New Scientist Australian Edition - 24.08.2019

(Jacob Rumans) #1
24 August 2019 | New Scientist | 17

Ancient humans

Solar system Health

Humans helped to
wipe out cave bears

Cave bears roamed Europe
for 100,000 years in large
numbers. Now an analysis
of the DNA of the extinct
animals shows they began
to decline 40,000 years
ago – as modern humans
arrived in their habitat
(Scientific Reports, doi.org/
c9g3). Our ancestors may
have occupied the caves
the bears relied on.

Sleep loss worse
than social media

Girls aged 13 and 14 who
use social media frequently
tend to be less happy and
more anxious than those
who use it less. But taking
into account sleep, physical
activity and cyberbullying,
the effect of frequent social
media use was found to be
insignificant (The Lancet
Child & Adolescent Health,
doi.org/c9gz).

Mystery methane
pinned on fracking

Levels of the greenhouse
gas methane have been
rising since 2008, but the
cause has been unclear.
A study suggests fracking
for shale gas is largely to
blame (Biogeosciences,
doi.org/c9hs). If fracking
continues to grow, it will
endanger the goals of the
UN’s Paris climate deal, the
researchers warn.

Neanderthals took
to life by the water

GROWTHS in Neanderthals’ ears
indicate that aquatic foraging was
a big part of their life. The finding
suggests that they were adaptable
and could live in a range of
environments.
Erik Trinkaus at Washington
University in St Louis, Missouri,
and his colleagues investigated the
ear remains of 77 ancient humans
that lived in western Eurasia in the
mid-to-late Pleistocene period.
They looked for dense, bony

A GIANT impact 4.5 billion years
ago could explain why Jupiter’s
core is stranger than expected.
Astronomers thought that Jupiter
began as a rocky and icy planetary
embryo that later formed its
massive gaseous envelope by
drawing in hydrogen and helium
from material swirling around the
sun. This would mean there was a
relatively clear delineation between
the solid core and the gas around it.
However, that doesn’t appear to
be the case. Over the past few years,
measurements by NASA’s Juno
probe of Jupiter’s gravitational field
suggest the solid core is mixed with
hydrogen through a lot of its radius.

To investigate, Shang-Fei Liu of
Sun Yat-sen University in Zhuhai,
China, and his team modelled a
scenario where, 4.5 billion years
ago, a big planetary embryo
smacked into Jupiter. “Jupiter’s
primordial compact core was
destroyed, and a dilute core-like
structure formed,” says Liu. The
simulations show the effects would
remain within Jupiter until this day,
fitting what has been observed by
Juno (Nature, doi.org/c9g2).
These sorts of collisions weren’t
rare at the time, says Vincent Eke
at Durham University, UK. However,
Liu’s hypothesis will be hard to
test directly. Abigail Beall

growths in the ear canals found
in people who spend a lot of time
in cold, wet and windy places, a
condition known as “surfer’s ear”.
The researchers were surprised
to find that around half of the
23 Neanderthals they studied
had signs of these growths. They
were at least twice as prevalent as
in any of the other ancient human
groups the team looked at. This
suggests Neanderthals foraged
in water, something that wasn’t
obvious from other archaeological
clues (PLoS One, doi.org/c9hq).
“It all reinforces what is
becoming increasingly clear from

Immune cells help
gallstones to grow

WE KNOW that gallstones grow
from crystals in the gallbladder,
but it has been unclear how these
stick together. Now it seems
immune cells are to blame – a
finding that could lead to new
treatments for the condition.
Martin Herrmann at the
Friedrich-Alexander University
Erlangen-Nürnberg in Germany
and his colleagues made this
discovery while studying small
stones in the bile of people
undergoing operations to treat
their gallstones.
On the small stones were telltale
signs of neutrophil extracellular
traps – sticky webs of DNA released
by immune cells to catch invading
microbes. The presence of large
clumps of DNA and an enzyme
used by neutrophil immune
cells suggested that these cells
had been targeting bile crystals.
To test this, researchers mixed
cholesterol crystals, which are a
component of many gallstones,
with human neutrophils. The
neutrophils shot DNA at the
crystals. When exposed to
neutrophils, gallstone surfaces
quickly collected neutrophil DNA.
These sticky webs pulled
cholesterol and calcium crystals
together to form larger stones
(Immunity, doi.org/c9hk). RPS

diverse forms of evidence: that the
Neanderthals were capable and
flexible, and not the benighted
deficients that some persist in
calling them,” says Trinkaus.
It is possible Neanderthals had
a greater risk of developing the
growths due to genetics, but the
different landscapes they lived in
and proximity to water may also
explain why they had more than
other groups, says Trinkaus.
We know from modern surfers
that the growths normally cause
little or no discomfort, but they
can result in partial deafness.
Ruby Prosser Scully

Jupiter’s weird innards may


be due to ancient collision


SHEILA TERRY/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY


NASA/JPL-CALTECH/SWRI/MSSS/GERALD EICHSTAD/SEAN DORAN

Really brief


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