Showing posts with label Daily Galaxy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Daily Galaxy. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 18

Geologists Reveal World’s Biggest Iron Deposit Worth $6 Trillion Set to Impact Global Economy


In a remote part of Western Australia, geologists have uncovered a mineral deposit of staggering size—one that promises to rewrite not only the map of global iron production but also our understanding of Earth’s geological history. The Hamersley region, already known for its rich mineral resources, now hosts what scientists say is the largest iron ore deposit ever recorded, containing roughly 55 billion metric tons of ore with iron concentrations exceeding 60 percent.

This massive find, valued at nearly $6 trillion, marks a significant moment for the global mining industry. Dr Liam Courtney-Davis, a geologist at Curtin University who has been closely involved in the research, published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, suggests that entire chapters of mineral formation and large-scale geological processes may need rewriting.

The size and quality of the deposit could influence international iron prices and reshape trade relations, particularly between Australia and major iron consumers such as China.


Tuesday, May 13

Scientists Find 3-Million-Year-Old Tools—But They Were Not Made by Our Ancestors

The discovery is challenging long-held beliefs about the origins of tool use and could alter our understanding of early human evolution.

TheNyayanga Site In South West Kenya. T.W. Plummer/Homa Peninsula Paleoanthropology Project | The Daily 
Galaxy --Great Discoveries Channel


Archaeologists in southwestern Kenya have uncovered stone tools that are estimated to be up to 3 million years old. These tools, which may be the oldest of their kind ever discovered, were found near fossils of Paranthropus, a distant relative of modern humans.

A Surprising Discovery in Nyayanga
The tools were found at the Nyayanga archaeological site, located near Lake Victoria in southwestern Kenya. This site, excavated between 2014 and 2022, yielded over 300 stone tools made primarily from quartz and rhyolite.

These tools are classified as Oldowan, the earliest known stone tool technology, previously thought to be linked exclusively to the genus Homo.


Monday, May 5

Big Bang Theory Debunked? A Physicist Presents An Alternative


A groundbreaking cosmological theory is taking the scientific community by storm, suggesting that the universe did not originate from a single Big Bang. Instead, this bold idea proposes that the cosmos has evolved through multiple, rapid bursts of energy known as temporal singularities.

Temporal Singularities: The Universe’s Hidden Forces
In a new paper published in Classical and Quantum Gravity, Dr. Richard Lieu, a physics professor at The University of Alabama in Huntsville, introduces a fresh perspective on the universe’s expansion.

According to Lieu, the cosmos is not the product of a one-time Big Bang. Rather, it has grown through a series of ultra-fast, step-like bursts that release energy and matter across the entire universe.


Tuesday, April 15

He Vanished Into a Cave for 63 Days—And Emerged With a Scientific Breakthrough No One Saw Coming


In the summer of 1962, a young French geologist named Michel Siffre descended into a glacial cave in the French Alps with no clock, no calendar, and no contact with the outside world. When he emerged 63 days later, he didn’t know the date, couldn’t estimate how much time had passed, and described himself as feeling like a “half-crazed, disjointed marionette.”


What had started as a geological expedition became a pioneering experiment in human biology, laying the foundation for the scientific field of chronobiology—the study of the body’s internal clock. Siffre had originally planned to study a newly discovered glacier in Scarasson, a remote and icy cave system located 130 meters below the surface.

His initial goal was to spend just fifteen days underground. But after further reflection, he decided that two weeks would be insufficient for a meaningful investigation. He expanded the expedition to a full two months, designing what would become one of the most extreme self-experiments in scientific history.