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Fossil jawbone from Israel is the oldest modern human found outside Africa

  • Written by Rolf Quam, Associate Professor of Anthropology, Binghamton University, State University of New York
Fossilized teeth from a modern human who lived in Israel close to 200,000 years ago.Israel Hershkovitz, Tel Aviv University, CC BY-ND

New fossil finds over the past few years have been forcing anthropologists to reexamine our evolutionary path to becoming human. Now the earliest modern human fossil ever found outside the continent of Africa is...

Read more: Fossil jawbone from Israel is the oldest modern human found outside Africa

Why climate change is worsening public health problems

  • Written by Chelsey Kivland, Professor of Anthropology, Dartmouth College
People collect water piped in from a mountain creek in Utuado, Puerto Rico on Oct. 14, 2017, in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria. Hundreds of thousands of Puerto Ricans were still without running water. AP Photo/Ramon Espinosa

Around the world, the health care debate often revolves around access.

Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, head of the World...

Read more: Why climate change is worsening public health problems

The state of the US solar industry: 5 questions answered

  • Written by Joshua D. Rhodes, Research Fellow of Energy, University of Texas at Austin
Dedicating a 31-kilowatt photovoltaic array at Rainshadow Community Charter High School, in Reno, Nevada. BlackRock Solar, CC BY

Editor’s note: On Jan. 22, 2018, the Trump administration announced plans to impose punitive duties on solar panels imported from abroad. This decision came in response to a complaint filed by two solar companies,...

Read more: The state of the US solar industry: 5 questions answered

For a North Korean refugee raising her kids in the UK, the past is never far

  • Written by Jieun Baek, PhD candidate in Public Policy, University of Oxford
Jihyun Park finds joy in the little things many take for granted, whether it's being able to drop her kids off at school or having family dinners. Author provided

Grace Park is an 8-year-old girl from Manchester, United Kingdom, who likes making colorful bracelets with plastic lanyards, playing games with her two older brothers, and writing poems...

Read more: For a North Korean refugee raising her kids in the UK, the past is never far

I visited the Rohingya refugee camps and here is what Bangladesh is doing right

  • Written by Sabrina Karim, Assistant Professor, Caplan Faculty Fellow, Cornell University
What is the future of Rohingya refugees?AP Photo/Manish Swarup

Nearly 1 million Rohingya refugees have entered Bangladesh from Myanmar since September 2017. The Bangladeshi government’s plan to start repatriating them beginning this Tuesday, Jan. 22, has been postponed due to concerns about their safety.

That the Bangladesh government agreed...

Read more: I visited the Rohingya refugee camps and here is what Bangladesh is doing right

How secure is your data when it's stored in the cloud?

  • Written by Haibin Zhang, Assistant Professor of Computer Science and Electrical Engineering, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
Is this cloud secure?SWEviL/Shutterstock.com

As cloud storage becomes more common, data security is an increasing concern. Companies and schools have been increasing their use of services like Google Drive for some time, and lots of individual users also store files on Dropbox, Box, Amazon Drive, Microsoft OneDrive and the like. They’re no...

Read more: How secure is your data when it's stored in the cloud?

The hidden health inequalities that American Indians and Alaskan Natives face

  • Written by Annie Belcourt, Associate Professor of Health Professions and Biomedical Sciences, The University of Montana
Tribally led wellness encampment in Wyoming.Gordon Belcourt, CC BY-SA

I was an American Indian student pursuing a doctoral degree in clinical psychology in the 1990s, when I realized the stark contrast between my life experiences growing up on my home reservation and those of my non-Native peers.

Many incredible family members and friends had...

Read more: The hidden health inequalities that American Indians and Alaskan Natives face

The world on a billionaire's budget

  • Written by Andrew D. Hwang, Associate Professor of Mathematics, College of the Holy Cross
Jeff Bezos is now the richest person in the world.Reed Saxon/AP Photo

The world’s wealthiest are prospering. As of February 2017, there were about 2,000 billionaires in the world. This micro-elite controls over US$7.6 trillion, an increase of 18 percent from 2016.

A billionaire’s spending power is difficult to grasp, both because most...

Read more: The world on a billionaire's budget

Don't automate the fun out of life

  • Written by Peter Hancock, Professor of Psychology, Civil and Environmental Engineering, and Industrial Engineering and Management Systems, University of Central Florida
Would a robot appreciate this view?soft_light/Shutterstock.com

Imagine you are about to go on vacation. You have been looking forward to it for some time. But your robotic personal assistant has other ideas. It calmly explains to you that it will be cheaper, safer and more efficient for it to take your place on the holiday trip.

In one sense,...

Read more: Don't automate the fun out of life

Look up at the super blue blood full moon Jan. 31 – here's what you'll see and why

  • Written by Shannon Schmoll, Director, Abrams Planetarium, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Michigan State University
As long as clouds don't get in the way, the view should be spectacular.NASA Goddard, CC BY

During the early hours of Jan. 31, there will be a full moon, a total lunar eclipse, a blue moon and a supermoon – all at the same time. None of these things is really all that unusual by itself. What is rare is that they’re happening all together...

Read more: Look up at the super blue blood full moon Jan. 31 – here's what you'll see and why

More Articles ...

  1. 4 things you need to know right now to protect yourself from the flu
  2. How talented kids from low-income families become America's 'Lost Einsteins'
  3. DACA isn't just about social justice – legalizing Dreamers makes economic sense too
  4. Successful businesses need proactive leadership – and so does Congress
  5. Is it time for a 21st-century version of 'The Day After'?
  6. Is a unified Korea possible?
  7. Unrest in Iran will continue until religious rule ends
  8. Spanish use is steady or dropping in US despite high Latino immigration
  9. When it comes to your health, where you live matters
  10. Medicaid work requirements could cost the government more in the long run
  11. Another continuing resolution won't solve the real problem within the Republican Party
  12. Healthy to eat, unhealthy to grow: Strawberries embody the contradictions of California agriculture
  13. There are better ways to foster solar innovation and save jobs than Trump's tariffs
  14. What are chronophilias?
  15. Is attraction to an age group another kind of sexual orientation?
  16. What might explain the unhappiness epidemic?
  17. Guarding against the possible Spectre in every machine
  18. Secret memo shows bipartisanship during Watergate succession crisis
  19. Deportees in Mexico tell of disrupted lives, families and communities
  20. Trump goes to Davos: 4 books he should read on first trip to gathering of global elites
  21. When a mom feels depressed, her baby's cells might feel it too
  22. Global toll from landslides is heaviest in developing countries
  23. Why so many Americans think Buddhism is just a philosophy
  24. DeVos speech shows contempt for the agency she heads
  25. What the government shutdown means for the health of Americans
  26. Shutdown under a unified government? Blame Trump
  27. Fungi can help concrete heal its own cracks
  28. Will a federal government shutdown damage the US economy?
  29. 20 years since America's shock over Clinton-Lewinsky affair, public discussions on sexual harassment are changing
  30. Climate change and weather extremes: Both heat and cold can kill
  31. Ahead of government shutdown, Congress sets its sights on not-so-comprehensive immigration reform
  32. 'Dreamers' could give US economy – and even American workers – a boost
  33. Tolerating distraction
  34. Is the FBI's latest probe of the Clinton Foundation a 'witch hunt' – or something more?
  35. If you thought colleges making the SAT optional would level the playing field, think again
  36. Time to stop using 9 million children as a bargaining CHIP
  37. This year's severe flu exposes a serious flaw in our medical system
  38. How social media helped fuel indie wrestling's resurgence
  39. Re-criminalizing cannabis is worse than 1930s 'reefer madness'
  40. New ways scientists can help put science back into popular culture
  41. Has Venezuela become a totalitarian regime?
  42. Why an election won't topple Venezuela's dictator
  43. Willie O'Ree's little-known journey to break the NHL's color barrier
  44. 50 years ago, a US military jet crashed in Greenland – with 4 nuclear bombs on board
  45. What a medieval love saga says about modern-day sexual harassment
  46. What the 2018 farm bill means for urban, suburban and rural America
  47. Post-fire landslide problems aren’t new and likely to get worse
  48. Post-fire mudslide problems aren’t new and likely to get worse
  49. Signaling more independence from the US, the World Bank phases out its support for fossil fuels
  50. How rejuvenation of stem cells could lead to healthier aging