Rare Direct Evidence of Ancient Predator Attacks (Image Credits: University of Tennessee) Long before humans walked the Earth, the region now known as Alabama lay beneath a vast inland ocean filled with enormous predators. During the Cretaceous period, marine reptiles and giant fish ruled these waters, competing for food in ecosystems as dynamic and dangerous … Read more

A Scorched Alien World Around a Red Dwarf Could Become a Key Benchmark for Exoplanet Science

Sumi

A Benchmark Planet for Atmospheric Research (Image Credits: NASA/ ESA/ CSA/ Joseph Olmsted (STScI)/ Webb Space Telescope) The discovery of planets beyond our solar system has reshaped our understanding of how planetary systems form and evolve. Over the past three decades, astronomers have identified thousands of exoplanets—ranging from massive gas giants to small rocky worlds … Read more

Tiny NASA Spacecraft Captures First Images of Distant Alien Worlds

Sumi

First Images From the Mission (Image Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech/ASU) The search for planets beyond our solar system has transformed astronomy over the past few decades. Since the first confirmed detection of an exoplanet orbiting a Sun-like star in the 1990s, scientists have discovered thousands of worlds scattered across our galaxy. Yet capturing direct images of these … Read more

Ancient Asteroid Impacts May Have Helped Spark Life on Earth

Sumi

Chemical Ingredients Delivered From Space (Image Credits: Getty Images) For decades, scientists have debated one of the most profound questions in science: how life first emerged on Earth. Some theories suggest life began in the deep ocean near hydrothermal vents, where mineral-rich hot water created chemical conditions ideal for early biological reactions. Others argue that … Read more

Hidden Tunnel

Petra’s Hidden Tunnels: What Lies Beneath the 2,000-Year-Old City?

Maria Faith Saligumba

Beneath the rose-red cliffs of Petra, Jordan’s ancient wonder, lies a secret world that most tourists never see. While millions marvel at the Treasury’s intricate facade carved into sandstone, few realize they’re standing above an elaborate network of tunnels, chambers, and waterways that rivals any modern city’s infrastructure. For decades, archaeologists have been uncovering this … Read more

Tiger laying on ground.

Doubling Tiger Populations: India’s Conservation Triumph

Maria Faith Saligumba

In the heart of India’s dense jungles, a remarkable story of conservation is unfolding. This story isn’t just about saving a species; it’s about restoring a critical balance in nature. Over the past few decades, India has achieved something extraordinary: doubling its tiger population. This success isn’t merely a statistical victory; it’s a testament to … Read more

A spaceship leaving Earth.

The Soviet Space Dogs: How Stray Pups Became Pioneers of Spaceflight

Maria Faith Saligumba

In the mid-20th century, an era marked by intense technological competition, a group of unlikely heroes emerged from the streets of Moscow. These heroes were neither scientists nor engineers, but stray dogs. The Soviet Union, in its quest to conquer space, turned to these resilient creatures to pave the way for human spaceflight. The journey … Read more

a scuba diver swims through an underwater cave

Could Humans One Day Breathe Underwater? The Science Says Maybe

Suhail Ahmed

Slip beneath the surface and the world changes – sound softens, light shards into blue, and the simple act of breathing becomes the biggest engineering problem on Earth. For more than a century, tanks and hoses have kept divers tethered to bubbles, while fish glide past with effortless calm. Now, a wave of biotech research … Read more