Tag: Science

Tiny Invisible Diamonds Tell Australia’s Tectonic Tale

A unique type of diamond has been discovered in Australia for the first time, but they’re invisible to the naked eye. Researchers from Queensland’s James Cook University found rare metamorphic diamonds in rocks along the Clarke River Fault, west of Paluma in the state’s north, according to Science Advances Journal. But before anyone grabs their…


COVID-19 Vaccines Hinder the Immune System, Lead to More Severe Illness: Dr. Robert Malone

A study out of the United Kingdom has shown that health care workers who received multiple COVID-19 vaccine boosters after initially being infected with the original virus strain from Wuhan are more prone to chronic reinfection from the Omicron variant. This may help explain why the people who have received several COVID-19 vaccine boosters are…


Earth Spinning Faster in 2022, Scientists Baffled as Days Get Shorter

The earth spun at its fastest speed on June 29, completing its shortest day and baffling scientists as to why this is happening. The earth finished a spin 1.59 milliseconds earlier than the usual 24 hours on June 29 according to new measurements by the National Physical Laboratory in the UK. The rapid spin is…


Debris From Chinese Rocket Found in Malaysia and Indonesia

Some fragments of a Chinese rocket that fell back to Earth on Saturday have reportedly been discovered in Malaysia and Indonesia. The Malaysian Space Agency has confirmed that burnt debris from China’s Long March 5B rocket crossed over Malaysian airspace and was detected in multiple locations in the state of Sarawak, according to local media….


CDC Points People to Transgenderism, Teen Sex, and Astrology Websites

The federal government is one more of transgenderism’s many online promoters. A CDC help page has listed resources from government agencies and community organizations that seek to protect and support LGBT children and their networks by providing online advice on sexuality with content that promotes transgenderism, anal and oral sex, and occult superstition. “It is critical…


Another Chinese Rocket Falls Uncontrolled to Earth

WASHINGTON—A Chinese rocket fell back to Earth on Saturday over the Indian Ocean but NASA said Beijing had not shared the “specific trajectory information” needed to know where possible debris might fall. U.S. Space Command said the Long March 5B-Y3 re-entered over the Indian Ocean at approximately 12:45 p.m. EDT Saturday (1645 GMT), but referred…


Gluttonous Cosmic ‘Black Widow’ Is Heaviest-Known Neutron Star

WASHINGTON—Astronomers have observed the most massive known example of an object called a neutron star, one classified as a “black widow” that got particularly hefty by gobbling up most of the mass of a stellar companion trapped in an unhappy cosmic marriage. The researchers said the neutron star, wildly spinning at 707 times per second,…


France’s Nuclear Power Answer to Europe’s Russian-made Energy Crisis

In the face of what is seen as Russian political payback by cutting energy exports to Europe, France is looking to nuclear options to ensure its own supplies and provide power to the continent. President Emmanuel Macron has announced plans to build six new nuclear reactors and, according to the World Nuclear Association, he’s also considering…


Hydrogen No Saviour for Renewable Energy Industry: Australian MP

While not opposed to hydrogen, newly elected federal MP Colin Boyce says governments are a long way off from efficiently tapping into the chemical to power the country, warning there were “huge issues and problems” that have received little coverage. In an address to the 47th Australian Parliament, the representative for Flynn—located in central Queensland…


Ancient Bird Species Unearthed More Than a Century After Excavation

Researchers from Flinders University and the South Australian Museum have finally corrected the record on a misclassification that has lasted more than 100 years old after unearthing Australia’s first fossil vulture, the Cryptogyps lacertosus. The fossilizinitiallys originally classified as the eagle, Taphaetus lacertosus, in 1905 by Charles Walter de Vis, an English ornithologist—studier of birds— who thought…