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    Marvel's Midnight Suns review: Meet your heroes in new strategy game

    In Marvel’s Midnight Suns, you are in charge of a team of superheroes who fight villains but also hang out. Who wouldn’t want to go fishing with Spider-Man or play video games with Wolverine, asks Jacob Aron

    Humans

    8 February 2023

    By Jacob Aron
    Try explaining Doctor Strange’s powers in terms of science2K Games
    Marvel’s Midnight Suns
    Firaxis Games
    PC, PlayStation 4 and 5, Xbox One and Series S/X, Nintendo Switch
    WHILE we wait for a rash of new games to arrive (see my previous column), I have been mopping up a few from last year that I hadn’t yet managed to finish.
    The one that has been occupying most of my time is Marvel’s Midnight Suns, which puts you in charge of a team of famous superheroes. You play as a new character … More

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    A three-year drought may have brought down the ancient Hittite empire

    Wood from a burial chamber in modern Turkey reveals there was a sudden severe drought around the time Hittite cities were abandoned 3000 years ago

    Humans

    8 February 2023

    By Clare Wilson
    A burial mound in Gordion, an archaeological site in Turkey, which was the source of wood samples that gave a record of the climate centuries beforeJohn Marston
    A three-year-drought may have led to the fall of the Hittite empire in the Middle East 3000 years ago.
    The finding comes from analysing timber used to make the burial chamber of a later ruler, who may have been the father of King Midas, referred to in Greek legends.
    The sudden drought “would have undoubtedly caused mass problems with food provision. That would have affected the tax base of the empire pretty dramatically,” says Sturt Manning at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York.Advertisement
    The Hittite empire, which encompassed most of what is now Turkey and lasted nearly five centuries, was one of the major geopolitical forces of the ancient world, with a mastery of ironwork, a cuneiform writing system and an army that could take on neighbouring Egypt.
    Ancient texts and archaeological discoveries suggest that around 1200 BC, cities began being abandoned and the empire splintered into independent states that were later overwhelmed by Assyrians from the east.
    Several causes have been proposed, including disease, famine, a centuries-long shift to a drier climate, as well as earlier invasions by mysterious groups named “Sea Peoples” in Egyptian texts.
    Now, Manning’s team has found evidence of a sharp and severe drought from a huge chamber tomb built in the city of Gordion in 748 BC. As the tomb’s mound is much bigger than others nearby, and was made about the time the local King Midas took the throne, some archaeologists say it could have been made for Midas’s father, the previous ruler – although nothing to identify the occupant remains.
    Wood sample showing reduced growth for three consecutive yearsBrita Lorentzen
    Clues to the fall of the Hittites, centuries earlier, come from the juniper logs making up the burial chamber. The logs were taken from 18 trees, which were growing from the period 1775 to 748 BC.
    Less rainfall means less tree growth, which shows up as narrower gaps between tree rings. The logs show there were 80 instances of two or more consecutive years with low rainfall, and one of these was the three years from 1198 to 1196 BC – just when Hittite cities started being abandoned.
    This was supported by another kind of test, measuring the ratio of different forms of carbon from samples of the wood. This shows gradually increasing dryness of the atmosphere between 1300 and 1200 BC, then spikes of dryness from 1222 to 1195 BC.
    “Most traditional societies had some storage that would have helped them through one bad harvest,” says Manning. “By the time you get to a third one in a row, it’s become a crisis.”
    Alan Greaves at the University of Liverpool in the UK, who wasn’t involved in the research, says the results shed new light on the climate changes at the time. “How do you pay for soldiers, how do you pay for artisans to make things?” he says. “A short, sharp drought would be enough to topple a very centralised state based heavily on grain and the gathering in and distribution of agricultural goods.”

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    Neolithic complex dubbed ‘Stonehenge of the North’ opens to UK public

    Two sections of the Thornborough Henges near Ripon, UK, have been donated to the public body Historic England in an effort to preserve the millennia-old monuments

    Humans

    3 February 2023

    By Madeleine Cuff
    The central of the three Thornborough HengesHistoric England
    Thornborough Henges, a Neolithic complex near Ripon in North Yorkshire, UK, known as the “Stonehenge of the North”, has been donated to public ownership and is now open to visitors.  
    The site dates from 3500 to 2500 BC and features three earth circles, each 4 metres high and 200 metres across. The earthworks were probably used as ceremonial gathering places and trading centres by early Britons, archaeologists believe. 
    Two of the three henges have been donated to the public body Historic England by building firm Tarmac. They are now under the care of the charity English Heritage and are free for the public to visit. Lightwater Holdings, a local company, has also donated parts of the wider monument. Advertisement
    The henges are “a link to our ancient ancestors, through thousands of years, inspiring a sense of wonder and mystery”, Duncan Wilson at Historic England said in a statement.
    “We are thrilled to have acquired this highly significant site for the nation, ensuring that these magnificent monuments are safe and will be preserved for generations to come.” 
    The southern and central hengesHistoric England
    The transfer of ownership means the two earthworks will be removed from Historic England’s risk register. They have been on the register since 2009, over concerns the sites were being eroded by livestock and rabbits.  
    Today, all three henges are visible as large, circular banks, but thousands of years ago, they would have stood above wetlands. They may have been covered in a sulphate mineral known as gypsum, creating white landmarks visible for miles.  
    The site’s opening to the public will bring its story to new audiences, according to Kate Mavor at English Heritage. “Thornborough Henges is one of the most important ancient sites in Britain and yet almost completely unknown. We are looking forward to sharing its significance, its stories and its secrets with the public,” she said in a statement. 

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    Vikings brought horses and dogs to England, cremated bones confirm

    The first physical proof that Vikings brought horses and dogs to England has been unearthed

    Humans

    1 February 2023

    By Jeremy Hsu
    Excavations at Heath Wood in EnglandJulian Richards, University of York
    Archaeologists have uncovered the first physical evidence that confirms some Vikings shipped their own horses and dogs from Scandinavia to England.
    The animal bone evidence comes from a burial mound at the only known Viking cremation cemetery in the British Isles. The Heath Wood cemetery – located in what is now Derbyshire in central England – is believed to be a burial ground for the first large Viking army to travel to the country. The soldiers arrived in AD 873 on a campaign of … More

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    Neanderthals hunted enormous elephants that fed 100 people for a month

    The extinct straight-tusked elephant was even larger than modern African elephants, making it unclear if Neanderthal hunters could take one down, but a newly analysed trove of bones suggests it was possible

    Humans

    1 February 2023

    By Clare Wilson
    A reconstruction of the straight-tusked elephantLUTZ KINDLER, MONREPOS
    Neanderthals regularly hunted and butchered elephants in Europe thousands of years ago, according to an analysis of marks made by stone tools on a trove of bones.
    The find suggests the ancient humans either lived in larger groups than previously suspected or that they had ways of processing the flesh so it didn’t spoil, says Wil Roebroeks at Leiden University in the Netherlands, given the amount of meat involved. “These elephants are really big calorie bombs.”
    There has long been debate over whether Neanderthals, distant cousins of modern humans, could have hunted the straight-tusked elephants (Palaeoloxodon antiquus). These extinct giants stood 4 metres tall, making them larger than modern African elephants and woolly mammoths.Advertisement
    To find out more, Roebroeks’s team took a closer look at elephant bones found alongside other animal remains and stone tools in a quarry near Halle, Germany, which was dug out from the 1980s. The bones have been dated to about 125,000 years ago, when Neanderthals were the only humans known to be in the area.
    The remains were from more than 70 elephants, with a few found as nearly complete skeletons. The marks left on the bones suggest the animals were thoroughly butchered to obtain every last scrap of meat and fat – including, for instance their brains and all of the bulky fat pads in their feet.
    There were also few gnaw marks left by scavenging carnivores, suggesting little food was left on the carcass. “There’s maybe a bit of nibbling on isolated vertebra, but most of these remains were so clean they weren’t attractive for carnivores,” says team member Lutz Kindler at the Museum for Human Behavioural Evolution in Neuwied, Germany.
    The team has calculated that all the flesh from one of the elephants would have fed about 100 adults for a month. Some researchers have previously suggested that Neanderthals lived in fairly small groups of up to about 25 people, based on factors such as the size of their caves or analysis of their footprints. “There’s a perception they lived in small groups, but when you look for the evidence, there’s nothing,” says Clive Finlayson at the Gibraltar National Museum, who wasn’t involved in the new study.
    If a smaller group of, say, 25 people had killed an elephant, they would have had to spend about three to five days working to strip the carcass of flesh and processing it so that it wouldn’t spoil, for instance by drying or smoking it, says Roebroeks. The marks on the bones mean the meat wasn’t simply left to rot once the Neanderthals had eaten their fill.

    The team found a higher proportion of male and older elephants among the remains, suggesting that the Neanderthals were specifically targeting these animals, rather than scavenging from ones that had died of natural causes.
    This makes some sense, as in modern elephants older males tend to live alone. Targeting loners would making hunting easier, says Roebroeks, as they could be driven into traps or muddy shores. “Large mammals are [easier] to kill as long as you are able to limit their mobility, and then they are finished off with spears,” he says.
    Previous work has shown that Neanderthals may have cleared forests in the region where the bones were found, which also supports the idea they lived in larger groups.

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    Impulse review: An authoritative, if dry, sexual behaviours manual

    Impulse: The science of sex and desire by psychiatrists Jon Grant and Samuel Chamberlain delivers on its bid to answer our hidden questions about sex, but it can be a little perfunctory

    Humans

    1 February 2023

    By Elle Hunt
    Everyone has a question about sex they would like answered – even if it is just “am I normal?”Beatriz Vera/shutterstock
    Impulse: The science of sex and desire
    Jon Grant and Samuel Chamberlain (Cambridge University Press)
    LET’S talk about sex – or not. Many of us have trouble striking the right tone or even finding the right words, caught between obfuscating with the birds and the bees or titillating with undue detail. For the topics too awkward to raise in person, there is always the internet, but its answers are many and highly variable.
    Factor … More

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    Stunning photos show nomadic life of Mongolian goat herders

    Mongolia produces 40 per cent of the world’s cashmere supply from its goats, but climate change and overproduction are threatening this unique way of life

    Humans

    1 February 2023

    By Matteo Fagotto
    Ganbaatar Davaasuren (known as “Bukhuu”) in Uvurkhangai province, MongoliaMatilde Gattoni
    FORTY per cent of the world’s cashmere is sourced from the windswept plateau of Mongolia.
    Bukhuu’s 14-year-old son Mungun Huleg gathers the goats before selecting those that need to be combed that dayMatilde Gattoni
    The fabric is made from the undercoats of the local goats, which develop a particularly tight fur to survive the harsh winters, where temperatures can drop as low as -40°C. In past decades, cashmere has made a fortune for local herders, becoming the main source of income for a third of the Mongolian population.Advertisement
    Tserennadmid Khaltarkhuu cuts a baby goat’s ears to mark them with the help of his childrenMatilde Gattoni
    But lately climate change and overproduction have threatened the cashmere supply, and a unique way of life with it. In Mongolia, temperatures have warmed by more than 2°C in the past 80 years, above the world average, and could rise by up to 5°C by the end of the century. Milder winters – which can negatively affect the quality of cashmere – are now followed by long, dry springs and short summers, when not enough rain falls to sustain the pastures.
    Bukhuu’s father Davaasuren Tsogt sits outside his ger (a traditional Mongolian dwelling)Matilde Gattoni
    The global cashmere boom saw the number of goats skyrocket from 10.2 million to 26.5 million, causing overgrazing and desertification. Seventy per cent of Mongolia’s pastures are already considered degraded.
    A herd of goats on a wall built from stones from the Gobi desertMatilde Gattoni
    To address the problem, local herders are reviving traditional pastureland management practices. Cooperatives have also been set up to coordinate grazing and rotation between pastures, to give nature the chance to replenish itself, and the national government has imposed a tax on livestock to curb numbers.
    Orkhontuya Oidovdagva answers the family mobile phone from the centre of a ger, where the phone is left to hang all dayMatilde Gattoni
    But so far, no alternative source of income seems a ready substitute to a fabric that has provided an economic lifeline for a nomadic way of life that would otherwise have been lost.
    A goat being combedMatilde Gattoni

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    Don’t Miss: Innervate, an EP reflecting on epilepsy by Liza Bec

    New Scientist’s weekly round-up of the best books, films, TV series, games and more that you shouldn’t miss

    Humans

    1 February 2023

    BEN HUGHES
    Listen
    Innervate is an EP by composer Liza Bec (pictured above), who almost lost their performance career to a rare epilepsy triggered by playing music. The EP spotlights the roborecorder, an instrument they built. On release 10 February.

    Read
    The Meaning of Geese is teased out by Nick Acheson, whose epic bicycle adventures trace the incoming paths of pink-footed and brent geese as they arrive from Iceland and Siberia to fill the skies of his native Norfolk, UK. On sale from 9 February.
    Dan Weill
    Visit
    Drug experiments and forays into medicines, narcotics and everyday … More