SYFY WIRE Elizabeth Rayne The first pregnant mummy ever found in Egypt has been expecting for almost 2,000 years By Elizabeth Rayne 3 years ago How Proxima Centauri’s mega-flare could change our minds about star tantrums and aliens By Elizabeth Rayne 3 years ago This AI isn’t just any artificial brain—it actually functions like the human brain By Elizabeth Rayne 3 years ago New bacteria named after Pokémon because we gotta catch (at least discover) ‘em all By Elizabeth Rayne 3 years ago Would humongous dinosaurs sink or swim? The answer might surprise you By Elizabeth Rayne 3 years ago Brave New World is being reinvented with synthetic embryos—and the right reasons By Elizabeth Rayne 3 years ago Dark matter could be powering a galaxy that orbits the Milky Way until they collide By Elizabeth Rayne 3 years ago In a Martian oxymoron, icy clouds could have kept the Red Planet warm enough for life to thrive By Elizabeth Rayne 3 years ago Dinosaurs that weren’t supposed to fly could still (sort of) fly By Elizabeth Rayne 3 years ago It rains on the Sun, and as if that isn’t bizarre enough, there’s a new type of solar rain By Elizabeth Rayne 3 years ago SYFY WIRE | Page 46
The first pregnant mummy ever found in Egypt has been expecting for almost 2,000 years By Elizabeth Rayne 3 years ago
How Proxima Centauri’s mega-flare could change our minds about star tantrums and aliens By Elizabeth Rayne 3 years ago
This AI isn’t just any artificial brain—it actually functions like the human brain By Elizabeth Rayne 3 years ago
New bacteria named after Pokémon because we gotta catch (at least discover) ‘em all By Elizabeth Rayne 3 years ago
Brave New World is being reinvented with synthetic embryos—and the right reasons By Elizabeth Rayne 3 years ago
Dark matter could be powering a galaxy that orbits the Milky Way until they collide By Elizabeth Rayne 3 years ago
In a Martian oxymoron, icy clouds could have kept the Red Planet warm enough for life to thrive By Elizabeth Rayne 3 years ago
It rains on the Sun, and as if that isn’t bizarre enough, there’s a new type of solar rain By Elizabeth Rayne 3 years ago