Sheepdogs could be replaced by robots after scientists crack simple process      

fuckyeahdarkextropian:

Writing in the Journal of the Royal Society Interface, the researchers concluded: “Our approach should support efficient designs for herding autonomous, interacting agents in a variety of contexts.

“Obvious cases are robot-assisted herding of livestock, and keeping animals away from sensitive areas, but applications range from control of flocking robots, cleaning up of environments and human crowd control.”

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* and perfect for letting the wild mingle back into civilization. Robots herding resurrected ancient bison through the city streets. Big Dogs shepherding Mammoth through the tundra. Please don’t kettle us!

Sheepdogs could be replaced by robots after scientists crack simple process      

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Ancient Arabian Stones Hint at How Humans Migrated Out of Africa            

Previous research had suggested that the exodus from Africa started between 70,000 and 40,000 years ago. However, a genetic analysis reported in April hinted that modern humans might have begun their march across the globe as early as 130,000 years ago, and continued their expansion out of Africa in multiple waves.
In addition, stone artifacts recently unearthed in the Arabian Desert date to at least 100,000 years ago. This could be evidence of an early modern-human exodus out of Africa, scientists say. However, it’s possible that these artifacts weren’t created by modern humans; a number of now-extinct human lineages existed outside Africa before or at the same time when modern humans migrated there. For instance, the Neanderthals, the closest known extinct relatives of modern humans, lived in both Europe and Asia around that time.

To help shed light on the role the Arabian Peninsula might have played in the history of modern humans, scientists compared stone artifacts recently excavated from three sites in the Jubbah lake basin in northern Saudi Arabia with items from northeast Africa excavated in the 1960s. Both sets of artifacts were 70,000 to 125,000 years old. Back then, the areas that are now the Arabian and Sahara deserts were far more hospitable places to live than they are now, which could have made it easier for modern humans and related lineages to migrate out of Africa.

“Far from being a desert, the Arabian Peninsula between 130,000 and 75,000 years ago was a patchwork of grasslands and savanna environments, featuring extensive river networks running through the interior,” Scerri said.

The northeast African stone tools the researchers analyzed were similar to ones previously found near modern-human skeletons. The scientists found that stone artifacts at two of the three Arabian sites were “extremely similar” to the northeast African stone tools, Scerri told Live Science. At the very least, Scerri said, this finding suggests that there was some level of interaction between the groups in Africa and those in the Arabian Peninsula, and might hint that these Arabian tools were made by modern humans.

Surprisingly, Scerri said, tools from the third Arabian site the researchers analyzed were “completely different.” “This shows that there was a number of different tool-making traditions in northern Arabia during this time, often in very close proximity to each other,” she said.

One possible explanation for these differences is that the artifacts were made by different human lineages. Future research needs to uncover skeletal remains with ancient tools unearthed from the Arabian Peninsula to help solve this mystery, Scerri noted. Unless skeletal remains are found near such artifacts, it will remain uncertain whether modern humans or a different  human lineage might have made them.

“It seems likely that there were multiple dispersals into the Arabian Peninsula from Africa, some possibly very early in the history of Homo sapiens,” Scerri said. “It also seems likely that there may have been multiple dispersals into this region from other parts of Eurasia. These features are what make the Arabian Peninsula so interesting.”

Ancient migrants out of Africa and from Eurasia might have encountered a number of different populations in the Arabian Peninsula, Scerri said. Some of these groups may have adapted to their environment more than others had, which raises the intriguing question:

“Did the exchange of genes and knowledge between such groups contribute to our ultimate success as a species?” Scerri said.

Ancient Arabian Stones Hint at How Humans Migrated Out of Africa            

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Water clouds tentatively detected just 7 light-years from Earth

“It’s tentative,” he says, but “it’s the first evidence for water clouds” outside our solar system. Even within the solar system, observers can see water clouds on only Earth and Mars; the giant planets are so cold that ammonia ice clouds cover the water clouds on Jupiter and Saturn while the atmospheres of Uranus and Neptune block the view there.

Observers have previously discerned water vapor in the atmospheres of extrasolar planets, but Fortney says water clouds are a new phenomenon. “One of the things we don’t really know is how common partly cloudiness is,” he says. Venus, whose clouds consist of sulfuric acid, is totally cloudy, whereas Earth is partly cloudy. Faherty says the brown dwarf is also partly cloudy: About half is obscured by clouds.

Verifying the discovery will require spectra. Because the object is so dim, this will likely await the James Webb Space Telescope, which will be launched later this decade.

Water clouds tentatively detected just 7 light-years from Earth

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Dating Aboriginal stone-walled fishtraps at Lake Condah, southeast Australia

This site provides the first direct insights into the antiquity of the elaborate fishtrapping and aquaculture system developed by Aboriginal people in the Lake Condah region, and may represent one of the world’s oldest known fishtraps.

Excavations at a large Aboriginal freshwater fishtrap at Lake Condah, western Victoria, Australia, indicate initial channel construction by removal of basalt lava blocks around 6600 years ago, with basalt block walls added to the sides of the channel within the past 800 years.

Dating Aboriginal stone-walled fishtraps at Lake Condah, southeast Australia

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The star that exploded at the dawn of time | Science/AAAS | News

warrenellis:

“An ancient star a mere thousand light-years from Earth bears chemical elements that may have been forged by the death of a star that was both extremely massive and one of the first to arise after the big bang. If confirmed, the finding means that some of the universe’s first stars were so massive they died in exceptionally violent explosions that altered the growth of early galaxies.”

The star that exploded at the dawn of time | Science/AAAS | News

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Whose narrative?

aleskot:

Abraham Riesman from Vulture.com recently asked me some questions and I gave him my answers. The interview, conducted in the Vulture offices and then in a cab rushing through upper Manhattan, is hopefully a decent chunk of somewhat interesting ideas and stories.

Abraham’s questions were…

Whose narrative?

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The Ultimate Telescope

seej500:

m1k3y:

I think it’s fair to say that, given your ‘druthers, you’d want an instrument that could map exoplanets in the kind of detail you get with Google Earth, with enough resolution to actually see the Great Wall of the Klingons, in case they’ve built one.

Could we construct such a telescope … ever?

An interesting discussion and worth a read, but in actual fact we sort-of already have telescopes that are bigger than this.  Like, almost twice the diameter.

Y’see, it used to be that to get your telescope to work you needed one big reflector. Bigger the reflector, better the resolution (in the strict physics sense of the word resolution, meaning the ability to distinguish objects as separate from each other).

The biggest single reflector is, as you probably know, the Arecibo radio telescope.  And that’s kind of unwieldy and pretty impractical, not least because you can’t point it at anything other than whatever is directly overhead.

Around the 1970s though, computing power got good enough that a new type of telescope became possible, and led to the construction of arrays of smaller dishes, probably the most famous example of which is the imaginatively-named Very Large Array in New Mexico.  With a bit of clever programming, the images from all those individual dishes can be stitched together to in effect make the whole thing behave like one really big dish, only with the benefits of being directional and much cheaper to build and maintain.

As computing power has increased, more and more of these array telescopes have been built.  MERLIN, one of my favourites because it’s British, takes the input from seven older dishes spread across a couple of hundred miles of the Midlands, puts it all together, and gives you an effective telescope diameter that would be impossible to construct as a single dish (well, unless you had a budget of trillions of pounds and felt like dooming Birmingham and the rest of central England to permanent darkness).

But even with this technology, we’re limited by the size of the Earth, with a diameter of about 8,000 miles, right?  And that’s pretty far short of 100 million miles.

Well, not exactly.  Because Earth is moving.  In six months time you will be 186 million miles away from where you are right now, round the other side of the Sun.

That’s a pretty long exposure photograph, I know, but to get the maximum resolution of deep-space objects, this is exactly what astronomers do.  We use the motion of our own planet in orbit to get an effective telescope diameter the same size as the diameter of our orbit.  Which is pretty mindblowing to me.

Now, this is currently only really used for radio frequencies, but I would expect it’s not impossible to use a similar system for visible frequencies.  Not that it would be much use for identifying features on a planet, as that planet will likely also be spinning on an axis and certainly it will be orbiting a star, and because its orbit would need to be in a fairly narrow range of distances away from that star for it to be habitable, its orbit would be of roughly the same order as our own (a few months to a few years), so over a 6 month exposure that planet will be a blur, but still, we could at least see that it’s there.  From the way its atmosphere reflects and transmits light we could detect possible signs of industry.  We could make informed guesses about oceans and landmasses.  We could even potentially detect signs of life.

And all of that makes me pretty damn excited.

The Ultimate Telescope

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Scientists find traces of sea plankton on ISS surface

Results of the scope of scientific experiments which had been conducted for a quite long time were summed up in the previous year, confirming that some organisms can live on the surface of the International Space Station (ISS) for years amid factors of a space flight, such as zero gravity, temperature conditions and hard cosmic radiation. Several surveys proved that these organisms can even develop.

Scientists find traces of sea plankton on ISS surface

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Cecil Speaks – Night Vale Transcripts — Episode 52 – The Retirement of Pamela Winchell   

One of the great fears among a life of great fears, perhaps the last great fear is the fear of being no longer useful. We find a role in life, and we do that role to the best of our ability for as long as that ability is there. But all of us — even me, dear listeners — will someday hit a point where we no longer are able to do that thing that we define ourselves by doing. And more than the fear of injury, more than the fear of death, this is the fear that looms. The loss of self. The self that is self we imagined we were our whole lives. But we were never that self, not really. We were only a series of selves, living one role and then leaving it for another. And all the time convincing ourselves that there was no change. That we were always the same person, living the same life. One arc to a finish, not the stutter-stop improvisation that is our actual lives.

Worry less about the person you once were. Or the person you dream you someday will be. Worry about the person you are now. Or don’t even worry! Just be that person. Be the best version of that person you can be. Be a better version than any of the other versions in any of the many parallel universes. Check regularly online to see the rankings.

Cecil Speaks – Night Vale Transcripts — Episode 52 – The Retirement of Pamela Winchell   

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The Fields Of The City

I have a complete image of the local weather, what’s coming and what’s going.  Another aspect of the overexposed technological urban, in one respect, more drizzle of military vision — GPS was created by the US Department of Defense — into the urban space.  But sometimes I remember my childhood, of wandering vast fields bordered by low hedges, and the scale of the view.  In our narrow British streets crammed with tall houses, we don’t have the view we once did.  When the wind’s the right way, we’ll smell the rain before we see it.  Sometimes it feels to me almost like technological acceleration is actually a reverse gear, and, in some perverse way, the surveilled urban gives a sense of an archaic view reclaimed.

The Fields Of The City

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