Astronomy

Webb Discovers Slow-Rotating Galaxy in Early Universe

This Webb/NIRSpec/IFU image shows the slow-rotator galaxy XMM-VID1-2075. Image credit: Forrest et al., doi: 10.1038/s41550-026-02855-0.

In today’s Universe, most galaxies are held together by orderly rotation. But among the largest, no-longer star-forming systems, many are instead dominated by the chaotic motion of their stars — a class of galaxies astronomers call slow rotators. These galaxies are expected to be rare in the early Universe, and until now, observations have revealed only fast-spinning systems. New observations...

Archaeology

780,000-Year-Old Charcoal Reveals How Early Humans Mastered Fire

Ancient inhabitants of the Gesher Benot Ya’aqov site in Israel likely used some kind of earth oven that maintained a temperature below 500 degrees Celsius to cook their fish. Image credit: Ella Maru / Tel Aviv University.

Hominins at the Acheulian site of Gesher Benot Ya’aqov in Israel relied on driftwood gathered along a lakeshore to fuel their hearths, according to new research led by archaeologists from the Institut Català de Paleoecologia Humana i Evolució Social and Bar-Ilan University; 780,000-year-old charcoal fragments from the site show that survival wasn’t about finding the perfect wood — it...

Paleontology

Earliest Organisms on Earth Built Their Biochemistry around Molybdenum, Study Suggests

Early Earth. Image credit: Peter Sawyer / Smithsonian Institution.

New research reveals that 3.4 billion years ago (Archean Eon), ancient microbes relied on molybdenum — a metal that was vanishingly rare at the time — and even experimented with tungsten. The findings may rewrite how astrobiologists search for life on other planets. Early Earth. Image credit: Peter Sawyer / Smithsonian Institution. Geochemical evidence suggests that molybdenum’s availability...

Biology

Earliest Organisms on Earth Built Their Biochemistry around Molybdenum, Study Suggests

Early Earth. Image credit: Peter Sawyer / Smithsonian Institution.

New research reveals that 3.4 billion years ago (Archean Eon), ancient microbes relied on molybdenum — a metal that was vanishingly rare at the time — and even experimented with tungsten. The findings may rewrite how astrobiologists search for life on other planets. Early Earth. Image credit: Peter Sawyer / Smithsonian Institution. Geochemical evidence suggests that molybdenum’s availability...

Physics

Dark Matter May Have Jump-Started Universe’s First Giant Black Holes

Aggarwal et al. show that the energy released from dark matter decay could alter the chemistry of early galaxies enough to cause some of them to directly collapse into black holes rather than forming stars. Image credit: Aggarwal et al., doi: 10.1088/1475-7516/2026/04/034.

New research by astronomers from the University of California, Riverside, Sam Houston State University and the University of Oklahoma suggests decaying dark matter could have triggered the rapid collapse of early gas clouds, helping supermassive black holes form far sooner than current theories allow. Aggarwal et al. show that the energy released from dark matter decay could alter the chemistry of...

Genetics

Study: Butterflies and Moths Have Reused Same Genetic Toolkit for 120 Million Years

Ben Chehida et al. studied convergent evolution in multiple mimetic Neotropical lepidopteran lineages that diverged between 1 and 120 million years ago, including seven species of Ithomiini and Heliconius butterflies and a day-flying Chetone moth. Image credit: Ben Chehida et al., doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.3003742.

A landmark study of several butterfly lineages and a day-flying moth in South America shows that convergent evolution — when unrelated species arrive at the same solution — isn’t just a coincidence; it follows a surprisingly consistent genetic script, and this discovery could help predict how species adapt to climate change. Ben Chehida et al. studied convergent evolution in multiple...

Geology

Why Geologists Love Pond Scum

Microbial mat chips scattered on a Cambrian tidal flat surface. Image credit: Nora Noffke.

If you’ve ever wondered how geologists know so much about ancient beaches and shallow oceans — from the paleoenvironment to the animals roaming around, the seasonality of the weather, and even the time of day when the ancient scene was preserved — they owe it all to the sand particles bound together by microbes, forming structures known as microbial mats. A planar microbial mat with...