Friday, 12 December 2025

Mars may once have had a much larger moon

 

The Gale crater on Mars. Image courtesy of ZUMA Press, Inc./Alamy

 Joel Kontinen

There are two small moons in orbit around Mars today, but both may be remnants of a much larger moon that had enough of a gravitational pull to drive tides in the Red Planet's lost lakes and seas.

A bigger moon for Mars. that is the result of water that supposedly sprang from it as the smaller moons that encircle they could not produce so much water.  

This is the result of believing in millions of years as it may given time for the moon to be formed.

A Mars crater may have once contained water that sloshed back and forth as a tide came and went. If that is true, it follows that Mars must have had a moon that was massive enough to exert a gravitational pull on the planet’s seas sufficient enough to create tides. Neither of the two moons it currently possesses are big enought for the job.

Suniti Karunatillake at Louisiana State University and his colleagues have found that traces of tidal activity seem to be preserved in thin layers within sedimentary rocks in Gale crater

Source:

Bas den Hond 2025 Mars may once have had a much larger moon | New Scientist 12 December 

Thursday, 11 December 2025

The 'hobbits' may have died out when drought forced them to compete with modern humans, new research suggests

 


Image courtesy of Lanmas via Alamy

Joel Kontinen

Darwinian  evolution and climate change seem to be the standard for how the hobbits died out,  but the only solution to this dilemma was that these humans suffered from a disease that made their heads grow small.

We might not forget that the all are the descendants of  Adam and Eve.

Homo floresiensis — a small ancient human species nicknamed the "hobbit" — may have gone extinct around 50,000 years ago because declining rainfall levels reduced the prey available for hunting. This may have forced them to migrate to areas where they competed with modern humans, new research suggests.

The rainfall shortage would not have been the only reason why they went extinct, the team noted. A volcanic eruption that occurred around 50,000 years ago may also have been a significant factor in their extinction.

So far, fossils of the hobbit have been found in only one cave, known as Liang Bua, on Flores island in Indonesia. Since the discovery of H. floresiensis was first reported publicly in 2004, scientists have been trying to determine how the diminutive species lived and why it went extinct.

Now, in a paper published Monday (Dec. 8) in the journal Communications Earth & Environment, scientists report that rainfall on the island appears to have declined considerably before 50,000 years ago. They also found that the population of Stegodon, a genus of a now-extinct elephant relative that the hobbits hunted, also diminished before vanishing from Flores around 50,000 years ago.

to determine how rainfall on the island changed, the team studied a stalagmite from Liang Luar, a cave on Flores that is close to Liang Bua. Stalagmites grow when water evaporates and forms calcium carbonate. The new growth also has small amounts of other minerals, such as magnesium. Stalagmites don't grow as fast during times of water shortage, and the growth that does occur tends to have less calcium carbonate and more magnesium, the researchers noted in their paper. This means that by measuring the ratio of magnesium to calcium carbonate, the team can determine when rainfall decreased or increased, and by how much.

The researchers found that average annual rainfall declined from 61.4 inches (1,560 millimetres) 76,000 years ago to 40 inches (990 mm) 61,000 years ago. The island continued to have this reduced rainfall level through 50,000 years ago. At that point, there was an eruption at a nearby volcano, and a layer of ejected rock covered the island.

When the team analyzed the remains of Stegodon teeth, they found that the number of these animals decreased on the island between 61,000 and 50,000 years ago, before vanishing after the eruption. The researchers think the reduction in rainfall led to a decrease in Stegodon populations, making life more difficult for the hobbits as they formed a major part of their diet.

As rainfall declined, Stegodon populations may have migrated to the coasts of the island, with the hobbits following them.

"We suspect that if the Stegodon population were declining due to reduced river flow then they would have migrated away to a more consistent water source," Nick Scroxton, a research scientist of hydrology, paleoclimate and paleoenvironments at University College Dublin and co-author of the paper, told Live Science in an email. "So it makes sense for the hobbits to have followed."

It's possible that moving to the coast could have brought the hobbits into contact with Homo sapiens groups who were expanding throughout the region. This contact could have resulted in competition for resources and even intergroup conflict, Scroxton suggested. Additionally, the volcanic eruption around 50,000 years ago would have made things even worse for the hobbits.

"This looks like a very impressive study," said Julien Luoys, a palaeontologist at Griffith University in Australia who has conducted extensive research on hominins but was not involved in the new research, told Live Science in an email. A reduction in rainfall can have a major impact on an island as small as Flores, he noted.

"There's only a limited amount of space on an island, and only so many types of environments that can be harboured," Luoys said. "When things get drier, an animal can't simply move off the island, and any potential refugia they could use are going to either disappear or become very crowded, very quickly."

Debbie Argue, an honorary lecturer in the School of Archaeology and Anthropology at the Australian National University, who was not involved in the work, also praised the research. "The paper gives us an excellent insight into a changing climatic environment in the region and is a most welcome contribution to knowledge about past conditions on Flores," Argue said.

Source:

Owen Jarus 2025 The 'hobbits' may have died out when drought forced them to compete with modern humans, new research suggests | Live Science 8. December

Tuesday, 9 December 2025

African Christians are persecuted


 African Christians are persecuted. Yet the United Nations is silent. This is fueled by Islamic extremists. 

Sunday, 7 December 2025

Melanie Phillips tells of the danger of Islamic radicalization


 Melanie Phillips is British journalist and author. She says that the West may be hampered by Islamic radicalization. She also says that the Western idea is based on Judeo-Christian worldwiew.

Saturday, 6 December 2025

Comet 3I/ATLAS from beyond solar system carries key molecule for life

 

Image courtesy of International Gemini Observatory/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/Shadow the Scientist; J. Miller & M. Rodriguez (Intl Gemini Observatory/NSF NOIRLab), T.A. Rector (University of Alaska Anchorage/NSF NOIRLab), M. Zamani (NSF NOIRLab)

Joel Kontinen

Astronomers have discovered that 3I/ATLAS is carrying methanol and other chemicals that were probably important in the origin of lifeComet 3I/ATLAS is only the third known visitor to our solar system from elsewhere.

The interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS is belching out carbon-rich chemical compounds at higher rates than almost any other comet in our solar system. One of these compounds is methanol, a key ingredient in prebiotic chemistry that hasn’t been seen in other interstellar objects.

3I/ATLAS, which is only the third visitor to our solar system from elsewhere in the galaxy, appears to be quite unlike any comet from our own galactic neighbourhood. As it travelled towards the sun, an envelope of water vapour and gas rapidly grew around it, which also contained much greater amounts of carbon dioxide than we see in typical solar system comets. The comet light also appeared to be much redder than is typical, surface chemistry, and it began releasing its gases while relatively far away from the sun, an indication that it might not have passed close to another star for hundreds of millions of years, or since it left its home star system.

Millions of years and evolution are tied together in this study. Both cannot be believed. Live needs a designer, that evolution is not.

Source: 

Alex Wilkins 2025 Comet 3I/ATLAS from beyond solar system carries key molecule for life | New Scientist 5 December

Thursday, 4 December 2025

Ancient human artefacts found near caves in Arabian desert

 

A cave near a site of ancient human occupation in the Arabian desert. Image courtesy of Huw S. Groucutt, et al

Joel Kontinen

Ancient humans used to live in the Arabian desert.  Evolutionists say that in the beginning it took place around 100,000 years ago but the dates of this is very doubtful.

The dry deserts of north-eastern Saudi Arabia were once wet enough to host vibrant communities of animals – and researchers have just found evidence that ancient hominins lived there too.

“This paper provides the first outline of the archaeological record of inland north-east Arabia – a vast region that has been unstudied,” says Monika Markowska at Northumbria University, UK, who wasn’t involved in the work.

The research focuses on a mostly underexplored region of the Arabian peninsula between Qatar and Kuwait. Records of a prehistoric human presence in this area are non-existent, yet scientists know it once received enough rain to support a thriving ecosystem.

Source:

Taylor Mitchell Brown 2025 Ancient human artefacts found near caves in Arabian desert | New Scientist 2 December 

Tuesday, 2 December 2025

San of Hamas tells about Hamas

 


The Son of Hamas tells about Hamas, which has been designated terrorist organization in the West and in many Muslim countries.