NEW The ceramic polymer ring (pictured left), created by inventors in San Francisco, California, links to an app (top right) to give wearers personalised suggestions and goals to help them sleep better. It costs £150 ($229), comes in black and white and is said to be scratch resistant and waterproof. An illustration of its internals are pictured bottom right.
Experts discovered an 'extraordinary' line of 4,500-year-old giant stones 90 or more stones, lying 3ft underground
Experts discovered an 'extraordinary' line of 4,500-year-old giant stones 90 or more stones, lying 3ft underground
Unearthed after 2,800 years: Turkish archaeologists find Kingdom of Uratu pithos tombs during painstaking excavation
Historians believe they have uncovered a series of burial chambers in Turkey dating back to the Kingdom of Uratu, which ruled the country from the mid-ninth century until its defeat by the Medes. Archaeologist are now carrying out the painstaking task of unearthing the pithos chambers, which are like large ceramic jars (above main). They have been discovered in the town of Vans (inset), which was the capital of the ancient kingdom.
Forget the 'floating spoon' on Mars, now there's a whole cutlery set! Nasa's Curiosity images reveal more strange shaped rocks on the red planet
Earlier this week, one group claimed they had seen a 'floating spoon' on Mars captured by Curiosity's Mastcam on sol 1089 of the mission. Now, a new wider version of the image reveals more 'spoons' nearby and even something resembling a chopstick (inset) on the same rock outcrop. Exerts estimate the spoons are around 10cm long. they are caused by the windy conditions on Mars breaking down the rock.
- Stonehenge II is found! Radar search reveals giant monument from 4,500 years ago just one mile from famous Wiltshire site
- What Facebook REALLY knows about you: Take the test that can work out your personality based on nothing but your 'likes'
- Boeing reveals its biggest plane yet: $400m 777-9X has a wingspan so big the tips have to be folded up so it can fit into airports
- Riddle of the lost city under a lake: Was one of Jesus' disciples laid to rest in ancient metropolis in Kyrgyzstan?
- Could a RING improve your sleep? £150 Oura monitors heart rate, temperature and movement to suggest lifestyle changes
- Think you're a good driver? Take this psychological test to find out if you're a 'punisher', an 'escapee' or a know-it-all
- Smartphone firms are developing 'safe screens' which emit less of the blue light it is feared prevents people sleeping
- WhatsApp hits 900 million users: Messaging app DOUBLES its downloads since being bought by Facebook last year
- Stunning moment a SEAL photobombs the Milky Way
- Have scientists found a cure for seasickness? Gadget that applies mild electric current to the scalp 'could eradicate nausea'
- It tastes out of this world! Whisky which was fired into space has returned with improved flavour, say researchers
- Student who hoped to raise £13,000 for his 'Swiss Army Knife' travel jacket raises £6MILLION - making it Kickstarter's most funded clothing project ever
- How Prince George will look aged 60! App allows parents to predict their children's faces in later life... but would YOU want to know?
- Unearthed after 2,800 years: Turkish archaeologists find Kingdom of Uratu pithos tombs during painstaking excavation
- Do you know your LOL from you PAL? Government is launching a social media dictionary to help parents understand their children’s online code
- Need a battery boost? Asus and Samsung are the fastest charging handsets... while Apple's iPhone lags behind
- To save your marriage, UNFRIEND your partner on Facebook: Therapist warns that social media can be toxic to a relationship
- Boeing reveals its biggest plane yet: $400m 777-9X has a wingspan so big the tips have to be folded up so it can fit into airports
- What Facebook REALLY knows about you: Take the test that can work out your personality based on nothing but your 'likes'
- Forget the ‘floating spoon’ on Mars, now there's a whole cutlery set! Nasa's Curiosity images reveal more strange shaped rocks on the red planet
- Creepy crawlies as you've never seen them before: Tiny microscope that could revolutionise the way objects are magnified is put to the test in the Amazon rainforest
- Gears of War Ultimate Edition: Remastered classic takes chainsaw-slashing to new heights
- Indestructible 'water bear' bug that can survive in space could revolutionise computing
- Smartphone firms are developing 'safe screens' which emit less of the blue light it is feared prevents people sleeping
- 'Steve Jobs didn't know technology and just wanted to be important': Steve Wozniak claims his business partner played no role in the design of early Apple devices
- To save your marriage, UNFRIEND your partner on Facebook: Therapist warns that social media can be toxic to a relationship
- Think you're a good driver? Take this psychological test to find out if you're a 'punisher', an 'escapee' or a know-it-all
- 'Vampire' squirrel caught on film for first time: Fluffy yet ferocious rodent has a reputation for attacking deer
- Nasa reveals bizarre 'hedgehog' robot that can roll and fall around alien planets
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Creepy crawlies as you've never seen them before: Tiny microscope that could revolutionise the way objects are magnified is put to the test in the Amazon rainforest
Foldscope was tested out by US field biologist Aaron Pomerantz, who spent a month in the Peruvian Amazon rainforest where he used the device to capture a series of striking images. The 25-year-old used it to take pictures of ants protecting a mealybug (left) and a close-up image of an Aphid, also known as plant lice (right). The device is 70mm x 20mm in size and weighs just 0.3oz - much lighter than a traditional microscope at around 512oz.
The Starliner is set for blast off! Boeing opens massive facility to build spacecraft that will see US return to manned spaceflight
The Starliner is being built at the Commercial Crew and Cargo Processing Facility, or C3PF, at Nasa's Kennedy Space Center in Florida (left and bottom right). Nasa had used the facility for 20 years as a shuttle processing hangar and for the extensive preps and testing of the space shuttle main engines in the engine shop. The Starliner CST-100 is expected to begin ferrying astronauts to the space station within two years. It may also take paying customers to the awe-inspiring heights of low-Earth orbit and the unique sensation of sustained weightlessness.
'Vampire' squirrel caught on film for first time: Fluffy yet ferocious rodent has a reputation for attacking deer
Scientists used motion sensitive cameras to film the 14 inch long elusive tufted ground squirrel (pictured left) in the forest of Gunung Palung National Park in Indonesia. Local legends say the rodent leaps from trees on to passing muntjac deer (bottom right), slashing their necks before disemboweling the carcass. However, the new footage shows the fluffy creature foraging harmlessly in the leaf-litter of the forest floor. An illustration of the so called 'vampire' squirrel is shown top right.
Riddle of the lost city under a lake: Was Jesus' disciple Matthew laid to rest in ancient metropolis in Kyrgyzstan?
The inscriptions on an ancient ceramic pot (left) found in Lake Issyk-Kul, Kyrgyzstan, could prove the existence of a monastery where Matthew the Apostle (top right) is thought to be buried. If the stamp is analysed to be Armenian or Syrian, it would strengthen the theory of a medieval Armenian monastery nearby where - as legend has it - St Matthew was finally laid to rest. More than 200 items including ceramics, whetstones and bronze sickles were found underneath the lake by divers (bottom right) from Tomsk State University. Some Orthodox Christians have long believed St Matthew, one of Jesus' disciples, was buried in Kyrgyzstan where they claim he died on his to India. Others argue he was buried in Syria - or even Ethiopia.
Mystery of what killed 200,000 antelope in one MONTH solved? Normally harmless bacteria appear to have turned on the endangered animals
Biologists were shocked by the scale of the deaths of saiga antelope in Kazakhstan this year, which saw 134,000 die in a couple of weeks (pictured top right), but are now finding clues pointing to the cause. They have found toxins from the normally harmless Pasteurella bacteria in tissue samples from the animals (pictured left), which appear to have caused massive internal bleeding. However, researchers are now trying to unravel what caused the bacteria to become so deadly. Workers are pictured bottom right clearing away saiga carcasses.
The 'Son of Concorde' comes closer to reality: Drone that will use flexible wings could reduce sonic booms on future aircraft
The drone, nicknamed 'Buckeye', recently completed a flight test by Nasa in California. Buckeye's mission is to test out something known as 'aeroservoelastic technology', which is how a plane's controls adapt to vibrations during flight. The subscale aircraft is 7.5 feet long, has a 28-foot wingspan, weighs about 480 pounds, and is powered by two small 90-pound thrust JetCat P400 turbojet engines. The knowledge gained about flutter will be used in designing the proposed supersonic X-54
Is Dyson working on an electric CAR? Firm's vehicle could run for twice as long as its rivals using breakthrough batteries
Dyson (founder Sir James Dyson pictured left) made the statements during an earnings announcement in which it revealed the Wiltshire-based firm's revenues were up 10 per cent in 2014 to £1.3billion thanks to surge in demand for its products. When asked if it would join Apple (rumoured Apple car pictured top right) and Tesla (P85D pictured bottom right), in launching a car, Dyson boss Max Conze said: 'We are ruling nothing out. Like our friends in Cupertino we are also unhealthily obsessive when it comes to taking apart our products to make them better.'
The science of SUPERMODELS: Researchers create algorithm that scours Instagram to find the best new talent
Researchers at Indiana University say they have created an algorithm that can predict the popularity of new faces to the world of modelling with over 80 per cent accuracy. They first gathered statistics on 400 fashion models from the Fashion Model Directory. The team then analysed accounts of the models on Instagram (pictured). A higher than average number of posts produced a 15 per cent higher chance of walking a runway, But surprisingly, more 'likes' could lower these chances by about 10 per cent.
Chimpanzees who attacked drone with a STICK took 'unique and deliberate action' say researchers
An Arnhem TV station has lost one of its expensive drones after a chimpanzee managed to knock it out of the sky with a stick as it was supposed to be capturing footage of the Royal Burgers Zoo chimp enclosure for a TV show. The April incident has now been analysed by researchers, who claim it was a 'unique and deliberate action'.
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British photographers Fiona Rogers and Anup Shah captured apes in Indonesia and Borneo - and highlighted how human our evolutionary cousins are.