SpaceX to Launch Used Rocket for 1st Time Tonight: Watch Live

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SpaceX to Launch Used Rocket for 1st Time Tonight: Watch Live

Space.com
The first stage of a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket lands on a “drone ship” after successfully launching the company’s Dragon cargo capsule on April 8, 2016.

Crikey! Refrigerator-Size Dinosaur Footprints Discovered in Australia

Live Science
Refrigerator-size dinosaur footprints are just some of the trackways that make the western coast of Australia the most diverse place on Earth for dinosaur footprints, a new study finds.

Experts call for creation of ‘red teams’ to challenge climate science

Stars and Stripes
Prominent scientists operating outside the scientific consensus on climate change urged Congress on Wednesday to fund “red teams” to investigate “natural” causes of global warming and challenge the findings of the United Nations’ climate science panel.

Jeff Bezos provides a sneak peek at Blue Origin’s New Shepard spaceship (and suits)

Yahoo News
In this artistic view, a passenger takes a look at the interior of Blue Origin’s New Shepard suborbital spaceship. (Blue Origin Illustration via Jeff Bezos).

A 20-mile long ‘spacescraper’ dangling from an asteroid: Could it work?

Christian Science Monitor
Realizing an architectural firm’s dream of a record-setting skyscraper hanging from an asteroid would be a tall order. Monitor’s Best: Top 5. A 20-mile long ‘spacescraper’ dangling from an asteroid: Could it work?

Juno Spacecraft Skims Jupiter’s Cloud Tops in Its 5th Flyby

Space.com
NASA’s Juno spacecraft whizzed closely by Jupiter today (March 27) in its fifth flyby of the gas giant. Juno made its closest approach at 4:52 a.m.

NASA Eyeing Mini Space Station in Lunar Orbit as Stepping-Stone to Mars

Space.com
Artist’s concept of NASA’s “deep space gateway” in lunar orbit. This astronaut-tended outpost would serve as a stepping stone for crewed trips to Mars.

World’s oldest spacewoman sets spacewalking record

Washington Post
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. – The world’s oldest and most experienced spacewoman has just set another record, this time for spacewalking.

Arctic sea ice lets in light and prompts algae bloom

Daily Mail
But experts have warned that this pearly white scenery is turning green, as sea ice continues to melt in the Arctic. The green tinge is caused by the bloom of microscopic algae as thinning ice allows in more sunlight – the consequences of which are

Growth Spurts May Determine a Lamprey’s Sex

Scientific American
Sex is determined by chromosomes in mammals and by temperature in many reptiles. But for sea lampreys – eel-like creatures that dine on blood – the growth rate of their larvae seems to control whether they are male or female.

In lab simulating harsh Mars climate, a nascent potato grows

Washington Times
In this March 16, 2017 photo, Peruvian scientist David Ramirez points to a potato plant in a simulator akin to a Mars’ conditions, in Lima Peru.

NASA assigns astronauts to future space station missions

Spaceflight Now
Astronauts Ricky Arnold (left) and Joe Acaba (right) aboard the space shuttle Discovery in March 2009. Credit: NASA. NASA has announced that veteran astronauts Joe Acaba and Ricky Arnold will launch on nearly six-month expeditions aboard the …

Saturn’s Weirdest Moon is Full of Electric Sand

Gizmodo
Saturn is the golden retriever of the solar system: It’s nice to look at and generally everyone’s favorite, including mine.

California beaches could be ‘severely damaged’ by 2100

Yahoo News
Los Angeles, March 30 (IANS) A group of US scientists have predicted that 31 to 67 percent of Southern California beaches could be severely damaged due to rising sea levels by 2100, a new study has revealed.

Humans developed larger brains in the search for food

Daily Mail
In the hope of understanding how humans developed their large brains, researchers have turned to our primate relatives. A new study suggests that primates and humans have bigger brains as a result of the search for food rather than because they …

Supermassive Black Holes Don’t Just Eat Stars – They Make New Ones Too

Forbes
Supermassive black holes don’t just destroy stars, new stars are born in the extreme environment around them too. A group of astronomers using the European Southern Observatory’s (ESO) Very Large Telescope have discovered stars forming in masses of …

Humans ‘Domesticated’ Mice 15000 Years Ago

National Geographic
Ancient rodent populations may now help us fill in gaps in the archaeological record as humans shifted from hunter-gatherers to farmers.

Was an 8-hour plane flight worth seeing this? More than 100 people thought so

WPXI Pittsburgh
More than 100 people spent eight hours aboard a plane to witness something very few will ever see – the Aurora Australis. >> Read more trending news.

Another View: Bumblebee needs protection for humankind’s sake

Press Herald
The rusty patched bumblebee is a key pollinator for fruit and other crops in dozens of states. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Share. facebook · tweet · email · print.

Scientists Who Want To Study Climate Engineering Shun Trump

OPB News
Spraying sea salt into the atmosphere to increase the reflective cloud cover over oceans is the way some scientists think they might be able to bring down Earth’s temperature.

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