. Scientific Frontline

Tuesday, October 28, 2025

Six-million-year-old ice discovered in Antarctica offers unprecedented window into a warmer Earth

Raising the Foro Drill, Allan Hills, Antarctica. 2022-2023.
Photo Credit: Julia Marks Peterson, COLDEX.

A team of U.S. scientists has discovered the oldest directly dated ice and air on the planet in the Allan Hills region of East Antarctica.

The 6-million-year-old ice and the tiny air bubbles trapped inside it provide an unprecedented window into Earth’s past climate, according to a new study published today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

The oldest ice sample from Allan Hills dated by researchers clocks in at 6 million years, from a period in Earth’s history where abundant geological evidence indicates much warmer temperatures and higher sea levels compared to today.

Polar bears act as crucial providers for Arctic species

Photo Credit: Credit: San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance

A new study published in the scientific journal Oikos reveals for the first time the critical role polar bears play as carrion providers for Arctic species. Researchers from University of Manitoba and San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance, alongside researchers from Environment and Climate Change Canada, and the University of Alberta, have estimated that polar bears leave behind approximately 7.6 million kilograms of their prey annually, creating a massive and vital food source for a wide network of arctic scavenger species.

This research demonstrates that these apex predators are a crucial link between the marine and terrestrial ecosystems. By hunting seals on the sea ice and abandoning the remains, polar bears transfer a substantial amount of energy from the ocean to the ice surface, making it accessible to other animals. The study identifies at least 11 vertebrate species known to benefit from this carrion, including Arctic foxes and ravens, with an additional eight potential scavenger species.

X-59 Soars: A New Era in Supersonic Flight Begins

Lockheed Martin X59 First Flight
Photo Credit: Lockheed Martin Corporation

Lockheed Martin Skunk Works® in partnership with NASA, successfully completed the first flight of the X-59, a revolutionary, quiet supersonic aircraft designed to pave the way for faster commercial air travel. 

The X-59 took off from Skunk Works' facility at U.S. Air Force Plant 42 in Palmdale, California, before landing near NASA's Armstrong Flight Research Center in Edwards, California. The X-59 performed exactly as planned, verifying initial flying qualities and air data performance on the way to a safe landing at its new home.

"We are thrilled to achieve the first flight of the X-59," said OJ Sanchez, vice president and general manager of Lockheed Martin Skunk Works. "This aircraft is a testament to the innovation and expertise of our joint team, and we are proud to be at the forefront of quiet supersonic technology development." 

Missing nutrient in breast milk may explain health challenges in children of women with HIV

UCLA study finds tryptophan is depleted in breast milk of mothers living with HIV
Photo Credit: Julia Koblitz

A new UCLA study reveals that breast milk from women living with HIV contains significantly lower levels of tryptophan, an essential amino acid likely important for infant immune function, growth, and brain development. This discovery may help explain why children born to women living with HIV experience higher rates of illness and developmental challenges, even when the children themselves are not infected with the virus. 

Approximately 1.3 million children are born to women living with HIV annually worldwide. Even with effective antiretroviral therapy that prevents HIV transmission, these children who are exposed to HIV but not infected continue to face a 50% increase in mortality in low-income settings along with increased risks of infections, growth problems, and cognitive challenges. Prior to antiretroviral therapy, these children had mortality rates that were two to three times higher than infants not exposed to HIV. Understanding why these children remain vulnerable despite not being infected has been a critical gap in maternal and child health research. This study provides the first metabolic explanation for these persistent health disparities and points toward potential nutritional interventions that could protect vulnerable infants.

Gluten sensitivity: It’s not actually about gluten

Photo Credit: Melissa Askew

A landmark study has revealed that gluten sensitivity, which affects approximately 10 percent of the global population, is not actually about gluten but part of the way the gut and brain interact.

The findings are expected to set a new benchmark for how gluten sensitivity is defined, diagnosed and treated.

The research review, published in The Lancet, examined current published evidence for non-coeliac gluten sensitivity (NCGS) to better understand this highly prevalent condition.

People with NCGS experience symptoms after consuming gluten but do not have coeliac disease, an autoimmune disease triggered by gluten. Common symptoms include bloating, gut pain and fatigue.

What Is: A Greenhouse Gas

Image Credit: Skeptical Science
(CC BY 4.0)

A greenhouse gas (GHG) is a constituent of the atmosphere that absorbs and emits longwave radiation, impeding the flow of heat from the Earth's surface into space. This process is the physical basis of the greenhouse effect, formally defined as "the infrared radiative effect of all infrared absorbing constituents in the atmosphere," which includes greenhouse gases, clouds, and some aerosols.

It is essential to distinguish between two distinct phenomena:

The Natural Greenhouse Effect: This is the baseline, life-sustaining process. Greenhouse gases, particularly water vapor and carbon dioxide, are a crucial component of the climate system. Without this natural insulating layer, the heat emitted by the Earth would "simply pass outwards... into space," and the planet's average temperature would be an uninhabitable -20°C.

The Enhanced Greenhouse Effect: This refers to the anthropogenic, or human-caused, intensification of the natural effect. The accumulation of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, primarily from the burning of fossil fuels and other industrial and agricultural activities, is trapping additional heat, driving the rapid warming of the planet's surface and lower atmosphere.

The term "greenhouse" is a persistent and somewhat misleading analogy. A physical greenhouse primarily works by a mechanical process: its glass walls stop convection, preventing the warm air inside from rising and mixing with the colder air outside. The Earth's greenhouse effect is not a physical barrier; it is a radiative one. Greenhouse gases do not trap air. Instead, they absorb outgoing thermal radiation and re-radiate a portion of it back toward the surface, slowing the planet's ability to cool itself. This radiative mechanism, not a convective one, is how a relatively tiny fraction of the atmosphere can have a planet-altering effect.

New Genetic Cause of Microcephaly Identified

Huu Phuc Nguyen, Pauline Ulmke, and Tran Tuoc (from left) contributed significantly to the work. 
Photo Credit: © RUB, Marquard

Microcephaly is a congenital malformation that leads to a significantly reduced brain size and is often accompanied by developmental delay. An international research team led by Dr. Tran Tuoc from the Department of Human Genetics at Ruhr University Bochum, Germany, has discovered a previously unknown genetic cause for this condition. Mutations in the EXOSC10 gene – a central component of the RNA degradation complex (“exosome”) – cause primary microcephaly. The work was published in the journal BRAIN

Precise balance of stem cells

During human brain development, neural stem cells must balance self-renewal and differentiation to build the cerebral cortex – the brain’s outer layer responsible for cognition and perception. If this balance is disturbed, malformations occur. “Recent advances in genome sequencing and genetic engineering are transforming our understanding of neurodevelopmental disorders”, Tuoc Tran says.

Coronal mass ejections at the dawn of the solar system

Artist's depiction of a coronal mass ejection from EK Draconis. The hotter and faster ejection is shown in blue, while the cooler and slower ejection is shown in red.
Image Credit: National Astronomical Observatory of Japan

Down here on Earth we don't usually notice, but the Sun is frequently ejecting huge masses of plasma into space. These are called coronal mass ejections (CMEs). They often occur together with sudden brightenings called flares, and sometimes extend far enough to disturb Earth's magnetosphere, generating space weather phenomena including auroras or geomagnetic storms, and even damaging power grids on occasion.

Scientists believe that when the Sun and the Earth were young, the Sun was so active that these CMEs may have even affected the emergence and evolution of life on the Earth. In fact, previous studies have revealed that young Sun-like stars, proxies of our Sun in its youth, frequently produce powerful flares that far exceed the largest solar flares in modern history.

The Power of Geckos: TU Wien Solves the Puzzle of Large Molecules

An example for large molecules with Van-der-Waals forces
Image Credit: Technische Universität Wien

A puzzle in theoretical chemistry has been solved at TU Wien: a new computational method now makes it possible to calculate the forces between large molecules with unprecedented accuracy.

Why can geckos walk up walls? Why does nitrogen become liquid at –196 °C? Many everyday phenomena can be explained by van der Waals forces – weak bonds between molecules that are notoriously difficult to calculate. For years, scientists have struggled with the fact that different computational methods produced conflicting results.

Now, researchers at TU Wien have resolved this discrepancy and found a solution. Ironically, it was the very method long considered the “gold standard” of quantum chemistry that turned out to be the source of the error: it systematically overestimates the energy contained in certain molecular bonds. With an improved variant, the TU Wien team can now correctly predict the behavior of large molecules – an essential step for understanding biological systems and for advancing renewable energy technologies.

Rare Brain Cell May Hold the Key to Preventing Schizophrenia Symptoms

A new study from the University of Copenhagen shows that a targeted intervention in a specific type of brain cell can change behavior in mice with symptoms resembling schizophrenia. The researchers hope that this knowledge may eventually pave the way for more targeted treatments for conditions such as schizophrenia.
Image Credit: Scientific Frontline / AI generated

A specific type of brain cell is abnormally active in mice exhibiting behavior reminiscent of schizophrenia, according to a new study from the University of Copenhagen. By dampening the activity of these cells, researchers were able to restore the animals’ behavior—an insight that may pave the way for a new preventive treatment.

Difficulty completing everyday tasks. Failing memory. Unusually poor concentration.

For many people living with schizophrenia, cognitive challenges are part of daily life. Alongside well-known symptoms such as hallucinations and delusions, these difficulties can make it hard to live the life they want. That is why researchers at the University of Copenhagen are working to find ways to prevent such symptoms - and they may now be one step closer.

In a new study, researchers discovered that a specific type of brain cell is abnormally active in mice displaying schizophrenia-like behavior. When the researchers reduced the activity of these cells, the mice’s behavior changed.

“Current treatments for cognitive symptoms in patients with diagnoses such as schizophrenia are inadequate. We need to understand more about what causes these cognitive symptoms that are derived from impairments during brain development. Our study may be the first step toward a new, targeted treatment that can prevent cognitive symptoms,” says Professor Konstantin Khodosevich from the Biotech Research and Innovation Center at the University of Copenhagen, and one of the researchers behind the study.

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