Category: Environment and Earth News
Latest Environment and Earth News.
-
Smithsonian Magazine-the Daily.
“Seabird poop may have fueled this pre-Inca Kingdom’s rise to power.”
Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.
Accessed on 13 February 2026, 2321 UTC.
Content and Source: “Smithsonian Magazine-the Daily.”
https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#inbox/FMfcgzQfBshlXmgXMzwhvcCsTVZNXbbb
URL–https://www.smithsonianmag.com.
Friday, February 13, 2026 View in Browser 


Seabird poop, along with food waste, feathers and carcasses, accumulates as guano, which is prized as a nutrient-rich fertilizer. (Richard McManus via Getty Images) Seabird Poop May Have Fueled This Pre-Inca Kingdom’s Rise to Power in South America
The Chincha Kingdom used nutrient-rich seabird guano as fertilizer for maize, according to a new study Sara Hashemi 
ADVERTISEMENT 

A Football-Size Creature That Lived 307 Million Years Ago May Have Been One of the First Land Vertebrates to Eat Plants

Five Things to Know About ‘Wuthering Heights,’ Author Emily Brontë’s Only Novel

Why a Marine Ecologist Was Thrilled to See a Critically Endangered Bird Very Far From Home

Gallop Into the Year of the Horse With These Five Amazing Equine Discoveries
PHOTO OF THE DAY 
Super Wenheyou
© Eric Seidner
FOLLOW SMITHSONIAN MAGAZINE

Questions about this newsletter? Contact Us Write us: Smithsonian Magazine Online MRC 513, P.O. Box 37012 | Washington, D.C. 20013 For all other questions or comments, please visit
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/contact/Unsubscribe / Manage Preferences | Privacy Statement © 2026 Smithsonian Magazine. All Rights Reserved.
-
Scientific American
“Today in Science: EPA scraps landmark climate finding.”
Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.
Accessed on 12 February 2026, 2131 UTC.
Content and Source: “Scientific American-Today in Science.”
https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#inbox/FMfcgzQfBkSGVJkDtDNnkztMDxdcpgzj
URL–https://www.scientificamerican.com.
Please check email link, URL, or scroll down to read your selections. Thanks for joining us today.
Russ Roberts (https://hawaiisciencejournal.com).
February 12, 2026—AI is helping to fight wildfires. Plus, a brewing ski-suit scandal at the Olympics and the EPA dropped one of its landmark findings.—Andrea Gawrylewski, Chief Newsletter EditorTODAY’S NEWS
A ski jumper on day four of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic games. Lars Baron/Getty
- Some ski jumpers in the ongoing Olympics are allegedly enlarging their crotch area by injecting their genitals with engorging chemicals or stuffing their underwear to create bigger bulges. The apparent reason: to gain a boost in jumps. Here’s the physics of how that would work. | 4 min read
- The Environmental Protection Agency scrapped the agency’s landmark 2009 global warming “endangerment finding,” breaking with the long-standing scientific consensus that global warming poses a risk to human health, and ending emissions regulation of cars and trucks. | 2 min read
- Three species of Red Sea fish appear to rely on special “hybrid” retina cells to see in dim underwater environments. | 2 min read
- BlueBird 6, the largest-ever satellite of its kind, recently launched a commercial communications array antenna in orbit around Earth, spanning some 2,400 square feet. | 2 min read
- Unlike the whiskers of other mammals, those of elephants are more flexible at the tip and stiffer closer to the skin, enabling them to complete delicate tasks with their incredibly strong trunks. | 3 min read
- Join the discussion: Cosmologists think the universe started out with a bang from a small, incredibly hot and dense point. But what caused it? And what happened before that? What do you think may have jumpstarted the universe, and do you think we’ll ever answer this question? Share your thoughts by reading the article, scrolling down to the tan box and clicking “Join the Discussion.” | 2 min read
TOP STORIES
AI Fire Detection
Some utility companies are relying on AI-powered tools to detect fires and flag places that are vulnerable to fire. In most cases, fire detection begins with a call to 911. But often blazes are well-established by then or require much more response than if they’d been detected sooner. That’s where AI could step in.Examples:
- One Amsterdam-based company developed an AI program that examines high-resolution satellite imagery based on the locations of a utility company’s power network. The program measures tree height, encroachment near power lines, health and mortality of the trees, alongside wildfire-relevant elements like the presence of dead grasses, shrubs and moisture levels. Using this technology, Pacific Gas and Electric (PG&E), saw a nearly 50 percent drop in the number of ignitions with vegetation as a suspected trigger in 2025 compared with the previous year.
- Another company, based in San Francisco, designed its own pan-tilt-zoom cameras, which can scan 360 degrees to look for anomalies like daytime smoke and nighttime heat signatures that are then cross-checked by human fire experts. The company partnered with Arizona Public Service (APS), Arizona’s largest utility company, and has shortened fire response times over the past two years by up to 25 minutes in some cases.
Why this matters: In 2025 more than 77,000 wildfires were reported in the U.S.—significantly more than the past decade’s average—and burned more than five million acres. Droughts have been recurring as the climate has continued to warm, and wildfires are now almost year-round threats. The new technology promises fewer ignitions, smaller fires, and more efficient deployment of firefighters.
BROUGHT TO YOU BY SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN
Join Scientific American for an insightful conversation on the trends and innovations shaping AI in the year ahead. Editor in Chief David M. Ewalt, technology editor Eric Sullivan, and technology writer Deni Ellis Béchard will share their perspectives on what’s next—and who wins and who loses—in the age of AI.WEIRD METHODS: AI GAMERS
To determine how a board game from the ancient Roman empire was played, a team of scientists employed AI agents as gamers. The stone game board was about eight inches across and etched with angular lines that roughly formed the shape of an oblong octagon inside a rectangle. Its surface showed grooves where players might have dragged their game pieces across.Scientists programmed two AI agents to play the game virtually over and over again using 130 possible game configurations based on other known European games, both ancient and modern. Most of them were variations on an 18th century Scandinavian “blocking game” called haretavl, where three “dog” pieces chase a “hare” piece. As the AI agents played—1,000 games per set of rules—the researchers tracked how the pieces moved and compared the moves with the wear on the board, tracing which gameplay seemed to replicate grooves on the stone.The game that best matched the grooves on the board was indeed a blocking game, with one player using four pieces against the second player’s two. I can only imagine how many times this game board was used by ancient Romans, but I bet the AI agents gave them a run for their money. —Emma Gometz, newsletter editorSCIENTISTS AT WORK
A. Enriqueta Valentín Concepción
Astronomer Desireé Cotto-Figueora is part of NASA’s Near-Earth Object Surveyor mission, which aims to spot big near-Earth asteroids to identify potential hazards. “In high school, I started an astronomy club and visited nearby observatories, including the one I work at now,” she says. “I don’t think that high-school girl would ever have imagined that one day she’d be working on a NASA mission.” Nature | 3 min readContent courtesy of Nature Briefing.
I hope you’ve been enjoying our coverage of the science of the Olympics. I’m always struck by the extremes that athletes will go to in order to fulfill their dreams of gold (you don’t have to look further than Lindsey Vonn competing with a torn ACL). It reminds me of some legendary scientists who have also risked everything to achieve results: Husband and wife volcanologists Katia and Maurice Krafft who gathered data and got closer to volcanoes than anyone had (and were ultimately killed by lava); marine biologist Sylvia Earle, who set a world record in 1979 by walking untethered on the ocean floor to study deep-sea ecology at a depth of 1,250 feet, which required extensive training; and Nobel winner physician Barry Marshall who drank a flask of Helicobacter pylori bacteria to prove it caused stomach ulcers. Science, like athletics, often advances through courageous physical acts.Send your comments, questions or feedback on this newsletter to: newsletters@sciam.com. See you tomorrow.—Andrea Gawrylewski, Chief Newsletter Editor
Subscribe to this and all of our newsletters here.Scientific American
One New York Plaza, New York, NY, 10004
Support our mission, subscribe to Scientific American here
Unsubscribe Preferences View in Browser -
News From Science (AAAS)
“Rare, dangerous side effects of some COVID-19 vaccines explained.”
Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.
Accessed on 12 February 2026, 1518 UTC.
Content and Source: “News From Science (AAAS).
https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#inbox/FMfcgzQfBkSFjmbbCTmjFFfqdLvfbMxG
URL–https://www.science.org.
Please check email link, URL, or scroll down to read your selections. Thanks for joining us today.
Russ Roberts (https://hawaiisciencejournal.com).
Brought to you by Xplorer Symposia 


Daily news and headlines from Science Support nonprofit science journalism
Help News from Science deliver the deep, trustworthy reporting this challenging time requires. Make a tax-deductible gift.Latest News Rare, dangerous side effects of some COVID-19 vaccines explained “Groundbreaking” study uncovers why adenovirus-based shots caused life-threatening blood clots and bleeding in some people By GRETCHEN VOGEL, KAI KUPFERSCHMIDT | 11 FEB 
Read more 
Latest News Pre-Incans collected seabird poop from remote islands to use as fertilizer Guano-based agriculture became highly prized in the Inca empire By CHRISTINA LARSON | 11 FEB 
Read more 
ScienceInsider India has big plans to remove silt from rivers, alarming scientists Dredging and mining sediments increases flood risks and threatens infrastructure, researchers say By ATHAR PARVAIZ | 11 FEB 
Read more 
ScienceShots Snapping shrimp use headgear to protect their brains from shock waves Unusual “hood” is the first known biological armor that protects against traumatic brain injury By CLAUDIA STEINER | 10 FEB 
Read more 
Latest News How did ancient Vietnamese people get such black smiles? Iron salt toothpaste darkened pearly whites By CHRISTA LESTÉ-LASSERRE | 10 FEB 
Read more 
ScienceInsider Japan’s election result could bring a research funding boost Landslide win by Liberal Democratic Party clears path for targeted R&D spending plan By DENNIS NORMILE | 10 FEB 
Read more 
ScienceInsider In unprecedented move, giant monkey research center may become a primate sanctuary University votes to consider ending all studies at Oregon National Primate Research Center. But cost and feasibility are still in doubt By DAVID GRIMM | 9 FEB 
Read more 
ScienceInsider NASA greenlights two earth science missions, to researchers’ relief Orbiting satellites will monitor changes in the stratosphere and on the planet’s surface By JAMES DINNEEN | 9 FEB 
Read more 
ScienceInsider Fire at German particle accelerator could delay multibillion-dollar project Damage to beam’s power supply marks latest setback for troubled Facility for Antiproton and Ion Research By ZACK SAVITSKY | 9 FEB 
Read more 
ScienceInsider Leader’s departure marks latest setback for ambitious Japanese science university Thirteen-year-old Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology hopes to become a global science leader By DENNIS NORMILE | 9 FEB 
Read more Subscribe to News from Science for full access to breaking news and analysis on research and science policy. 

subscribe 
Sifter Our favorite stories from around the internet A surgery-free way to treat appendicitis? BY CLAUDIA STEINER | 11 FEB 
Battery reactions give clues to fighting forever chemicals BY CLAUDIA STEINER | 30 JAN 
Brain-heart communication can impede recovery from heart attacks BY CLAUDIA STEINER | 28 JAN Sign up for ScienceAdviser Science’s free daily newsletter delivers exclusive reporting and analysis as well as the latest science news, commentary, and research. Sign up to delve deeper into what matters most in Science and science. 

Sign up This email was sent to: kh6jrm@gmail.com To stop receiving Science Latest News and Headlines, you can update your preferences or unsubscribe here. American Association for the Advancement of Science
1200 New York Avenue NW, Washington, DC, 20005, USPrivacy Policy Brought to you by Xplorer Symposia 
-
Discover Magazine-The Sciences
“Humans abandoned a bison-hunting site 1,100 years ago-turns out, climate change was to blame.”
Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.
Accessed on 11 February 2026, 1353 UTC.
Content and Source: “Discover Magazine-The Sciences.”
URL–https://www.discovermagazine.com/category/science/the-sciences
Please check URL or scroll down to read your selections. Thanks for joining us today.
Russ Roberts (https://hawaiisciencejournal.com).
The Sciences
Stay Curious
SubscribeTo The Magazine
Save up to 40% off the cover price when you subscribe to Discover magazine.
-
Nature Briefing
“Coffee and tea might reduce dementia risk and slow cognitive decline.”
Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.
Accessed on 10 February 2026, 1951 UTC.
Content and Source: “Nature Briefing.”
https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#inbox/FMfcgzQfBkPnHgwpFqxMCXHkFTXcvmxG
URL–https://www.nature.com
Please check email link, URL, or scroll down to read your selections. Thanks for joining us today.
Russ Roberts (https://hawaiisciencejournal.com).
View this email in your browser Tuesday 10 February 2026 
Hello Nature readers,
Today we learn that coffee has been linked to slower brain ageing, get a view of global hot and cold weather extremes and hear tips for commanding the conference stage.
People who drank decaffeinated coffee did not see any of the cognitive benefits observed in those who drank the caffeinated version, say study authors. (Matthew Horwood/Getty) Caffeine hits might keep the mind sharp
Regular caffeine intake from coffee and tea might slow cognitive decline and reduce a person’s risk of dementia, a huge study suggests. Researchers used data from two health studies to track the caffeine-drinking habits of more than 130,000 people over four decades. They found that drinking 2–3 cups of coffee or 1–2 cups of tea a day was associated with the greatest reductions in rate of cognitive decline, a result that held true even in people with a genetic variant called APOE4, which is associated with Alzheimer’s disease. “However, because it uses observational, not experimental, evidence, the findings can only be considered suggestive,” says cardiometabolic medicine specialist Naveed Sattar.
Nature | 4 min read
Reference: JAMA paper
Dozens of US researchers bound for France
France has announced that its initiative to recruit foreign researchers will award funds to 46 scientists who are relocating to the country — 41 of them from the United States. Eight of these researchers worked at Columbia University, which last year saw hundreds of millions of dollars’ worth of its research grants cut and frozen by the administration of US President Donald Trump. The high proportion of US scientists among those recruited by the programme shows that “enthusiasm and morale for doing science is low” in the United States, says Sharon Milgram, who used to lead training of early-career researchers at the US National Institutes of Health.
Infographic of the week

“January 2026 delivered a stark reminder that the climate system can sometimes simultaneously deliver very cold weather in one region, and extreme heat in another,” says Samantha Burgess of the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF). This view of surface temperatures in the middle troposphere (around 5.5 kilometres above sea level), as seen from over the North pole on 24 January, shows the Northern Hemisphere experiencing severe cold waves as a meandering polar jet stream spilled icy air into Europe and North America. Meanwhile, record-breaking heat provided fuel for extreme conditions, including wildfires and floods, in the Southern Hemisphere. (Euronews | 4 min read)
Reference: Copernicus Climate Change Service and ECMWF announcement (Data source: ERA5. Credit: C3S/ECMWF)Features & opinion
Keep China’s biotech open to the world
International restrictions on China’s fast-growing biotechnology sector — such as a US law that prevents federally funded pharmaceutical companies from working with certain Chinese companies — are prompting some in China to argue that the country should go it alone. That would be a backwards step — for China and the rest of the world, say policy analysts Lizzi Lee and Jing Qian. “Through collaboration, Western biotech and pharma firms are gaining access to China’s drug-manufacturing muscle and vast clinical data sets, and Chinese companies are conducting more rigorous science and so gaining international regulatory approval, and greater visibility and credibility,” the authors write.
How to make your science talks sing
Immunologist and science communicator John Tregoning shares tips on how to command the conference stage, gleaned from fellow scientists and celebrity performers. Get out from behind the lectern, vary your tone of voice and check your IT set-up in advance to avoid losing the crowd’s attention before you’ve even started, he suggests. “The purpose of being on a stage, regardless of the type of performance, is communication,” advised singer–songwriter Frank Turner. “You are engaged in a dialogue, not a monologue, even if the replies of the audience are silent and implied.”
Quote of the day
“Some accessibility is just about getting things done, and some accessibility is about teaching others about how much of a pain in the neck it is to get things done.”Physicist, space scientist and engineer Josh Miele is blind, and has dedicated much of his career to innovations that improve access to everything from metro maps to scientific data. (Nature | 14 min read)
Can you sing every word of mathematician-satirist Tom Lehrer’s 1959 song ‘The Elements’? Or even the updated attempt featuring the latest discoveries from science communicators ASAP Science? If so, you’ll be at an advantage when playing C&EN’s periodic table challenge. Beat the clock or take all the time you need to fill out the whole table in any order. While I frantically type ‘praseodymium’ to the tune of ‘I Am The Very Model Of A Modern Major-General’, why not send me your feedback on this newsletter? Your e-mails are always welcome at briefing@nature.com.
Thanks for reading,
Flora Graham, senior editor, Nature Briefing
With contributions by Jacob SmithFree newsletters from Nature
Want more? Update your preferences to sign up to our other Nature Briefing newsletters:
- Nature Briefing: Anthropocene — climate change, biodiversity, sustainability and geoengineering
- Nature Briefing: AI & Robotics — 100% written by humans, of course
- Nature Briefing: Cancer — a weekly newsletter written with cancer researchers in mind
- Nature Briefing: Careers — insights, advice and award-winning journalism to help you optimize your working life
- Nature Briefing: Microbiology — the most abundant living entities on our planet – microorganisms – and the role they play in health, the environment and food systems
- Nature Briefing: Translational Research — covers biotechnology, drug discovery and pharma

Join our community 

You received this newsletter because you subscribed with the email address: kh6jrm@gmail.com Please add briefing@nature.com to your address book.
Enjoying this newsletter? You can use this form to recommend it to a friend or colleague — thank you!
Had enough? To unsubscribe from this Briefing, but keep receiving your other Nature Briefing newsletters, please update your subscription preferences.
To stop all Nature Briefing emails forever, click here to remove your personal data from our system.
Fancy a bit of a read? View our privacy policy.
Forwarded by a friend? Get the Briefing straight to your inbox: subscribe for free.
Want to master time management, protect your mental health and brush up on your skills? Sign up for our free short e-mail series for working scientists, Back to the lab.
Get more from Nature: Register for free on nature.com to sign up for other newsletters specific to your field and email alerts from Nature Portfolio journals.
Would you like to read the Briefing in other languages?
关注Nature Portfolio官方微信订阅号,每周二为您推送Nature Briefing精选中文内容——自然每周简报。
Nature Portfolio | The Springer Nature Campus, 4 Crinan Street, London, N1 9XW, United Kingdom
Nature Portfolio, part of Springer Nature.
© 2026 Springer Nature Limited. All rights reserved. -
News From Science (AAAS)
“In unprecedented move, giant monkey research center may become a primate sanctuary.”
Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.
Accessed on 10 February 2026, 1422 UTC.
Content and Source: “News From Science (AAAS).
https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#inbox/FMfcgzQfBkPmfdvnSCHcjQbkCxzsGkdB
URL–https://www.science.org.
Thanks for joining us today.
Russ Roberts (https://hawaiisciencejournal.com).
-
Reuters Technology Roundup
“US stocks tumble sparks concern that AI trade is reshaping markets.”
Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.
Accessed on 09 February 2026, 2138 UTC.
Content and Source: “Reuters Technology Roundup.”
https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#inbox/FMfcgzQfBkNdvpkkhVqCZrhftRQCglKp
URL–https://www.reuters.com.
Please check email link, URL, or scroll down to read your selections. Thanks for joining us today.
Russ Roberts (https://hawaiisciencejournal.com).
Technology Roundup

US software stocks tumble sparks concerns that AI trade is reshaping markets
Instagram, YouTube addiction trial kicks off in Los Angeles
Taiwan says 40% shift of chip capacity to US is ‘impossible’
Nio recalls record 246,229 cars over software problem
EU threatens temporary measures to stop Meta blocking AI rivals from WhatsApp
SpaceX prioritizes lunar ‘self-growing city’ over Mars project, Musk says
Imec opens 2.5 bln euros chip pilot line as Europe looks to strengthen AI hand
Chinese chip firm Montage Technology soars 64% in Hong Kong debut
Databricks valued at $134 billion in $5 billion fundraise, CNBC reports
South Korea watchdog says tougher crypto rules needed after $40 billion giveaway
Sponsors are not involved in the creation of newsletters or other Reuters news content. Advertise in this newsletter or on Reuters’ website 

Technology Roundup is sent seven days a week. Think your friend or colleague should know about us? Forward this newsletter to them. They can also sign up here. Want to stop receiving this email? Unsubscribe here. To manage which newsletters you’re signed up for, click here.
This email includes limited tracking for Reuters to understand whether you’ve engaged with its contents. For more information on how we process your personal information and your rights, please see our Privacy Statement.
© 2026 Thomson Reuters. All rights reserved.
3 Times Square, New York, NY 10036
































































