Richard III, Neanderthal dating, Dognition, gold bug

Richard III (Nature, New Scientist, Science Daily)

"Now is the winter of our disinterment." Richard III, act 1, scene 1, sorta.

The bones found under a parking lot in England (and therefore a "car park") turn out to be those of King Richard III, the last of the Plantagenet dynasty, famously portrayed as a villain by Shakespeare. The bones show that, yes, just as legend says, he had a back deformity. (There used to be a church where the parking lot now is.)

Neanderthal dating (Science Daily, Science News)

This is "dating" as in figuring out the date of something, not as in dinner and a movie. Some of the most recent Neanderthal bones have been re-dated; if the new findings stand, these Neanderthals lived longer ago than we thought. There aren't that many Neanderthal skeletons to go around, so re-dating just a couple is significant. It may mean that modern humans and Neanderthals did not overlap in time as long as we thought.

Dognition (Scientific American, Dognition.com)

"Dognition" is a project and web site run by neuroscientists Brian Hare, all about canine intelligence, which Hare claims is even higher than most people think. Dogs are extremely good at reading us - after all, they've been bred for it for thousands of years. This site helps us read them.

Gold bug (Science News)

Here's a handy microbe - a bacterium that concentrates gold out of its food, into a convenient solid form.

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, Manchester Science Examiner

Earl Wajenberg (pronounced WY-en-berg, contact him) is a professional writer. He has masters degrees in physics and the history and philosophy of science. Science has been a lifelong fascination for him.

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