1177 BC: The Year Civilization Collapsed

Written by PSI Staff

What Was The Bronze Age | Define Bronze Age | DK Find Out

Esteemed American professor provides fascinating video presentation about why the Bronze Age came to an end and whether the collapse of those ancient civilizations might hold some warnings for our current society.

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Liquid Blood & Urine Found in 42,000-year-old Foal

Written by Gianluca Mezzofiore,

The foal was found in the Batagaika crater.

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Sore knee? Maybe you have a fabella

Written by BBC

The fabellaImage copyright IMPERIAL COLLEGE LONDON
Image caption The arrow on the scan shows where the fabella is – behind the knee

A little bone in the knee scientists thought was being lost to evolution seems to be making a comeback, say experts from Imperial College London.

The fabella is found in some people buried in the tendon just behind their knee. Doctors think it is entirely pointless, and you can happily live without it – many people do. However, people who have arthritis appear more likely to be in possession of a fabella.

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What Gives? UN Climate Report (due 2022) Excludes Geologists

Written by John O'Sullivan

IPCC - Working Group I

Geology is a key science to help our understanding of earth’s past climate. Yet, once again, the corrupt UN IPCC will deliver another biased report in 2022 that excludes ANY geologists.

Geologist, Dr Roger Higgs exposes the reasons for this shameful omission in his paper ‘IPCC Intergovernmental Panel On Climate Change next report (AR6, due 2022) − 784 authors, yes 784, but again NO geologists!

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TED 2019: 10 years of ‘ideas worth spreading’?

Written by Jane Wakefield

TED logoImage copyright TED/BRET HARTMAN

TED (which stands for Technology, Entertainment and Design) is famous for turning 17-minute talks into viral videos. This year’s conference has kicked off in Vancouver, offering a new set of thought-provoking talks under the tagline of ‘ideas worth spreading’.

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New Class of ‘Gene Silencing’ Medicine Reverses Disease

Written by James Gallagher

Sue BurrellImage copyright SUE BURRELL
Image caption Sue Burrell no longer has severe bouts of pain.

Doctors have used a new type of medicine called “gene silencing” to reverse a disease that leaves people in crippling pain.

The condition, acute intermittent porphyria, also causes paralysis and is fatal in some cases. The novel approach fine-tunes the genetic instructions locked in our DNA.

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The BBC Still Spewing Outrageous Climate Lies

Written by James Delingpole

BBC Climate Change The Facts

The increasingly unwatchable and slavishly woke BBC plumbed new depths last night. It gave a prime time slot to a piece of environmental propaganda so blatant, shameless, and dishonest it might just as well have been a political broadcast on behalf of Extinction Rebellion.

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Stonehenge: DNA reveals origin of builders

Written by Paul Rincon

Stonehenge
Image caption Construction on Stonehenge probably began about 3,000BC

The ancestors of the people who built Stonehenge travelled west across the Mediterranean before reaching Britain, a study has shown.

Researchers compared DNA extracted from Neolithic human remains found across Britain with that of people alive at the same time in Europe.

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Climate Alarm Honk World

Written by Joseph E Postma

You know who the clown is?  That clown is a PhD in Geophysics at the University of Chicago!  To be a PhD in geophysics requires that you’ve taken advanced-level multi-dimensional calculus including partial differential equations and Fourier Tranforms, have entirely completed classical physics, some computer science courses, courses in statistics, and much more.

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The Dandelion Windfall

Written by Dr Klaus L E Kaiser

Dandelions improve your overall health, including liver ...

For as long as I can remember, dandelion plants were THE enemy of the city neighbors all around. Any sign of their yellow flowers in the lawn or garden needed to be eradicated by all means, as soon as possible.

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‘I was the only girl studying electronics’

Written by Judith Burns

Khadijah Ismail at BAeImage copyright KHADIJAH ISMAIL
Image caption Khadijah Ismail’s unusual A-level choice led to a top apprenticeship

As a little girl Khadijah Ismail would spend hours watching aeroplanes through the window of the attic bedroom she shared with her sister near Manchester Airport, England.

She even wrote the airport a letter “on fancy paper and everything”, giving her address and asking them to send more planes past her house.

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