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  • The Water Jets of Pythia’s Oasis
    2026/07/08

    Let’s imagine you’re on a research ship rolling in heavy Pacific swells, about 50 miles off the rugged coast of Newport, Oregon. The weather’s gone sideways, your original plans are on hold, and the sonar screen suddenly starts lighting up with strange, rising plumes of bubbles from the pitch-black depths below. You send down an underwater robot on a tether… and what it shows you stops everyone cold. Not just bubbles. A powerful jet of warm fluid blasting out of a hole in the seafloor like a firehose. Something that had never been seen before in quite this way.


    This is the story of Pythia’s Oasis, a real scientific discovery that gives us a rare, direct peek into the hidden plumbing of one of the world’s most dangerous earthquake faults. Grab your headphones, dim the lights, and let’s dive deep in Episode 41: “The Water Jets of Pythia’s Oasis”


    Sources


    Philip et al. (2023). “Fluid sources and overpressures within the central Cascadia Subduction Zone revealed by a warm, high-flux seafloor seep.” Science Advances. https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.add6688


    University of Washington News (April 2023): “Warm liquid spewing from Oregon seafloor comes from Cascadia fault, could offer clues to earthquake hazards.” https://www.washington.edu/news/2023/04/10/warm-liquid-spewing-from-oregon-seafloor-comes-from-cascadia-fault-could-offer-clues-to-earthquake-hazards/


    Ocean Observatories Initiative – Pythias Oasis overview (adapted from the research): https://oceanobservatories.org/ (search “Pythias Oasis” or related geological posts)


    Additional context: OPB Think Out Loud interview with researchers (April 2023) – search “Pythias Oasis OPB”.



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    9 分
  • The Sleeping Brain That Knew the Next Word
    2026/07/06

    Episode 40 is about what happens inside your head when the lights go out under general anesthesia. Spoiler: your brain doesn’t just power down like an old laptop. One very special part of it keeps right on working, sorting words by meaning, figuring out grammar, and even guessing what word is coming next in a story. All while you are completely unconscious and remember nothing. So dim the lights, get comfortable, and let’s slip into the operating room together.


    Sources


    Katlowitz, K.A., Cole, E.R., Mickiewicz, E.A. et al. Plasticity and language in the anaesthetized human hippocampus. Nature (2026). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-026-10448-0


    Baylor College of Medicine News Release: “Researchers discover advanced language processing in the unconscious human brain” (May 2026)


    ScienceDaily summary of the study (June 2026): https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/06/260624025514.htm


    Scientific American coverage: “The brain processes overheard words under anesthesia, but it may not remember them” (May 2026)


    Related foundational work: Davis et al., “Dissociating speech perception and comprehension at reduced levels of awareness” (PNAS, 2007) and other sedation neuroimaging studies referenced in the Nature paper.



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    12 分
  • The Pink Enigma: Salt Clouds on a Distant World
    2026/07/01

    You’re staring up at the night sky from somewhere quiet, maybe the hills above the Bay, where the fog rolls in like a living thing. Most stars are pinpricks of white fire. But one faint dot glows a soft, impossible pink.


    For years, astronomers knew it was there. They even gave it a nickname: the Pink Planet. But it stayed silent. Too dim, too far, too strange for our best Earth-bound eyes to read its secrets. Then, in 2026, something changed. A telescope in space, one with infrared vision, finally caught its light. And what it whispered back… was salt. Clouds of it. High in the sky of a world 57 light-years away.


    In Episode 39, we’re not just talking about a discovery. We’re stepping into the story of how light from a pink world traveled across the galaxy, got tangled in salt crystals, and forced us to rewrite what we thought we knew about planets, clouds, and the weird chemistry hiding in the dark.


    Sources

    ScienceDaily summary (Northwestern University): https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/06/260623014009.htm


    The Astronomical Journal paper (open access or abstract): https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.3847/1538-3881/ae6919 (DOI: 10.3847/1538-3881/ae6919)


    Phys.org coverage: Search “Famous ‘Pink Planet’ harbors a salty surprise” (Northwestern release)


    Universe Today / SpaceDaily detailed explainers on the JWST observations and salt cloud modeling.


    Earlier discovery context (2013 Subaru imaging): Public NASA/Subaru releases on GJ 504 b. Cross-reference the 2026 AJ paper for the exact retrieval parameters, molecular detections, and cloud modeling details.


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    9 分
  • The Secret Recipes of Eternity
    2026/06/29

    You are standing in the blistering heat of the Saqqara necropolis, south of Cairo where the sands have guarded their secrets for thousands of years. Then, in 2016, archaeologists start digging near the pyramid of Unas, and they uncover something no one had ever found intact before: an actual ancient Egyptian mummification workshop. Not just tombs or mummies, but the place where the magic happened. Complete with stone beds for preparing bodies, tools, and dozens upon dozens of ceramic jars and bowls.

    Many of those vessels still bore clear hieroglyphic and hieratic labels: “To put on his head.” “To wash”, “To make his odour pleasant”, “Dry antiu”, “Sefet”. For the first time, we could peek behind the curtain of one of humanity’s most enduring quests. the fight against decay itself.

    For Episode 38, we descend into the sands of Saqqara for the story of the labeled embalming jars, the groundbreaking science that decoded their contents, and the very latest 2026 findings that show just how personalized and sophisticated those ancient recipes truly were.

    Sources

    Rageot et al. (2023). “Biomolecular analyses enable new insights into ancient Egyptian embalming.” Nature. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-022-05663-4


    Science.org / AAAS coverage of the 2023 findings: https://www.science.org/content/article/secrets-mummy-making-revealed-residues-ancient-urns


    Los Angeles Times feature with visuals: https://www.latimes.com/world-nation/story/2023-02-01/how-to-make-a-mummy-ancient-egyptian-workshop-has-new-clues


    2026 Spanish study coverage (mummy head balms variability): Infobae article summarizing Colmenares-Prado et al. in Journal of Archaeological Science: https://www.infobae.com/america/ciencia-america/2026/06/11/descubren-las-recetas-secretas-de-los-embalsamadores-del-antiguo-egipto-como-este-hallazgo-cambiaria-el-paradigma/


    Muy Interesante detailed summary of the 2026 Spanish research: https://muyinteresante.okdiario.com/historia/investigadores-espanoles-descifran-composicion-balsamos-7-momias-egipcias.html




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    13 分
  • The Stones That Refused to Stay Buried
    2026/06/24

    In Episode 37 we’re heading south of the border to the lush hills of Veracruz, Mexico. It’s late 2025. A quiet piece of land near the town of Coatepec is about to become somebody’s new backyard. Bulldozers are idling. Permits are signed. Progress is coming. But the ground has other ideas.


    Locals out walking their dogs or heading to the store start noticing big, suspiciously shaped stones being shifted around by construction crews. Stones that look… old. Really old.


    Sources


    Agence France-Presse (AFP) reporting on the discovery (multiple outlets including Yahoo News and Gulf News versions): https://www.yahoo.com/news/science/articles/archaeologists-discover-never-seen-pre-000438139.html

    and

    https://gulfnews.com/world/americas/archaeologists-discover-never-before-seen-pre-hispanic-ruins-in-mexico-1.500580604


    Heritage Daily: “Ancient ceremonial complex and rare sculpture uncovered in Veracruz” – https://www.heritagedaily.com/2026/06/ancient-ceremonial-complex-and-rare-sculpture-uncovered-in-veracruz/158396


    Aristegui Noticias: “Descubren escultura y estructura prehispánica con características únicas en Veracruz” – https://aristeguinoticias.com/1706/cultura/descubren-escultura-y-estructura-prehispanica-con-caracteristicas-unicas-en-veracruz/


    Milenio: Coverage of the INAH find in Coatepec – https://www.milenio.com/cultura/inah-encuentra-estructura-y-escultura-prehispanicas-en-veracruz


    Excélsior: “INAH confirma hallazgo de sitio prehispánico y estela única en Coatepec” – https://www.excelsior.com.mx/cultura/inah-confirma-hallazgo-sitio-prehispanico-y-estela-unica-coatepec


    Additional reporting (Telediario México and others) confirming project timeline and details. INAH social media announcements and related coverage also reference the salvage project tied to the Campo Viejo research program ongoing since ~2000.



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    13 分
  • The Hidden Switch – Humanity’s Secret Power to Regrow
    2026/06/22

    Imagine you lose a finger in an accident. The wound closes. A scar forms. The story ends there, a permanent reminder etched into your flesh. Now imagine something else. The same wound… but instead of a scar, new bone grows. A joint reassembles. Tendons and ligaments weave themselves back into place like they were following an ancient blueprint. You don’t just heal. You regrow.


    For most of human history, we believed this was impossible for us. Scarring was our destiny. Regeneration belonged to myths, to salamanders, to creatures from another world. But what if the power was never gone? What if it was only… switched off?


    In episode 36 we dive into a real scientific discovery that just flipped that switch in the lab, and what it might mean for every one of us. Stay with me. This one gets under the skin… in the best possible way.

    Sources


    ScienceDaily coverage (June 17, 2026): https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/06/260617032207.htm


    Original research paper: Yu et al., “Digit regeneration in mice is stimulated by sequential treatment with FGF2 and BMP2,” Nature Communications (2026). https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-026-72066-8

    (DOI: 10.1038/s41467-026-72066-8)


    PubMed entry: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41997949/


    Texas A&M / EurekAlert release context: Search “What if humans could regrow tissue? Texas A&M study” or the ScienceDaily page above for linked institutional materials.



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    15 分
  • The Fungi Superhighway
    2026/06/17

    Imagine stepping out into a quiet field on a clear night. The grass brushes your ankles. The stars wheel overhead. Everything feels… still. But what if I told you that right beneath the soles of your shoes, an ancient, living superhighway is humming with activity? A network so vast it could stretch to the Sun and back nearly a billion times. A hidden circulatory system pulsing with life, trading secrets between plants, locking away carbon, and holding our world together in ways we’re only beginning to understand.


    Tonight, on Episode 35, we descend into the soil to uncover one of the most mind-bending discoveries of 2026: the first global map of Earth’s massive underground fungal networks.


    Sources


    ScienceDaily full story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/06/260614011845.htm


    SPUN / Mycorrhizal Infrastructure Map (interactive): https://spun.earth/ (explore the map directly)


    Full paper in Science: https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adu4373

    (DOI: 10.1126/science.adu4373)


    SPUN/EurekAlert: https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1131131



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    10 分
  • The Snuffleupagus of the Sea
    2026/06/15

    Deep beneath the waves, in the twilight zones where sunlight struggles to penetrate, the coral reefs hold secrets that have waited millions of years to be uncovered. Not every mystery hides in the abyss. Some lurk in plain sight, swaying gently among the fronds of red algae, invisible to all but the most patient observers.


    Today, we descend into the gardens of the Great Barrier Reef to encounter a creature so perfectly disguised that it evaded science for decades. A tiny phantom, draped in living filaments that make it look like a forgotten relic from a children’s story, or something far older and stranger that nature itself dreamed up. This is episode 34, the Snuffleupagus of the Sea (Solenostomus Snuffleupagus). A ghost pipefish that blurs the line between myth and science.


    Sources


    Original Research Paper (formal description):
Short, G., & Harasti, D. (2026). Solenostomus snuffleupagus sp. nov., a hairy ghost pipefish (Teleostei: Solenostomidae) from the Southwest Pacific… Journal of Fish Biology.
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jfb.70497


    National Geographic (excellent overview with photos and diver context):
https://www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/article/snuffleupagus-fish


    Science News (strong on science details and timeline): 
https://www.sciencenews.org/article/new-fish-sesame-street-snuffleupagus


    Scientific American (great narrative on the long search):
 https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/a-real-mr-snuffleupagus-meet-the-oceans-strangest-new-fish-species/


    Wikipedia (concise summary with references to the paper and key collections):
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solenostomus_snuffleupagus


    Sydney Morning Herald (detailed on the 25-year quest and local Australian angle): 
https://www.smh.com.au/national/the-25-year-ocean-mystery-solved-with-a-nod-to-mr-snuffleupagus-20260510-p5zvg4.html


    Discover Magazine (focus on camouflage and evolutionary context): 
https://www.discovermagazine.com/this-shaggy-new-fish-looked-so-much-like-snuffleupagus-that-scientists-named-it-after-him-49110


    IFLScience (includes quotes and collection challenges): 
https://www.iflscience.com/its-beautiful-you-wouldnt-expect-it-to-be-a-predator-new-hairy-looking-ghost-pipefish-is-a-real-life-mr-snuffleupagus-83544


    Mongabay (conservation and broader reef context): 
https://news.mongabay.com/short-article/new-species-of-ghost-pipefish-named-after-sesame-street-character-found-in-australia/


    CBC Radio / As It Happens (interview with Graham Short): 
https://www.cbc.ca/radio/asithappens/snuffleupagus-fish-9.7207623



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    12 分