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    Bored in lockdown? Try a guide to the science of this familiar state

    Many people are experiencing boredom during lockdown. Book Out of My Skull brings together decades of research on this familiar yet elusive feeling, writes Elle Hunt Humans 3 June 2020 Out of My Skull James Danckert and John Eastwood Harvard University Press “Drab routine has begun,” wrote the Russian cosmonaut Valentin Lebedev, just one week […] More

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    We've just found the largest and oldest Mayan monument yet

    The oldest and largest known monument built by the Mayan civilisation has been found in Mexico. Called Aguada Fénix, it is a huge raised platform 1.4 kilometres long. Aguada Fénix was built around 1000 BC, centuries before the Maya began constructing their famous stepped pyramids. Its design suggests that early Mayan societies were fairly egalitarian […] More

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    DNA analysis sheds new light on ancient biblical Dead Sea Scrolls

    Fresh evidence from DNA analysis is helping to piece together the Dead Sea Scrolls – 25,000 fragments of parchment discovered in the Qumran caves and surrounding areas in the West Bank over the past 70 years, which contain the oldest known copies of biblical texts. Oded Rechavi and Noam Mizrahi at Tel Aviv University in […] More

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    The return of race science: an interview with Angela Saini

    In her latest book, Superior: The Return of Race Science, Angela Saini examines what she calls the “subtle” return of race within mainstream science. She tells New Scientist that part of the reason she wrote the book was to understand our beliefs on race, and whether scientific beliefs have really moved on since the era […] More

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    Cannabis was burned for religious rituals in Biblical-era Israel

    Religious ceremonies that took place thousands of years ago in what is now Israel involved the burning of cannabis, according to a study of an ancient shrine. The finding suggests psychoactive substances played a key role in rituals performed in the biblical Kingdom of Judah. “In many places in the world, psychoactive materials were used […] More

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    Don't miss: Europe's biggest art-meets-tech festival on your computer

    New Scientist’s weekly round-up of the best books, films, TV series, games and more that you shouldn’t miss Technology 27 May 2020 Robert Bauernhansl/Arc Electronica Visit online Ars Electronica Home Delivery is a weekly programme of exhibition tours, lab visits, concerts and talks with artists and scientists, bringing the magic of Europe’s biggest art-meets-technology festival […] More

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    Climate chief: How coronavirus shows us we can beat global warming

    Forget the naysayers: what we must do to combat climate change is far less drastic than coronavirus measures, says World Meteorological Organization head Petteri Taalas Humans 27 May 2020 YOU might say the body Petteri Taalas heads determines the weather on world climate action. At the very least, it takes its temperature. The World Meteorological […] More