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You are at:Home»Science»Scientific news this week: “City-Killer” asteroid swarms and an all-little buried “Ice Prince”
Science

Scientific news this week: “City-Killer” asteroid swarms and an all-little buried “Ice Prince”

June 7, 2025006 Mins Read
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This week’s new scientists started with a blow while the largest active volcano in Europe broke out on Monday morning (June 2), spitting ashes and black smoke at around 21,300 feet (6,500 meters) in the air and sending tourists to rush.

The Italian Etna exceeds the neighboring catanum, whose metropolitan region is home to more than a million people, and Officials warned Those who are closest to the eruption that gas and SMOG of the eruption can cause respiratory problems and other health problems.

And speaking of explosions, a very public quarrel broke out between Elon Musk And President Trump Thursday afternoon (June 5). Added social media Culnea in Musk threatening to take out the SpaceX dragon spacecraft “immediately”, ” Raising concerns about the future of the American space industry.

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“City-Killer” asteroid swarms

The impression of an asteroid artist approaching the earth

An unknown number of potential asteroids of city killers could hide near Venus and could be a threat to our planet in the future, suggest new simulations. (Credit image: Getty Images)

A hidden swarm of large spaces of space around Venus could constitute a threat to our planet One day, new research suggests. The 20 asteroids of 20 “tutors” are considered wider than 460 feet (140 m), which means that they could destroy a highly populated area if they had to have an impact on our planet.

These asteroids are currently no threat to the earth. However, if they are too close to the gravitational field of the earth, this could potentially define them on a collision course with our planet.

Discover more new spaces

–The Ginormous planet discovered around tiny red stars challenges our understanding of solar systems

Get the most fascinating discoveries in the world delivered directly to your reception box.

–The NASA spacecraft finds that solar “cannonballs” may have stripped of its water – a theory of several decades of several decades

–Long and dark “streaks” identified on Mars are not what scientists thought

The little mysteries of life

An image of comparison showing a jaguar on the left and a leopard on the right

Can you locate the difference between a Jaguar (left) and a leopard (right)? (Image credit: Andreas Furil / 500px and Mario Moreno via Getty Images)

Leopards and jaguars are difficult to distinguish at first glance: the two are large predators with similar versions and black and tanned spots.

Although apparently similar, leopards and jaguars have separated from their common ancestor between 3.6 million and 2.5 million years and live on the opposite sides of the globe. So how can you distinguish them?

Toddler ‘Ice Prince’

A frozen grave with a skeleton is transported in a box by an archaeologist

The tomb was found in 2021 then “Flash Frozen” with liquid nitrogen so that it can be searched in a single block. (Image credit: BLFD)

Archaeologists discovered the Remains of 1,350 years of an altogether 18-month-old with bright blue eyes. The youngster was buried with rare riches, including a small sword, silk clothes, a gold cross and a piglet.

The child, who would have died between 670 and 680 AD, was nicknamed the “Ice Prince” because the archaeologists who found the remains frozen the funeral chamber to search its content in a single block.

An analysis revealed that the boy had died of a “chronic infection” in his middle ear, and the sumptuous treasures surrounding his body suggest that he was of a rich and important family.

Discover more archeology news

–Prosciutto di Portici: a portable sundial that looks like a pork leg – and it probably belonged to the stepfather of Julius César before Mont Vesuve has fun

–The old DNA reveals a mysterious native group of Colombia which disappeared 2,000 years ago

–Viking arm ring in braided gold discovered by an amateur metal detector on the island of Man

Also in new scientists this week

–Faced with steep financing cuts, scientists offer to use black holes like particle collides instead of building new ones on earth

–Mysterious “mega-tsunamis” which shook the whole world for 9 days revealed by satellite

–Broken nuclear merger record while German scientists make a “significant step” to an almost limitless clean energy

–The student discovers a psychedelic fungus that escaped the inventor LSD

Beyond the headlines

An illustration of a satellite on the moon

The Lunar Crater (LCRT) radiotelescope is currently in the planning phase, but could soon become a reality if it passes the final controls and receives complete funding. (Image credit: NASA / VLADIMIR VUSTYANSKY)

Scientists at Nasa Develop plans to build a giant radiotelescope in a huge crater on the other side of the moon.

The $ 2 billion project aims to help disentangle some of the greatest mysteries in the universe, but it could also act as a rescue telescope in case The radiation fleeing to “private” private “megaconstellations becomes too disruptive for radio instruments here on earth.

The proposed telescope would be fully built by robots in a depression of 0.8 mile wide (1.3 km) in the northern hemisphere of the Moon, although NASA keeps its exact location under the Wraps.

If it is approved, the lunar crater radiotelescope could be built in the 2030s – But it will not really be the first radiotelescope of the moon.

Something for the weekend

If you are looking for something a little longer to read during the weekend, here are some of the best long reads, books of books and interviews published this week.

–“ Reckless at best, and deceptive and dangerous at worst ”: do not believe media threw – this is why the general artificial intelligence is not what the billionaires tell you that it is (Extract book)

–10 strange and wonderful things to look under a microscope (Countdown)

–Can adults develop new brain cells? (Request)

And something for Skywatchers.

‘Strawberry Moon’ 2025: The full moon of June is about to break an annual record

Moving science

Wild cockatoes in western Sydney have learned an intelligent tip to access water from public consumption fountains. The torsion handle valves are not easy to light, requiring fine motor skills in a coordinated sequence of actions – not something that a bird would fall on accident.

The birds use their two feet to handle the torsion handle, then lower their body weight to turn it in the needles of a watch and prevent it from backing up.

Cacatoos have become fountain fans that they will wait for even online to have a drink, in what researchers believe Now qualifies as a new local tradition.


Do you want more scientists? Follow our Channel Whatsapp live For the latest discoveries as they occur. This is the best way to make expert reports on travel, but if you don’t use WhatsApp, we are also on Facebook,, X (formerly Twitter),, Slip,, Instagram,, Tiktok,, Bluesky And Liendin.

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