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The Shadow Moses incident.
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Metal Gear Solid.
The Shadow Moses incident.
Twitter (X) | Instagram | Artstation

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Ancient Egypt Just Got 20% Spicier
Here is something wild from the Old Kingdom:
Researchers just published a DNA study of a body buried in Nuwayrat (Egypt) around 2800 BCE. Turns out this man is 80 % genetically Egyptian, but the other 20 % traces back to the eastern Fertile Crescent, including Mesopotamia and nearby regions.
The reason this is so unexpected is that up until now, we thought Egypt and Mesopotamia were only linked through trading routes. But this result could actually point to human mobility, long-distance family ties, or migration patterns.
This is the first whole-genome analysis of someone from the Old Kingdom, and it’s essentially saying: 'Hey, your idea of how much people moved around 5,000 years ago?' Too small. Think bigger.
Full article available here
"Okay, so around four years ago, I wrote an article on parasites, and in that little piece I dropped a bomb… or well… something I considered a bomb. Namely, that mitochondria (fondly referred to as the powerhouse of the cell) probably started off as bacteria or intercellular parasites that were essentially engulfed by nucleated cells, and have, since then, become an essential component of our cellular structure. Why is this a bomb, you might ask? Well, our science textbooks never told us that the organelle responsible for essentially keeping us alive (through energy production) was/is a parasite we just happened to form a symbiotic relationship with some two billion years ago?! It’s crazy."
Read the full article here:
Mitochondria Stuff
For centuries, naturalists have puzzled over what might constitute the head of a sea star, commonly called a "starfish." When looking at a w
This just in, starfish are a radially symmetrical head with a stomach.
God I love echinoderms
If you told someone that there’s an entire group of animals that develop butt first as embryos are born bilateral but then grow a radially symmetrical head like a cancer in their side that then bursts out and lives as a completely separate organism from its birth form and moves via hydraulic systems…
They wouldn’t believe you. Yet one of the most beloved cartoon characters is one of them.

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A new Stanford Medicine study has identified single nucleotide variants that are essential to drive cancer growth. The findings could enhanc
Thousands of single changes in the nucleotides that make up the human genome have been associated with an increased risk of developing cancer. But until now, it’s not been clear which are directly responsible for the uncontrolled cellular growth that is the hallmark of the disease and which are simply coincidences or minor players. Stanford researchers have conducted the first large-scale screen of these inherited changes, called single nucleotide variants, and homed in on fewer than 400 that are essential to initiate and drive cancer growth. These variants control several common biological pathways, including those governing whether and how well a cell can repair damage to its DNA, how it produces energy, and how it interacts with and moves through its microenvironment.
Continue Reading.
The Scientific Research Notes of S. Sunkavally. Years: 1986 - 1990.
Page 38.