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Preistoria cantabrica: un nuovo studio ricalibra l'orologio del periodo Maddaleniano

Preistoria cantabrica: un nuovo studio ricalibra l'orologio del periodo Maddaleniano

23 Gennaio 2026

Una ricerca internazionale ha perfezionato la datazione al radiocarbonio dei...

Il "custode" dell'embrione: scoperto il ruolo degli RNA ultraconservati nello sviluppo precoce

Il "custode" dell'embrione: scoperto il ruolo degli RNA ultraconservati nello sviluppo precoce

20 Gennaio 2026

Una ricerca internazionale guidata dal Cnr-Igb di Napoli rivela come...

Oltre l'istinto: il paradosso di Monty Hall inganna anche i pesci

Oltre l'istinto: il paradosso di Monty Hall inganna anche i pesci

20 Gennaio 2026

Uno studio dell’Università di Padova rivela che le fallacie cognitive,...

Malattie neurodegenerative: la terapia genica apre la strada a nuove cure

Malattie neurodegenerative: la terapia genica apre la strada a nuove cure

16 Gennaio 2026

Uno studio dell’Università di Padova rivela come il ripristino di...

L'impronta digitale degli astrociti: una nuova frontiera per la diagnosi precoce delle malattie cerebrali

L'impronta digitale degli astrociti: una nuova frontiera per la diagnosi precoce delle malattie cerebrali

13 Gennaio 2026

Un innovativo sistema di imaging proteico permette di distinguere le...

Il respiro intermittente dei fiumi: l'80% dei corsi d’acqua mondiali non scorre tutto l'anno

Il respiro intermittente dei fiumi: l'80% dei corsi d’acqua mondiali non scorre tutto l'anno

12 Gennaio 2026

Uno studio dell’Università di Padova rivela che la quasi totalità...

I geni del virus dell'herpes scritti nel nostro DNA: una storia lunga millenni

I geni del virus dell'herpes scritti nel nostro DNA: una storia lunga millenni

10 Gennaio 2026

Per la prima volta, un team di scienziati è riuscito...

Il ritorno del pesce azzurro: perché i britannici sono pronti a dire addio al salmone

Il ritorno del pesce azzurro: perché i britannici sono pronti a dire addio al salmone

09 Gennaio 2026

Milioni di britannici potrebbero essere pronti a sostituire il pesce...

Gennaio 2026

Figure 1D and 1E from Rathburn et al.: Flood impacts in the North St. Vrain Creek catchment, northern Colorado, USA. Images D and E are from Google Earth.


Sara Rathburn of Colorado State University and colleagues have developed an integrated sediment, wood, and organic carbon budget for North St. Vrain Creek in the semi-arid Colorado Front Range following an extreme flooding event in September of 2013. Erosion of more than 500,000 cubic meters, or up to ~115-years-worth of weathering products, occurred through landsliding and channel erosion during this event. More than half of the eroded sediment was deposited at the inlet and delta of a water supply reservoir, resulting in the equivalent of 100 years of reservoir sedimentation and 2% loss in water storage capacity. The flood discharged 28 mega-grams of carbon from one square kilometer of land (28 Mg C/km2), which is more like what would happen in humid, tectonically active areas. To get an idea of what that means, Rathburn explains, a mega-gram of carbon (C) eroded from one square kilometer of land is equivalent to about a million paper clips covering an 18-hole golf course. So in this scenario, the flood discharged 28 million paper clips from just a golf course-sized area.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

NGC253 starburst galaxy in optical (green; SINGG Survey) and radio (red; GLEAM) wavelengths. The H-alpha line emission, which indicates regions of active star formation, is highlighted in blue (SINGG Survey; Meurer+2006).

Astronomers have used a radio telescope in outback Western Australia to see the halo of a nearby starburst galaxy in unprecedented detail. A starburst galaxy is a galaxy experiencing a period of intense star formation and this one, known as NGC 253 or the Sculptor Galaxy, is approximately 11.5 million light-years from Earth. “The Sculptor Galaxy is currently forming stars at a rate of five solar masses each year, which is a many times faster than our own Milky Way,” said lead researcher Dr Anna Kapinska, from The University of Western Australia and the International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR) in Perth. “This galaxy is famous because it’s beautiful and very close to us, and because of what’s happening inside it—it’s quite extraordinary.”

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

 

The illustration identifies the high-latitude North Atlantic as a significant CO2 sink (The purple areas are the most efficient sinks, while red ones are sources of CO2 in the modern ocean). The white star shows the location of the studied sediment core. The map was generated using data of Takahashi et al. Illustration: M. Ezat.


Norwegian Sea acted as CO2 source in the past. It pumped the greenhouse gas into the atmosphere instead of absorbing it, as it does today. At the same time the pH of the surface waters in these oceans decreased, making them more acidic. Both of these findings imply changes in ocean circulation and primary productivity as a result of natural climate changes of the time. The findings were recently published in Nature Communications.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

Climate change predicted to impact field workability

 

Climate change is predicted to impact agriculture, but a new study puts these changes in terms that are directly applicable to farmers. For Illinois, the corn planting window will be split in two to avoid wet conditions in April and May. Each planting window carries increased risk – the early planting window could be thwarted by frost or heavy precipitation, and the late window cut short by intense late-summer drought. Farmers and crop insurers must evaluate risk to avoid losing profits. Scientists the world over are working to predict how climate change will affect our planet. It is an extremely complex puzzle with many moving parts, but a few patterns have been consistent, including the prediction that farming as we know it will become more difficult. Scientists infer the impact on agriculture based on predictions of rainfall, drought intensity, and weather volatility. Until now, however, the average farmer may not have been able to put predictions like these into practice. A new University of Illinois study puts climate change predictions in terms that farmers are used to: field working days.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

The fibres in the artificial fibre network have about the same diameter as natural collagen fibres in normal connective tissue. The structure is also sufficiently loose for the cells to be able to enter. (Picture taken with an electron microscope) Photo: Ulrica Englund Johansson, Fredrik Johansson

 

The usual way of cultivating cells is to use a flat laboratory dish of glass. However, inside a human body, the cells do not grow on a flat surface, but rather in three dimensions. This has lead researchers at Lund University in Sweden to develop a porous “spaghetti” of tissue-friendly polymers with cavities in which the cells can develop in a more natural way. “When cultivating brain cells in a flat laboratory dish, the different cell types form layers, with the nerve cells on top and the glial cells – a form of supporting tissue –underneath. This is not what it looks like in natural brain tissue, where the cells are much more mixed”, says neuroscience researcher Ulrica Englund Johansson. Many research groups around the world have therefore tried to develop three-dimensional structures in which cells can be cultivated in a more natural way. The Lund researchers have used a method called electrospinning.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

Most of the Nepalese children participating in the study had vitamin B12 levels which were suboptimal, below the recommendations for best possible growth and development, says Ingrid Kvestad. (Photograph: Uni Research)

 

Small children with low levels of vitamin B12 had more difficulties solving cognitive tests, such as the ability to do puzzles, recognize letters and interpret other children’s feelings. Poor B12 status as a baby was associated with a decrease in test scores at 5 years of age, reports researcher Ingrid Kvestad at Uni Research in Bergen, Norway and colleagues in a new study.Kvestad is first author on the work, published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. Our results clearly demonstrate associations between early vitamin B12 status and various measures on development and cognitive functioning, as for example the ability to interpret complex geometrical figures, and the ability to recognize other children`s emotions, says Kvestad. Accordingly, the study suggests that vitamin B12 deficiency impair, or possibly delays, brain development in small children.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

Around 100,000 Austrians suffer from Alzheimer's disease and 16,000 from Parkinson’s. Experts estimate that, in view of the ageing population, these numbers are set to triple over the next 30 years. Both Alzheimer's and Parkinson's diseases are progressive degenerative diseases of the brain, which start up to 30 years before the onset of symptoms. Early diagnosis would be a huge help in combating the disease. However, the early detection tests that are available do not provide any reliable prediction about the further course of the disease and also carry the risk of producing a false positive result. “Neurology researchers throughout the world are therefore on the hunt for a specific biomarker signal for Alzheimer's," explains Peter Dal-Bianco, Alzheimer's expert from MedUni Vienna. Dal-Bianco is convinced: "There is a specific biomarker – we just haven't found it yet." The 13th International Conference on Alzheimer's and Parkinson's diseases will take place in the Vienna Exhibition Center from Wednesday 29 March to Sunday 2 April (www.adpd2017.kenes.com). Dal-Bianco is on the local organising committee.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

Moisture derived from underground water sources sustains one of world's oldest and most biologically diverse deserts

Fog, seen here receding in the morning, comes and goes quietly in the Namib Desert. The ocean is not the sole source of the fog that sustains life for numerous plants and animals living in Africa's coastal Namib Desert. The fog also comes from groundwater and other sources, report ecohydrologists supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF) and affiliated with Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI). The scientists conducted the research in one of the world's oldest and most biologically diverse deserts. Their results are published today in the journal Science Advances. Today on World Water Day -- and in fact every day -- water sources are an important consideration for society. To develop ecological models of arid environments, scientists say they must deepen their understanding of water sources. That knowledge can help them assess how plants and animals function in current and possible future climates.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

Various theories of religion hypothesize a connection between death anxiety and religiosity. In particular, Terror Management Theory’s worldview defence hypothesis predicts that death anxiety is lowest among very religious and irreligious individuals, and highest among uncertain individuals. Likewise, the supposition that death anxiety motivates religious belief, which in turn mitigates death anxiety, predicts that religiosity increases with death anxiety among non-believers, and that death anxiety decreases as religiosity increases among believers. In both cases, a curvilinear relationship – specifically, an inverted-U curve – is predicted. We extracted 202 effect sizes from 100 studies for an “omnibus” religiosity meta-analysis, and six meta-analyses that examine particular dimensions of religiosity. We found high heterogeneity and a weak negative association between death anxiety and religiosity. A closer examination revealed that 10 of the 11 studies that directly tested for curvilinearity provided some support for an inverted-U pattern. The curvilinearity hypothesis cannot be ruled out, but more evidence – particularly on non-religious individuals, and in non-Western, non-Abrahamic contexts – is needed.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

 

Independent research, initiated and carried out by Kaunas University of Technology (KTU) interdisciplinary migration research cluster shows that introduction of Euro in Lithuania coincides with the fourth wave of emigration. In 2015, more than 40 thousand people left Lithuania, and in 2016 – around 50 thousand. This number comprises the population of a small Lithuanian town, such as Marijampolė or Mažeikiai. In October 2016 the data from the 4 136 emigrants representing all four waves of emigration, aged 19–65+ were collected. 811 of the respondents emigrated from Lithuania in 2015 or later. According to Professor Vilmante Kumpikaite-Valiuniene (KTU School of Economics and Business), the first wave of emigration started just after the restoration of Lithuanian independence, when the State borders opened. The second wave was related to Lithuania joining the EU in 2004. In 2008, the third emigration wave was caused by Lithuania joining Schengen Area and the global economic crisis, which contributed to unemployment and financial instability.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

Medicina

Il "custode" dell'embrione: scoperto il ruolo degli RNA ultraconservati nello sviluppo precoce

Il "custode" dell'embrione: scoperto il ruolo degli RNA ultraconservati nello sviluppo precoce

20 Gennaio 2026

Una ricerca internazionale guidata dal Cnr-Igb di Napoli rivela come...

Paleontologia

Preistoria cantabrica: un nuovo studio ricalibra l'orologio del periodo Maddaleniano

Preistoria cantabrica: un nuovo studio ricalibra l'orologio del periodo Maddaleniano

23 Gennaio 2026

Una ricerca internazionale ha perfezionato la datazione al radiocarbonio dei reperti marini, migliorando drasticamente...

Geografia e Storia

Dagli Ipogei del Tepui venezuelano ai terreni marziani: un protocollo innovativo per l'indagine di siti estremi

Dagli Ipogei del Tepui venezuelano ai terreni marziani: un protocollo innovativo per l'indagine di siti estremi

15 Dicembre 2025

Un team internazionale ha applicato metodologie analitiche portatili avanzate per esaminare in situ le...

Astronomia e Spazio

Destinazione Giove: a Roma nasce lo SWIM Lab per scovare oceani extraterrestri

Destinazione Giove: a Roma nasce lo SWIM Lab per scovare oceani extraterrestri

30 Dicembre 2025

Inaugurato presso l'Università Roma Tre un centro di eccellenza mondiale: studierà...

Scienze Naturali e Ambiente

Il respiro intermittente dei fiumi: l'80% dei corsi d’acqua mondiali non scorre tutto l'anno

Il respiro intermittente dei fiumi: l'80% dei corsi d’acqua mondiali non scorre tutto l'anno

12 Gennaio 2026

Uno studio dell’Università di Padova rivela che la quasi totalità della...

 

Scienzaonline con sottotitolo Sciencenew  - Periodico
Autorizzazioni del Tribunale di Roma – diffusioni:
telematica quotidiana 229/2006 del 08/06/2006
mensile per mezzo stampa 293/2003 del 07/07/2003
Scienceonline, Autorizzazione del Tribunale di Roma 228/2006 del 29/05/06
Pubblicato a Roma – Via A. De Viti de Marco, 50 – Direttore Responsabile Guido Donati

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