Live Science Newsletter

Author:

“Pectoral with coins:  ‘One of the most intricate pieces of gold jewelry to survive from mid-sixth century.'”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.

Accessed on 30 November 2025, 1336 UTC.

Content and Source:  “Live Science Newsletter.”

https://newsletter.smartbrief.com/servlet/encodeServlet?issueid=575D3D87-57C1-4033-A1FE-D0617AF1FBAE&sid=B61BC6F9-DEC9-4AD1-8BD3-FF27A86CCC5D

URL–https://www.livescience.com.

Please check email link, URL, or scroll down to read your selections.  Thanks for joining us today.

Russ Roberts (https://hawaiisciencejournal.com).

Created for kh6jrm@gmail.com | Web Version
November 30, 2025
CONNECT WITH LIVESCIENCE X Facebook YouTube Instagram
LiveScienceSR
SIGN UP ⋅   SHARE

Sunday science
From amazing animals to the wonders of space, here’s this week’s selection of hidden gems you might have missed.
Astonishing artifacts

Pectoral with coins: 'One of the most intricate pieces of gold jewelry to survive from the mid-sixth century'
Pectoral with coins: ‘One of the most intricate pieces of gold jewelry to survive from the mid-sixth century’
This sixth-century pectoral comprises 14 Byzantine gold coins and a gold disc gathered over two centuries.
Read More
Space photo of the week

Live Science
Giant ‘diamond ring’ sparkles 4,500 light-years away in the Cygnus constellation
NASA’s SOFIA observatory captured a rare image of a glowing gas ring in Cygnus X — a vast star-forming region 4,500 light-years away.
Read More
Diagnostic dilemma

Live Science
A man’s muscles looked strangely deformed. Doctors found they were leaking calcium into his blood.
A man showed up to the hospital with vomiting, weakness, failing kidneys and sky-high calcium. The culprit was a muscle-enhancing oil he injected into his chest and arms years ago.
Read More
Earth from space

Live Science
Twin tornadoes tear perfectly parallel tracks through Mississippi during deadly ‘superstorm’
A satellite photo from March shows a pair of parallel tornado tracks in Mississippi, leftover from a deadly storm system that spawned over 100 twisters in more than a dozen U.S. states.
Read More
In science history this week

Live Science
Iconic ‘Lucy’ fossil discovered, transforming our understanding of human evolution — Nov. 24, 1974
On an expedition in the Awash Valley in Ethiopia, two anthropologists uncovered the bones of a 3.2 million-year-old human ancestor. The iconic “Lucy” fossil would reveal much about our species’ tangled family tree.
Read more

Astronomy graduate student Jocelyn Bell Burnell discovers a signal of 'little green men,' but her adviser gets the Nobel Prize — Nov. 28, 1967
Astronomy graduate student Jocelyn Bell Burnell discovers a signal of ‘little green men,’ but her adviser gets the Nobel Prize — Nov. 28, 1967
Astronomer Jocelyn Bell Burnell detected a strange signal from outer space that would lead to the discovery of the radio pulsar. The signal, once described as coming from “little green men,” would earn her adviser the Nobel Prize in physics in 1974.
Read more
Feed your curiosity: Sign up to our other newsletters for the latest discoveries, mind-bending mysteries and expert insight from Live Science.
Sign Up
Future Follow LiveScience X Facebook YouTube Instagram
Contact Us: Feedback | Advertise
Sign Up | Update Profile | Unsubscribe
Privacy Policy | Cookies Policy | Terms and Conditions
Future US LLC ©
Full 7th Floor, 130 West 42nd Street, New York, NY, 10036

 


Discover more from Hawaii Science Journal.

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Leave a Reply

Discover more from Hawaii Science Journal.

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading