surviving Hawaiian tree snail, there is some good news.

There are thousands of native snails living at the Hawaii Invertebrate Program, and, according to Sischo, some snails have been re-introduced into remote forest areas. With any luck, in these remote areas, they will be free of both human and the rosy wolfsnail's clutches.

Let's just hope that George's death is the catalyst for stopping these extinctions – if we can get a handle on invasive species, not to mention climate change.

As DLNR writes so poignantly, "George, the last known Achatinella apexfulva, died on New Year's Day 2019 … he is survived by none."

People across the UK, from the Shetland Islands to Somerset and from Norfolk to Northern Ireland, have been treated to a...
05/03/2023

People across the UK, from the Shetland Islands to Somerset and from Norfolk to Northern Ireland, have been treated to a stunning display of the aurora borealis or northern lights recently.

But what causes this beautiful phenomena and why has it appeared so far south?

For thousands of years, people associated the ghostly northern lights with the world of restless spirits. But over the last century, science has revealed that aurorae originate in the area surrounding our planet. The near-Earth region of space is known as the magnetosphere.

It is a cocktail of atoms and molecules from the Earth's upper atmosphere, shattered and heated by solar radiation (electromagnetic radiation emitted by the Sun).

The aurora borealis is created when these electrically charged particles rain down into the upper atmosphere. Most of the incoming particles that stimulate the light are electrons.

As the patterns of precipitation shift, the aurora shimmer and dance across the sky. Electrons are accelerated down along the Earth's magnetic field towards the polar regions.

The Sun emits a couple of million tons of particles every second, forming the solar wind that constantly flows through our solar system. The solar wind drags remnants of the Sun's powerful magnetic field with it, bathing the planets in a magnetized steam of particles smaller than atoms.

Interactions between the solar wind and the Earth's magnetosphere power the northern lights.

So what happened this week to drive aurorae to much lower latitudes than normal?

Towards the end of last week, scientists noticed a pair of coronal mass ejections (CMEs) on the Sun. A CME is an eruption of material from the Sun's outer atmosphere (the corona).

These explosive bursts can launch billions of tons of material in almost any direction, and Earth is typically hit a couple of times per month. As it happens, this pair of CMEs both fired Earthward, with the first leaving the Sun late on February 24 and the second late on February 25.

Traveling at about 3 million kilometers per hour (1,864,113 miles per hour), the first CME took about 48 hours to travel the 150 million kilometers (93,205,679 miles) to Earth and slammed into the magnetosphere around 7:00 pm (UK time) on Sunday, February 26.

The impact of a billion tons of highly magnetized, electrically charged material triggered a geomagnetic storm (a major disturbance of the Earth's magnetosphere).

Electrons in the magnetosphere accelerated into Earth's atmosphere, sparking intense auroral displays that rapidly expanded much further towards the equator than usual.

Timing was key. The geomagnetic storm happened in the early evening in the UK. Although dark, most people were awake, and the weather was fine, with clear skies over most of the country.

As the geomagnetic storm intensified over the next few hours, pictures of the aurora from as far south as Kent filled social media timelines, no doubt prompting more people to scan the skies.

Had the CME arrived a few hours later, most people in the UK would have been in bed and probably missed the event. Cloudy weather would have obscured the show. But the timing was right, and the famously unpredictable UK weather was cooperating (for once).

By late Sunday evening, my phone was ringing. As a space scientist who researches the connections between the Sun and Earth, I'm often contacted by the media when there is an auroral display over the UK.

As Monday morning broke, most of the media were running with stories of the previous night's display. Sure enough, most channels had found expert talking heads to talk about the science. But for me, this event was different. Normally, "morning after" media work involves answering an inevitable question.

"Will we see the northern lights again tonight?"

Usually, the answer is "probably not". In most cases, after 24 hours, the intensity of a geomagnetic storm has waned, and the northern lights retreat away from the UK towards their usual location at the edge of the arctic circle.

But this time, things were different. The second CME launched towards the Earth was still in transit, so it was a rare opportunity for me to give an optimistic prediction.

The second CME arrived in the wake of the first and caught Earth with a glancing blow around lunchtime on Monday, February 27. The weather conditions in the UK had deteriorated, and many hopeful aurora chasers were thwarted by cloud.

But geomagnetic activity remained high for a second night running, and folks with cloud-free skies were treated to another display of the northern lights.

When will we next see them over the UK? It's hard to say, but the prospects are improving.

The Sun's activity varies over an 11-year solar cycle, with CMEs (and aurora over the UK) more likely during the active parts of the cycle. At present, solar activity is increasing as we move towards the next solar maximum, expected in 2025.

A new breakthrough has allowed physicists to create a beam of atoms that behaves the same way as a laser, and that can t...
03/03/2023

A new breakthrough has allowed physicists to create a beam of atoms that behaves the same way as a laser, and that can theoretically stay on "forever".

This might finally mean the technology is on its way to practical application, although significant limitations still apply.

Nevertheless, this is a huge step forward for what is known as an "atom laser" – a beam made of atoms marching as a single wave that could one day be used for testing fundamental physical constants, and engineering precision technology.

Atom lasers have been around for a minute. The first atom laser was created by a team of MIT physicists back in 1996. The concept sounds pretty simple: just as a traditional light-based laser consists of photons moving with their waves in sync, a laser made of atoms would require their own wave-like nature to align before being shuffled out as a beam.

As with many things in science, however, it is easier to conceptualize than to realize. At the root of the atom laser is a state of matter called a Bose-Einstein condensate, or BEC.

A BEC is created by cooling a cloud of bosons to just a fraction above absolute zero. At such low temperatures, the atoms sink to their lowest possible energy state without stopping completely.

When they reach these low energies, the particles' quantum properties can no longer interfere with each other; they move close enough to each other to sort of overlap, resulting in a high-density cloud of atoms that behaves like one 'super atom' or matter wave.

However, BECs are something of a paradox. They're very fragile; even light can destroy a BEC. Given that the atoms in a BEC are cooled using optical lasers, this usually means that a BEC's existence is fleeting.

Atom lasers that scientists have managed to achieve to date have been of the pulsed, rather than continuous variety; and involve firing off just one pulse before a new BEC needs to be generated.

In order to create a continuous BEC, a team of researchers at the University of Amsterdam in the Netherlands realized something needed to change.

"In previous experiments, the gradual cooling of atoms was all done in one place. In our setup, we decided to spread the cooling steps not over time, but in space: we make the atoms move while they progress through consecutive cooling steps," explained physicist Florian Schreck.

"In the end, ultracold atoms arrive at the heart of the experiment, where they can be used to form coherent matter waves in a BEC. But while these atoms are being used, new atoms are already on their way to replenish the BEC. In this way, we can keep the process going – essentially forever."

That 'heart of the experiment' is a trap that keeps the BEC shielded from light, a reservoir that can be continuously replenished for as long as the experiment runs.

Protecting the BEC from the light produced by the cooling laser, however, while simple in theory, was again a bit more difficult in practice. Not only were there technical hurdles, but there were also bureaucratic and administrative ones too.

"On moving to Amsterdam in 2013, we began with a leap of faith, borrowed funds, an empty room, and a team entirely funded by personal grants," said physicist Chun-Chia Chen, who led the research.

"Six years later, in the early hours of Christmas morning 2019, the experiment was finally on the verge of working. We had the idea of adding an extra laser beam to solve a last technical difficulty, and instantly every image we took showed a BEC, the first continuous-wave BEC."

Now that the first part of the continuous atom laser has been realized – the "continuous atom" part – the next step, the team said, is working on maintaining a stable atom beam. They could achieve this by transferring the atoms to an untrapped state, thereby extracting a propagating matter wave.

Because they used strontium atoms, a popular choice for BECs, the prospect opens exciting opportunities, they said. Atom interferometry using strontium BECs, for example, could be used to conduct investigations of relativity and quantum mechanics, or detect gravitational waves.

"Our experiment is the matter wave analogue of a continuous-wave optical laser with fully reflective cavity mirrors," the researchers wrote in their paper.

"This proof-of-principle demonstration provides a new, hitherto missing piece of atom optics, enabling the construction of continuous coherent-matter-wave devices."

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