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  • Agustina Bazterrica at Hay Festival 2025

    Agustina Bazterrica at Hay Festival 2025






    Agustina Bazterrica at Hay Festival 2025 – Monocle
















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    Esther Freud on family, fiction and healing

    Esther Freud reflects on her childhood and literary journey to ‘My Sister and Other Lovers’, which follows two sisters facing secrets and heartbreak.

    Damien Wilkins at the 2025 Auckland Writers Festival

    Georgina Godwin meets Damien Wilkins, the 2025 Ockham New Zealand Book Award winner for fiction with his novel ‘Delirious’. Wilkins reflects on his early literary influences, past work and transitioning to songwriting.

    Eliza Reid on crafting her first mystery

    Eliza Reid speaks to Georgina Godwin about growing up in Ottawa, her time as Iceland’s first lady and her debut whodunit, ‘Death of a Diplomat’.

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  • Mattel launches Barbie with type 1 diabetes and a glucose monitor

    Mattel launches Barbie with type 1 diabetes and a glucose monitor

    Barbie is expanding its representation with the launch of a doll that has type 1 diabetes, outfitting the toy with medical devices such as a wearable insulin pump that are regular sights for people with the condition.

    Mattel announced newest member of its Barbie Fashionistas line on Tuesday, saying that it not only let’s children see themselves in the doll, but also encourages play “that extends beyond a child’s own lived experience.” The doll has a continuous glucose monitor attached to her arm and an insulin pump attached to her waist.

    Krista Berger, senior vice president for Barbie and global head of dolls, said in a press release that the latest doll “marks an important step in our commitment to inclusivity.”

    “Barbie helps shape children’s early perceptions of the world, and by reflecting medical conditions like T1D, we ensure more kids can see themselves in the stories they imagine and the dolls they love,” Berger said.

    The Mayo Clinic defines type 1 diabetes as a chronic condition that results when a person’s pancreas creates little to no insulin, the hormone that breaks down glucose. A glucose monitor allows someone with the condition to keep track of their sugar levels and inject insulin to help their body process glucose.

    An insulin pump is a wearable device that allows for an easy supply of insulin into the body.

    More than 18,000 young people under the age of 20 have been diagnosed with type 1 diabetes, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention last year. The agency reported that there’s been about a 2% increase per year in diagnosed cases between 2002 and 2018.

    Barbie partnered with the nonprofit organization Breakthrough T1D in the development of its new doll and to ensure an accurate reflection of the devices, the release said. Breakthrough T1D CEO Aaron J. Kowalski said he was “thrilled” when the company reached out about a collaboration.

    “I have lived with T1D since I was 13, and my brother since he was 3, so this partnership is deeply personal – it means the world to be part of bringing greater visibility to a condition that affects so many families,” Kowalski said.

    A link to buy the doll was live on Mattel’s website and it appeared to already have reviews from parents who were sent the doll, as the website notes the reviews are “incentivized.”

    One parent said they gave the doll to their 7-year-old daughter and it opened up a conversation about diabetes. Another parent called it a “great addition” to the Barbie brand.

    “We have a close family friend who is T1D, so this was an excellent opportunity to explain what each item was and what it does to help keep people safe and healthy,” the review said.

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  • Balancing Surgery and Radiosurgery in Jugulotympanic Paragangliomas

    Balancing Surgery and Radiosurgery in Jugulotympanic Paragangliomas


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  • Ocean Teems with Nanoparticle Plastic Debris

    Ocean Teems with Nanoparticle Plastic Debris

    “This estimate shows that there is more plastic in the form of nanoparticles floating in the this part of the ocean, than there is in larger micro- or macroplastics floating in the Atlantic or even all the world’s oceans!”, said Helge Niemann, researcher at NIOZ and professor of geochemistry at Utrecht University. Mid-June, he received a grant of 3.5 million euros to conduct more research into nanoplastics in the sea and their fate.

    Ocean expedition

    For this research, Utrecht master student Sophie ten Hietbrink worked for four weeks aboard the research vessel RV Pelagia. On a trip from the Azores to the continental shelf of Europe, she took water samples at 12 locations where she filtered out anything larger than one micrometer. “By drying and heating the remaining material, we were able to measure the characteristic molecules of different types of plastics in the Utrecht laboratory, using mass spectrometry,” Ten Hietbrink says.

    First real estimate

    The research by NIOZ and Utrecht University provides the first estimate of the amount of nanoplastics in the oceans. Niemann: “There were a few publications that showed that there were nanoplastics in the ocean water, but until now no estimate of the amount could ever be made.” This first estimate was made possible, according to Niemann, by the joining of forces of ocean scientists and the knowledge of atmospheric scientist Dusân Materic of Utrecht University.

    Shocking amount

    Extrapolating the results from different locations to the whole of the North Atlantic Ocean, the researchers arrived at the immense amount of 27 million tons of nanoplastics. “A shocking amount,” Ten Hietbrink believes. “But with this we do have an important answer to the paradox of the missing plastic.” Until now, not all the plastic that was ever produced in the world could be recovered. So, it turns out that a large portion is now floating in the water as tiny particles.

    Sun, rivers and rain

    The nanoplastics can reach water by various routes. In part, this happens because larger particles disintegrate under the influence of sunlight. Another part probably flows along with river water. It also appears that nanoplastics reach the oceans through the air, as suspended particles fall down with rainwater or fall from the air onto the water surface as ‘dry deposition’.

    Consequences

    The consequences of all those nanoplastics in the water could be fundamental, Niemann emphasizes. “It is already known that nanoplastics can penetrate deep into our bodies. They are even found in brain tissue. Now that we know they are so ubiquitous in the oceans, it’s also obvious that they penetrate the entire ecosystem; from bacteria and other microorganisms to fish and top predators like humans. How that pollution affects the ecosystem needs further investigation.”

    Other oceans

    In the future, Niemann and colleagues also want to do further research on, for example, the different types of plastics that have not yet been found in the fraction of 1 micrometer or smaller. “For example, we have not found polyethylene or polypropylene among the nanoplastics. It may well be that those were masked by other molecules in the study. We also want to know if nanoplastics are as abundant in the other oceans. It is to be feared that they do, but that remains to be proven.

    Not cleaning up but preventing

    Niemann emphasizes that the amount of nanoplastics in ocean water was an important missing piece of the puzzle, but now there is nothing to do about it. “The nanoplastics that are there, can never be cleaned up. So an important message from this research is that we should at least prevent the further pollution of our environment with plastics.”

    /Public Release. This material from the originating organization/author(s) might be of the point-in-time nature, and edited for clarity, style and length. Mirage.News does not take institutional positions or sides, and all views, positions, and conclusions expressed herein are solely those of the author(s).View in full here.

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  • PHC terms Swat tragedy a gross negligence, orders comprehensive investigation

    PHC terms Swat tragedy a gross negligence, orders comprehensive investigation

     

    PESHAWAR: The Peshawar High Court (PHC) Wednesday declared the Swat tragedy a result of gross negligence and ordered a comprehensive investigation into the incident.

    In a written judgment on a petition filed against encroachments on rivers and the Swat incident, the court stated that the tragic event that occurred on June 27 in the Swat River was due to the serious negligence of the concerned authorities.

    The judgment noted that 17 precious lives were lost due to the failure of officials, and no emergency measures such as helicopters were used to rescue tourists, terming it a clear sign of criminal negligence in public service.

    The court also pointed out that illegal construction of hotels and buildings along rivers such as the Swat, Panjkora, Dir, Indus, Kabul, and Charsadda has become common, posing a severe threat to human lives. The existence of these unauthorized structures reflects the failure and silent complicity of the relevant institutions.

    The court directed the investigation committee formed on the Swat tragedy to submit its preliminary findings within 7 days and a detailed report within 14 days. The Advocate General of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa was also instructed to clarify what steps have been taken so far to ensure public safety.

    This firm action by the court is seen as a landmark step towards ensuring accountability and protecting lives in the future.

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  • RNA Blood Test Detects Early Colon Cancer with 95% Accuracy

    RNA Blood Test Detects Early Colon Cancer with 95% Accuracy


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    A new approach using RNA instead of DNA has improved the accuracy of liquid biopsy tests for early-stage colorectal cancer, according to a study by researchers at the University of Chicago. The method, which measures chemical modifications in RNA fragments from both human and microbial sources, was able to detect early disease with 95% accuracy using blood samples.

    Shifting the focus from DNA to RNA

    Liquid biopsies are diagnostic tools that detect cancer-associated genetic material in the bloodstream. Most current tests focus on circulating cell-free DNA (cfDNA), which is released by dying tumor cells. However, in early stages of cancer, tumor cells are more likely to be proliferating rather than dying, resulting in lower cfDNA concentrations. This limits the sensitivity of standard cfDNA-based liquid biopsies for early detection.

    “That has been a major challenge for early diagnosis. You just don’t have enough tumor DNA released into the blood,”


    Dr. Chuan He.

    To overcome this challenge, researchers focused on circulating cell-free RNA (cfRNA), which reflects ongoing genetic activity. RNA acts as a messenger between DNA and protein synthesis, offering a dynamic view of cellular processes. Yet, measuring RNA abundance alone is often unreliable because RNA levels can fluctuate depending on sample collection conditions.

    To address this limitation, the team measured RNA modifications – chemical changes that influence RNA behavior. Unlike total RNA levels, the proportion of modified RNA remains stable across different sample conditions. For instance, if 30% of an RNA transcript is chemically modified, that proportion is consistent regardless of the overall RNA quantity.

    RNA modification

    Chemical changes made to RNA molecules after they are produced. 

    Capturing signals from gut microbes

    Researchers also found that the cfRNA test captured signals from microbial RNA originating in the gut. These microbes, which coexist with human cells in the digestive system, release RNA fragments into the bloodstream as they die. Since microbial populations change rapidly and respond to inflammatory conditions such as cancer, the analysis of RNA modifications in microbial RNA offers an additional layer of early detection.

    “In the gut when you have a tumor growing, the nearby microbiome must be reshaped in response to that inflammation. That affects the nearby microbes.”


    Dr. Chuan He.

    The study analyzed blood samples from patients with colorectal cancer and compared them with healthy controls. Patterns of RNA modification were distinct in cancer samples, both in human- and microbe-derived RNA. These differences enabled the researchers to distinguish cancerous samples with high sensitivity.

    Improved accuracy over existing tests

    Current commercial tests based on DNA or RNA abundance, particularly stool-based ones, show reduced accuracy for early-stage disease – typically below 50%. In contrast, the new test, which evaluates RNA modification profiles, maintained nearly 95% accuracy across all cancer stages, including the earliest ones.

    This study marks the first time RNA modifications have been evaluated as biomarkers for cancer detection in a liquid biopsy context. It also demonstrates the diagnostic potential of integrating host and microbial genetic activity in a single test.

    Reference: Ju CW, Lyu R, Li H, et al. Modifications of microbiome-derived cell-free RNA in plasma discriminates colorectal cancer samples. Nat Biotechnol. 2025. doi: 10.1038/s41587-025-02731-8

    This article has been republished from the following materials. Note: material may have been edited for length and content. For further information, please contact the cited source. Our press release publishing policy can be accessed here.

    This content includes text that has been generated with the assistance of AI. Technology Networks’ AI policy can be found here.

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  • Demna bows out at Balenciaga with star-studded final show in Paris | Balenciaga

    Demna bows out at Balenciaga with star-studded final show in Paris | Balenciaga

    Kim Kardashian modelling an off-shoulder fake mink coat inspired by Elizabeth Taylor. Nicole Kidman and Kyle MacLachlan nattering on the front row. And an appearance from Mrs Bezos herself.

    The stars were always going to align in Paris for Demna’s final show at Balenciaga. And on Wednesday lunchtime, the most controversial and copied designer in modern fashion bowed out after a decade with a show that conformed to the idea of couture as much as it challenged it.

    Backstage, Demna spoke with relief about “leaving this city that I love and hate for good” when he moves to his new job at Gucci in Milan next week. But before then, he wanted to “make couture relevant”.

    Democratising couture isn’t easy. This stuff is handmade to exacting rules and wildly expensive. But the plan was to use the show as a stage and the clothes as costumes for social commentary. Previous hot topics have included climate change, swag-wars and AI. On Wednesday it was a study of the relevant dress codes of “La Bourgeoisie” – and the moneyed few sat here who fork out for it.

    The stage itself was Cristóbal Balenciaga’s former apartment, restored to its plush 1960s cream glory when the Basque designer introduced couture in 2021.

    Demna (second from left) in June at the Paris menswear spring/summer 2026 show with (from left) Guram Gvasalia, Tori Brixx and Rich the Kid. Photograph: Pierre Suu/Getty Images

    At the glamorous end were a sugar pink debutante dress made from the world’s lightest organza, and a sequinned skirt suit based on – what else – Demna’s grandma’s kitchen tablecloth. No doubt Mrs Bezos had her eye on the elegant corset dresses which came without boning, “so you can actually breathe”, he said.

    Famous for flipping traditional notions of beauty by casting models of all ages and sizes, out came nine Neapolitan suits without shoulder pads and modelled by bodybuilders because “it isn’t the garment that defines the body, but the body that defines the garment”.

    There followed references from Demna’s greatest hits, including a seam-free puffer coat and couture trainers, while references from Cristobal’s came in the shapes and long sleeves; the show ended with a cream, bell-shaped Guipure lace gown which referenced the scale of Balenciaga’s from the 1950s.

    Few designers have had the cultural reach of Demna, who was made creative director at Balenciaga in 2016 after stints at Maison Margiela, Louis Vuitton and his own label, Vetements.

    During his career here, he has orchestrated frenzies around ordinary items such as Crocs and Ikea Frakta bags, upending the meaning of good taste while infuriating critics by whacking four-figure price tags on to distressed trainers.

    Intended as a joke and a commentary on the hierarchy of value, it proved a particularly lucrative gag for Balenciaga’s parent company, Kering, becoming a billion-dollar megabrand.

    For some, Demna never recovered from allegations that he had condoned child exploitation in a series of ads involving BDSM imagery and children in 2022. At the time, he took responsibility, although the scandal dented both hype and sales for some time.

    Ultimately, it predicated a move away from his more viral designs, which had begun to distract, and he became more focused on his skills as a designer.

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    He is succeeded by the relatively safer designer, Valentino’s Pierpaolo Piccioli. Demna’s back catalogue will continue to polarise, but his legacy is indisputable. As Demna said: “I’m so hard on myself – but I could not do better than this at Balenciaga.”

    Was this Giorgio Armani’s last ever collection? Last month, for the first time in the designer’s history, the designer missed his Milan shows due to to ill health.

    The plan had been a precautionary one, a rest before this show. So a no-show from the designer at his show at the company headquarters this week, coupled with visibly emotional models ambling like Erté sketches down the catwalk, certainly sent tongues wagging.

    In an attempt to stop the rumour mill, the 90-year-old designer explained his absence to a handful of reporters in an email: “Even though I wasn’t in Paris, I oversaw every aspect of the show remotely via video link, from the fittings to the sequence and the makeup”. His absence, he said, was at the behest of his of his doctors: “Although I felt ready to travel, they recommended extending my rest.”

    Regardless of whether you could afford an Armani suit, one of his legacies has been encouraging women to wear trouser suits. And at the show, among the sculptural peplums and slithery gowns with oversized bows, came tuxedos in funereal black. Ostensibly glamorous versions of the menswear he began in the 1980s, there was also a finality to them.

    Keen to control the narrative of his £10bn Armani empire, of which he is a sole shareholder, he was quick to remind us that “everything [we saw] … has been done under my direction and carries my approval”.

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  • In a first, enamel proteins 18-20 million years old from tropical, High Arctic sites unravel palaeobiology of extinct taxa

    In a first, enamel proteins 18-20 million years old from tropical, High Arctic sites unravel palaeobiology of extinct taxa

    If obtaining sequences from ancient proteins found in fossils was previously limited to samples no older than four million years, two studies published in the journal Nature on Wednesday (July 9, 2025) have pushed back this timescale to more than 20 million years. The enamel proteins from extinct mammals are a staggering ten-fold older compared with the oldest known ancient DNA that has been obtained so far. The studies have used proteins or peptides trapped within dense enamel of the mammal teeth to study palaeoproteomics and to obtain phylogenetic information of extinct mammals.

    One study is of enamel proteins from extinct mammal fossils from the Turkana Basin in Kenya, and the other study is of enamel proteins from extinct mammals in the Haughton impact crater site located on Devon Island, Nunavut in far Northern Canada.

    “The two papers have redefined the boundaries of biomolecular preservation in the fossil record,” says Dr. Niraj Rai, Head of the Ancient DNA Lab at the Birbal Sahni Institute of Palaeosciences (BSIP) in Lucknow, who is not part of the two studies. “These findings confirm that enamel — a highly mineralised and durable tissue that serves as an extraordinary molecular archive — is capable of preserving endogenous peptides far beyond the temporal limits of ancient DNA, which typically degrades within a million years.”

    If recovering evolutionary-informative protein sequences from samples 18 to over 20 million years old is by itself remarkable, recovering well-preserved protein samples of extinct mammals 18 million years old from the Turkana Basin in Kenya, which is a hot tropical site, is even more astounding. Unlike in cold climatic conditions, the possibility of finding well-preserved DNA and proteins dating back millions of years in one of the hottest regions in the world is slim. As a rule, molecular breakdown happens over time, which is exacerbated in a hot climate.

    A view of the Turkwel River in Turkana, northern Kenya, where the fossils from which ancient peptides were recovered are found.
    | Photo Credit:
    Daniel Green

    The second study is on protein samples encased deep within the teeth enamel found in fossil samples collected from the Haughton impact crater site located on Devon Island, Nunavut in far Northern Canada. The researchers extracted and sequenced ancient enamel proteins from a fossilised rhino tooth that are 21-24 million years old. They recovered partial sequences of seven different enamel proteins and over 1,000 peptides.

    A recent study of an ancient Egyptian who lived 4,500-4,800 years ago as well the two current studies on extinct mammals have relied on teeth samples to obtain genetic and phylogenetic information, respectively; teeth samples have turned out to be invaluable in preserving almost intact DNA and proteins. DNA found at the root tip of teeth of the ancient Egyptian allowed researchers to sequence the whole genome of the ancient man. Now, two separate teams have successfully used proteins encased within dense enamel of teeth of different mammals to interpret the biology and evolution of mammals that lived 18-24 million years ago in completely different climatic settings — frigid cold and hot tropics.

    Proteins not inferior to DNA

    Explaining that not just DNA but proteins too can reveal vital information about ancient animals, Dr. Timothy P. Cleland in an email to The Hindu says: “Proteins are translated from DNA so it can provide similar information. We can learn a wide variety of information from studying proteins from ancient animals.” Dr. Cleland, a Physical Scientist at the Smithsonian Museum Conservation Institute, Suitland, Maryland, and one of the corresponding authors of the East African Rift paper, cites the example of an enamel protein called amelogenin which has X-linked and Y-linked forms that can be used to estimate biological sex of the mammal being studied. The enamel proteins have more evolutionary information than collagen (for example) and can be used to evaluate the evolutionary relationships of fossil species beyond morphology alone, he says.

    Dr. Ryan Sinclair Paterson in an email says that he would not say either palaeoproteomics or palaeogenomic data is more reliable than the other, when it comes to studying living organisms. Dr. Paterson is from Globe Institute, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark, and the first and a corresponding author of the paper on the discovery of teeth enamel of Rhinocerotinae in the Haughton impact crater site, Nunavut in far Northern Canada. “Genomic data can have a higher resolution, and be more useful for finer aspects, particularly of relatedness amongst closely-related lineages. Proteomic data can also be very useful for resolving very deep splits in the tree of life, as they are thought to be less prone to convergence and saturation,” he says.

    Dr. Paterson further adds: “With these ancient proteins, while they lack the resolution of DNA, they still represent robust genetic sequence data, carrying mutations that can allow for sequence-based timetrees. I think that is the major goal of this type of palaeoproteomic study – filling in the tree of life across vast geological timescales using genetic sequence data.”

    Both teams extracted key structural enamel proteins, enamelin, ameloblastin, and amelogenin using advanced mass spectrometry and rigorous criteria to rule out contamination. Remarkably, diagenetic alterations once considered damaging, such as advanced glycation end-products and carbamylation in the Kenyan samples, or widespread arginine oxidation and peptide bond hydrolysis in the Arctic specimen, are now leveraged as hallmarks of authenticity, says Dr. Rai.

    “The study of enamel proteins from fossils has been an exciting area of research for the last several years, and has benefited from new extraction methods, improvements in mass spectrometry methods, and data analysis tools. We took advantage of all of these developments to find preserved proteins from mammal enamel from the Turkana Basin of Kenya,” says Dr. Cleland.

    The Turkana Basin has produced the richest record of mammal evolution in eastern Africa in the current geological era — the Cenozoic Era — spanning the last 66 million years. The researchers had examined protein fragments ranging from 1.5-million-year-old elephant fossils to 29-million-year-old fossils from Arsinoitheriidae, a family of extinct, rhinoceros-like ungulates. The Turkana Basin has been found to document the evolutionary origins and/or diversifications of key taxonomic groups of African mammals, such as proboscideans, rhinocerotids, hippopotamids and hominoids (great apes).

    View of the Haughton Formation near Rabbit Run creek on Devon Island, Nunavut. The dry, cold “polar desert” conditions helped preserve the ancient rhinoceros fossil found here, including traces of original proteins.

    View of the Haughton Formation near Rabbit Run creek on Devon Island, Nunavut. The dry, cold “polar desert” conditions helped preserve the ancient rhinoceros fossil found here, including traces of original proteins.
    | Photo Credit:
    Martin Lipman

    Shielding the embedded proteins

    Explaining how the proteins had escaped complete destruction during the last 18 million years despite the hot climate and diagenesis — the physical and chemical changes that occur during the conversion of sediment to sedimentary rock — at the Turkana Basin, Dr. Cleland says: “Because the proteins are essentially self-fossilised within the enamel mineral, they are protected from other environmental impacts that could lead to their loss.” Going further to explain how the enamel proteins are protected even for millions of years, he says: “Enamel is the hardest substance that animals produce and shields the embedded proteins from access to water or microbial impact, so it begins as a good place to find the preserved proteins.” The researchers had sampled the internal part of the enamel that is fairly thick in these species, so it is unlikely that protein from elsewhere would be deposited on the enamel.

    Despite building the study to have a range of ages from 1.5 million years to 29 million years to explore the preservation of enamel proteins across a long-time range, the researchers of the Turkana Basin in the East African Rift System were “surprised and excited to find proteins that retained evolutionary information all the way to 18 million years”.

    Though the hot climate is not conducive for protein preservation for millions of years, the Turkana Basin also has fluviodeltaic sediments, which might have led to swift burial of ancient animals, thereby resulting in relatively well-preserved fossil samples. The findings from the Turkana Basin also suggest that this could have been the case. “Relatively more proteins are found in some sites that we study, compared to others. For instance, we find an especially high number of peptides from fossils at a very old site, Buluk. Sedimentary data suggest that Buluk fossils were buried rapidly, and this may be why protein preservation is better there,” Daniel R. Green from the Department of Human Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, and the first and one of the corresponding authors of the East African Rift paper tells The Hindu in an email.

    Swift burial may have played a role in preserving the proteins even in the case of the Haughton impact crater site located on Devon Island, Nunavut, where it was a lake. “Swift burial can help with preservation of bones and teeth under the right conditions. Specifically, we expect exceptional preservation when there is both rapid burial and low oxygen or anoxic conditions. There may have been some low oxygen conditions in the Haughton Lake, as mummified wood has been discovered. So, it’s possible that this contributed to the exceptional preservation. However, it is most likely related to the cool temperatures, specifically preservation in permafrost. Interestingly, a lot of bones from the Haughton Crater end up broken due to the repeated freeze and thaw of the permafrost. Some are also brought to the surface by this freeze and thaw action, making them easier to find,” Dr. Danielle Fraser from Palaeobiology, Canadian Museum of Nature, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada and one of the corresponding authors of the paper says in an email to The Hindu.

    The team has collected a large amount of data from all of these sites across northern Kenya, which includes information about ancient climatic conditions as estimated through Earth System Climate Models. “We have reconstructed vegetation and rainfall through soil chemistry analyses. And we can make inferences about ancient diets, behaviours, and evolutionary processes through the fossils themselves, and their stable isotope compositions,” says Dr. Green.

    According to Dr. Frazer, finding intact teeth, which are identifiable, is not surprising, given that there are teeth from mammals dating back many more millions of years into the Mesozoic. “What is exceptional, is that the proteins we recovered were complete and abundant enough to infer evolutionary relationships; these are, by about 10 million years, the oldest from which evolutionary information has been gleaned,” he says. “Specifically, we were able to test a hypothesis about the evolution of rhinocerotids (rhinoceroses and their extinct relatives), a group whose past diversity was much greater than today. What recovering such evolutionarily informative proteins from this fossil tells us is that we will be able to test many more hypotheses using many more fossils from the Arctic and, perhaps, challenge some other long-held evolutionary hypotheses along the way.”

    The Haughton Crater has been studied for decades to understand the depositional environment, the plant community, the date of the formation of the crater (based on several types of exact dating), the mammal fauna etc. “What we know is that the environment was fundamentally different from the modern Arctic, being much more temperate, and that the mammal fauna was unique, being a combination of species with North American and Eurasian affinities,” says Dr. Frazer.

    He is very hopeful that we will see evolutionarily informative proteins extracted from older [more than 24 million years] materials and expects them to be found in Arctic or Antarctic conditions, where they have been preserved in a “freezer” for many millions of years.

    The authors of the Haughton impact crater site located on Devon Island, Nunavut in far Northern Canada used the protein sequences to shed light on the divergence between the two main subfamilies of rhinos, Elasmotheriinae and Rhinocerotinae. Based on protein sequences, they revised the rhinocerotid phylogeny, showing that Epiaceratherium diverged prior to the Elasmotheriinae-Rhinocerotinae split, contradicting fossil-based models that suggested a deeper basal divide.

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  • NASA’s Parker Solar Probe Finds Evidence Of “Helicity Barrier” In The Sun’s 2 Million Kelvin Atmosphere

    NASA’s Parker Solar Probe Finds Evidence Of “Helicity Barrier” In The Sun’s 2 Million Kelvin Atmosphere

    A study looking at data from NASA’s Parker Solar Probe has found evidence for a “helicity barrier” in the atmosphere of the Sun.

    In 2018, NASA launched the Parker Solar Probe on a trajectory that would eventually have it dive into the Sun’s atmosphere (corona), getting seven times closer to our host star than any other spacecraft so far. In June 2025, the probe completed its 24th close approach to the Sun, whilst equaling its record for the fastest a human-made object has ever traveled, at a zippy 692,000 kilometers per hour (430,000 miles per hour).

    The probe is aimed at studying the Sun’s atmosphere and will hopefully shed light on a few long-standing mysteries, such as how the solar wind is accelerated. One puzzle, first discovered in 1939, is that the Sun’s corona is far hotter than the solar surface. And not just by a little.

    “The hottest part of the Sun is its core, where temperatures top 27 million °F (15 million °C). The part of the Sun we call its surface – the photosphere – is a relatively cool 10,000 °F (5,500 °C),” NASA explains. “In one of the Sun’s biggest mysteries, the Sun’s outer atmosphere, the corona, gets hotter the farther it stretches from the surface. The corona reaches up to 3.5 million °F (2 million °C) – much, much hotter than the photosphere.”

    This is known as the “coronal heating problem”. The basic problem is this: why is the atmosphere far hotter than the surface, when the surface is much closer to the core, where energy is generated through the fusion of hydrogen into helium? 

    There have been suggestions that the extra heat in the corona is caused by turbulence, or a type of magnetic wave known as “ion cyclotron waves”.

    “Both, however, have some problem—turbulence struggles to explain why hydrogen, helium and oxygen in the gas become as hot as they do, while electrons remain surprisingly cold; while the magnetic waves theory could explain this feature, there doesn’t seem to be enough of the waves coming off the sun’s surface to heat up the gas,” Dr Romain Meyrand, author on the new paper, explained in a previous statement.

    While both ideas have problems, together with a “helicity barrier”, they show some promise for explaining the coronal heating problem.

    “If we imagine plasma heating as occurring a bit like water flowing down a hill, with electrons heated right at the bottom, then the helicity barrier acts like a dam, stopping the flow and diverting its energy into ion cyclotron waves,” Meyrand added. “In this way, the helicity barrier links the two theories and resolves each of their individual problems.”

    Essentially, the helicity “barrier” alters turbulent dissipation, changing how fluctuations dissipate and how the plasma is heated. The team has now analyzed data from the Parker Solar Probe, and it appears to show evidence for the helicity barrier.

    “The barrier can form only under certain conditions, such as when thermal energy is relatively low compared to magnetic energy. Since fluctuations in the magnetic field are expected to behave differently when the barrier is active versus when it is not, measuring how these fluctuations vary with solar wind conditions relevant to the barrier’s formation—including the thermal-to-magnetic energy ratio—provides a way to test for the barrier’s presence,” the team explains in their paper. 

    “By analyzing solar wind magnetic field measurements, we find that the fluctuations behave exactly as predicted with changes in solar wind parameters that characterize these conditions. This analysis also allows us to identify specific values for these parameters that are needed for the barrier to form, and we find that these values are common near the Sun.”

    Further analysis is necessary, but the approach looks fairly promising for explaining the problem.

    “This paper is important as it provides clear evidence for the presence of the helicity barrier, which answers some long-standing questions about coronal heating and solar wind acceleration, such as the temperature signatures seen in the solar atmosphere, and the variability of different solar wind streams,” Dr Christopher Chen, study author and Reader in Space Plasma Physics at Queen Mary University of London, said in a statement.

    “This allows us to better understand the fundamental physics of turbulent dissipation, the connection between small-scale physics and the global properties of the heliosphere, and make better predictions for space weather.”

    While conducted on our own Sun (we are far from ready to plunge spacecraft into the atmosphere of other stars), the study has implications for other stars, and other parts of the universe, in other collisionless plasmas.

    “This result is exciting because, by confirming the presence of the ‘helicity barrier’, we can account for properties of the solar wind that were previously unexplained, including that its protons are typically hotter than its electrons,” said Jack McIntyre, lead author and PhD student from Queen Mary University of London.

    “By improving our understanding of turbulent dissipation, it could also have important implications for other systems in astrophysics.”

    The study is published in Physical Review X.

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  • Pakistan’s actions to root out terrorism globally recognised, says Bilawal

    Pakistan’s actions to root out terrorism globally recognised, says Bilawal



    Pakistan Peoples Party Chairman Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari addresses a press conference. — AFP/File

    Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) Chairman and former foreign minister Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari categorically rejected the India’s allegations of patronising terrorist groups, saying that the country had successfully cleared the rigorous FATF process.

    In an interview with Indian journalist Karan Thapar, Bilawal said: “Pakistan does not willingly permit […] the groups you mentioned or any group to conduct terrorist attacks outside of Pakistan but also within Pakistan.”

    Highlighting the country’s losses during the war against terrorism, the PPP lawmaker said that the world is well aware that Pakistan faced the brunt of terrorism over the past many decades.

    “Pakistan is fighting and has been fighting the largest inland war against terrorism. We’ve lost 92,000 lives altogether. Just last year, we lost more than 1,200 civilian lives in more than 200 different terrorist attacks.”

    “At the rate at which terrorist attacks are taking place just this year alone, if they continue at this pace, this year will be the bloodiest year in Pakistan’s history.”

    Recalling the assassination of his mother and former premier Benazir Bhutto, Bilawal said: “I too am a victim of terrorism. I feel the pain of the victims of the Pahalgam terrorist attack. I understand the trauma that their families are experiencing in a way more than many others can ever imagine.”

    He also elaborated on Pakistan’s ongoing battle to root out the menace, saying: “Pakistan went through a process where we not only took military action against terrorist groups within Pakistan.”

    He said that in the previous Zardari’s tenure, Pakistan conducted an operation in South Waziristan following Benazir’s assassination, and the next government conducted another operation in North Waziristan.

    ‘Rigorous’ FATF process

    “We implemented a National Action Plan as far as our actions against the groups of concern to India. Most recently, we went through a rigorous FATF [Financial Action Task Force] process.”

    He added that the international community was very well aware and endorsed Pakistan’s actions against said terrorist groups.

    Bilawal added that the FATF is a very rigorous process that has a complete monitoring mechanism, so it’s not like you can hide from it.

    Slamming the Indian allegations, Bilawal said that immediately after the Pahalgam attack, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif publicly stated that Islamabad is “willing to be part of any impartial international inquiry into the incident, our hands are clean.”

    “We had that sort of confidence. It was the Indian government that rebuffed that offer. To this day, the Indian government has not shared with Pakistan or the international community.”

    Pakistan and India engaged in a military confrontation in May, triggered by April’s Pahalgam attack in Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IIOJK). Pakistan has denied involvement in the attack.

    Bilawal had also led a parliamentary delegation that visited global capitals on a mission to debunk the Indian propaganda in the aftermath of the recent conflict between the two countries.

    The nuclear-armed rivals used missiles, drones, and artillery fire during the four-day fighting —their worst in decades — before agreeing to a ceasefire.

    In response to the Indian aggression, Pakistan’s armed forces launched a large-scale retaliatory military action, named “Operation Bunyan-um-Marsoos”, and targeted several Indian military targets across multiple regions.

    The ceasefire was first announced by US President Donald Trump on social media after Washington held talks with both sides, but India has differed with Trump’s claims that it resulted from his intervention and threats to sever trade talks.

    However, Pakistan has acknowledged Trump’s efforts and formally recommended him for the 2026 Nobel Peace Prize, citing his role in defusing tensions between Pakistan and India last month.

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