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A Mercedes-Benz just sold for US$52.4 million (€51.15 million) at auction, though the real story is the relentless and somewhat foreboding rise in collectible automobile prices … and there's another auction tomorrow that might change the story again.Continue ReadingCategory: Automotive, TransportTags: Auction, Collecting, World's Most Expensive, RM-Sothebys, Historic Cars, Racing
A common, usually harmless bacteria have a significant role in causing stomach cancer, a new study has found. It joins the better-known, at least in medical circles, H. pylori bacteria as a known cancer risk. Researchers identified the bacteria’s mechanism of action, opening the door to developing therapeutics to reduce the risk.Continue ReadingCategory: Medical, ScienceTags: Cancer, Gut Bacteria
Researchers have just revealed that Mimas, one of Saturn's smallest moons, has an ocean of liquid water flowing under its entire surface. What is really making waves though, is how young the body of water is: just 5 to 15 million years old.Continue ReadingCategory: Space, ScienceTags: Saturn, Cassini, NASA, Queen Mary University of London, Solar System, Ocean
Current evidence suggests many organisms will struggle to keep pace with a changing climate on Earth. However, unlucky for humans, some pathogens will not just adapt but thrive, including, as this new study suggests, the bugs that cause the common diarrhea illness campylobacteriosis.Continue ReadingCategory: Medical, ScienceTags: University of Surrey, Bacteria, Viruses and Bacteria, Climate Crisi
In this renovated loft in Brooklyn, the owner both resides and hosts public art performances within a space divided by a variety of inserted volumes. Read more
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved a new drug for patients in the early-stages of Alzheimer's disease. Called Leqembi (lecanemab) the treatment was heralded last year as a major breakthrough in Alzheimer's therapy following early Phase 3 data indicating it could slow the progression of cognitive decline. But growing concerns over the drug's safety and real-world efficacy hav
In the winter months, at the bottom of Lake Akan in Hokkaido, Japan, harmless underwater algae balls that can grow to be bigger than basketballs are protected from death by an ice shield on top of the water. That shield is expected to thin thanks to global warming, causing the balls to join the list of species threatened by climate change, according to researchers at the University of Tokyo.Conti


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