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    Don't Miss: I Am Greta documentary is the story of a climate crusader

    ReadThreats: Intimidation and its discontents explores the world of intimidation, as psychologist David Barash considers why humanity’s evolved response to threats sometimes makes things worse rather than better.

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    I Am Greta, a documentary now streaming on Hulu and Amazon Prime, celebrates the work of Greta Thunberg, whose campaign to save the natural world led her from school strikes to speaking at the UN General Assembly.
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    The Janus Point: A new theory of time is physicist Julian Barbour’s answer to why time seems to flow in only one direction. Its arguments could have astonishing implications for … More

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    Can a law meant to protect Native American artefacts free an orca?

    Members of the Native American Lummi Nation consider a captive orca called Sk’aliCh’elh-tenaut to be their kin. Now they are using extraordinary means to gain her release

    Life 25 November 2020
    By Elle Hunt
    The captive orca performs twice daily under the name Lolita
    Marice Cohn Band/Tribune News Service Via Getty Images

    ABOARD a small boat in Biscayne Bay, Florida, Raynell Morris (Squil-le-he-le) beats a steady rhythm on a handheld drum. When she shouts towards the shore, her voice cracks with emotion. “Your people are here,” she says. “We’ll bring you home.”
    Morris’s call is directed at the Miami Seaquarium where an animal she considers her kin is kept in captivity. Sk’aliCh’elh-tenaut – also known as Tokitae or Lolita – is a Southern Resident orca. It is the last week in September, and Morris has travelled 5500 kilometres from her home in Washington state to mark the 50th anniversary of the whale’s capture. Sk’aliCh’elh-tenaut’s incarceration remains an open wound for Morris and the rest of the Lummi Nation, the Native American people in whose territory the whale was taken. Various groups have been fighting for her release for decades. Now, the Lummi are leading a new approach.
    The latest bid to free Sk’aliCh’elh-tenaut centres on her cultural significance, striking at the heart of questions about how to recognise Indigenous rights and make amends for historical harms. Morris and another Lummi tribal elder, Ellie Kinley (Tah-Mahs), intend to sue the Miami Seaquarium to release Sk’aliCh’elh-tenaut under the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA), the federal US law governing the return of objects of cultural importance to Native Americans. If they do, it would be the first time the law has been applied to a living being. Those involved believe it is the best hope yet of getting Sk’aliCh’elh-tenaut released.
    Southern Resident orcas are a single … More

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    Climate change has revealed a huge haul of ancient arrows in Norway

    By Chris Baraniuk
    Ancient arrows are emerging from Norway’s ice
    Glacier Archaeology Program, Innlandet County Council

    An extraordinary number of arrows dating from the Stone Age to the medieval period have melted out of a single ice patch in Norway in recent years because of climate change.
    Researchers from the Universities of Cambridge, Oslo and Bergen gathered up a total of 68 arrow shafts, some with arrow heads still attached or nearby, and many other artefacts. Almost all of the items were found on an area of mountainside no bigger than 18 hectares in Jotunheimen, a region of southern Norway.
    The oldest arrows date from around 4100 BC while the youngest are from roughly AD 1300, based on radiocarbon analysis. However, the dates aren’t evenly distributed across the millennia, raising questions about whether environmental conditions during some periods were more likely to preserve fallen arrows than at other times. Peaks and troughs in reindeer hunting activity could also have played a role.

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    In some cases, arrowheads of various materials have also survived, including bone, slate, iron, quartzite and one made of mussel shell. A few arrowheads even retain the twine and tar used to fix them to their wooden shaft.

    Based on the nearly 300 specimens of reindeer antler and bone also secreted by the ice, and the fact that reindeer still frequent the area, the archaeologists are confident that the area served as a key hunting ground for millennia.
    Other artefacts from the site include a beautifully preserved 3000-year-old shoe and textiles that the archaeologists say may have been used to package meat.
    The finds represent a “treasure trove”, says William Taylor at the University of Colorado Boulder, who wasn’t involved in the work. He notes that it is very unusual to recover so many artefacts from melting ice at one location. “You might expect a handful of items if you were lucky,” he says. “It’s extremely rare and extremely important.”
    As the ice that locked the artefacts away has shifted and deformed over time, the arrows have moved from the locations where they originally fell. That makes it hard to infer too much about the activity associated with them, says Lars Holger Pilø at the Department of Cultural Heritage, Innlandet County Council, Norway, who is one of the paper’s co-authors.

    “The ice is an artefact-preserver but it is also at the same time a destroyer of history,” he says.
    Journal reference: The Holocene, DOI: 10.1177/0959683620972775
    More on these topics: More

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    Arecibo Observatory, an ‘icon of Puerto Rican science,’ will be demolished

    Arecibo’s days are done. After two support cables failed in recent months, the radio observatory’s 305-meter-wide dish is damaged beyond repair, the National Science Foundation announced on November 19. It will be decommissioned and dismantled.
    “It’s a death in the family,” says astronomer Martha Haynes of Cornell University, who has used the telescope in Puerto Rico to study hydrogen in the universe since she was fresh out of college in 1973. “For those of us who use Arecibo and had hoped to use it in the future, it’s a disaster.”
    The telescope, famous for appearances in movies like GoldenEye and Contact, consists of a wide dish to collect radio waves from space and focus them into detectors housed in a dome suspended above the dish. In August, one of the cables that holds up the dome slipped out of a socket and punched a hole in the dish.
    The NSF and the University of Central Florida, which manages the telescope, had plans to repair the cable, Haynes said. But then a second cable unexpectedly broke on November 6. If a third cable were to break, it could send the platform holding up the dome swinging, or the whole structure could collapse.

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    The NSF determined that there was no safe way to repair the telescope, the agency announced on November 19.
    “Until these assessments came in, our question was not if the observatory should be repaired but how,” said Ralph Gaume, director of NSF’s Division of Astronomical Sciences, in a statement. “But in the end, a preponderance of data showed that we simply could not do this safely. And that is a line we cannot cross.”
    The closure is the last in a series of near disasters for Arecibo. A different cable was damaged in an earthquake in 2014. Repairs on that cable were delayed by Hurricane Maria in 2017, which temporarily shut down the observatory as Puerto Rico weathered widespread power outages and humanitarian crises (SN: 9/29/17). And the observatory has been the victim of threatened or actual budget cuts for years (SN: 11/17/17).
    But its loss is a major blow for astronomy. Built in 1963, Arecibo was one of the best facilities in the world for observations ranging from mysterious blasts of radio waves from deep space (SN: 2/7/20) to tracking near-Earth asteroids that could potentially crash into our planet (SN: 1/20/20). It also was used in the early days of the search for extraterrestrial intelligence, or SETI (SN: 5/29/12).
    The Arecibo Observatory starred in major films, scanned the sky for hazardous asteroids and spotted mysterious radio bursts from space, among other things.University of Central Florida
    “Astronomers don’t have a lot of facilities,” Haynes says. Each new one is designed to have unique advantages over existing telescopes. “So when you lose one, it’s gone.”
    The observatory’s end is also a symbolic and practical loss for Puerto Rico, says radio astronomy researcher Kevin Ortiz Ceballos, a senior at the University of Puerto Rico at Arecibo who used the observatory to study the first known interstellar comet and stars that host exoplanets (SN: 10/14/19).
    “Arecibo is like an icon of Puerto Rican science,” he says. “This is absolutely devastating.”
    Ortiz Ceballos grew up watching Puerto Rican cartoons in which the characters went to Arecibo to use the telescope. His parents drove him an hour and a half to visit the telescope. He credits it with sparking his interest in astronomy, and he had hoped to come back to Puerto Rico to work at Arecibo after completing his Ph.D.
    “Puerto Rico has a huge mass emigration problem,” he says. “It’s a lot of people, and they’re all my age. It’s a huge brain drain. Being able to do what I love without having to leave, it was a huge dream for me.”
    And not just him, he notes: Dozens of students at the university and the observatory, plus more than 200 Puerto Rican students who went through the observatory’s high school program, have a similar story.
    “Losing this, especially after all that we’ve lost over the past half decade, makes me feel like we’re condemned to have our country just be ruins,” he says. “It becomes a signifier of a broader collapse. That’s just really tragic.” More

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    Your eyes can reveal your decisions before you've even made them

    By Gege Li
    The eyes are a window to decision making
    Rolando Caponi/EyeEm/Getty Image

    Choosing between going out for a run or staying slumped on your sofa can be tricky, but it turns out your eyes can reveal your decision before you have even made it.
    When we do something that requires physical effort, our pupils can dilate and activity heightens in the prefrontal cortex, the part of the brain involved in cognition. Now, it seems that these two reactions may also guide our decisions about activities that we have yet to carry out.
    To investigate this idea, Irma Kurniawan and her colleagues … More

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    Our supposed earliest human relative may have walked on four legs

    By Michael Marshall
    The shape of the femur from Sahelanthropus tchadensis is typical of apes like chimps
    Franck Guy/Université de Poitie

    AFTER more than a decade in limbo, a crucial fossil of an early human relative has finally been scientifically described. The leg bone suggests that Sahelanthropus tchadensis, the earliest species generally regarded as an early human, or hominin, didn’t walk on two legs, and therefore may not have been a hominin at all, but rather was more closely related to other apes like chimps.
    A paper from a rival group, not yet peer-reviewed, disputes this. The studies are the latest twist in … More

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    Systemic racism: What research reveals about the extent of its impact

    We spoke to five researchers working to demonstrate the various ways that racial discrimination is embedded in the structures and procedures that underpin US society

    Humans 18 November 2020
    By Layal Liverpool

    Marta D’Asaro

    THE explosion of the Black Lives Matter movement into mainstream awareness has brought the prevalence of systemic racism and anti-Black bias into sharp focus. This isn’t confined to individual acts and attitudes. It is racism deeply embedded as normal practice in the systems, structures and institutions that underpin society. And although it remains invisible to some, a growing body of research shows that systemic racism has a hugely detrimental impact on people across the world.
    In the US, where the most recent wave of anti-racism protests began, Black people are far more likely to be arrested and incarcerated than white people for the same crimes. But the issues faced in the US and other countries go far beyond law enforcement. We know that racism is also baked into housing, education, employment and healthcare systems. In the US, UK and elsewhere, for example, the disproportionate impact of the coronavirus pandemic on people from Black and ethnic minority (BAME) backgrounds has put a powerful spotlight on the way societal inequalities affect health and vulnerability to disease.
    And yet researchers are still working to understand how societies hold back and harm BAME communities, running experiments and analysing existing data with fresh eyes to uncover all the manifestations of systemic racism. We spoke to five US-focused scientists who investigate concealed discrimination in various aspects of everyday life, from children’s academic development to health and disease in adulthood and interactions with technology.
    EDUCATIONAL INEQUITY

    Daphne Henry is a developmental and educational psychologist at Boston College in Massachusetts
    In the US, Black children tend to get lower scores in reading and mathematics tests compared … More

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    Away review: An exquisite animated film created entirely by one person

    Feature-length animation Away was created solely by film-maker Gints Zilbalodis. The writing, animation and soundtrack are all uncomplicated, and the storytelling is all the better for it, says Simon Ings

    Humans 18 November 2020

    Away tells the story of a boy pursued by a strange, humanoid figure
    Subliminal Films

    Film
    Away
    Gints Zilbalodis
    At selected cinemas, with a digital release in early 2021
    A BARREN landscape at sun up. From the cords of his deflated parachute, dangling from the twisted branch of a dead tree, a boy slowly wakes to his surroundings, just as a figure appears out of the dawn’s dreamy desert glare. Humanoid but not human, faceless yet inexpressibly sad, the giant figure shambles towards the boy, bends and, though mouthless, tries somehow to swallow him.
    The boy unclips himself from his … More