The bacteria, (pictured main and in a test tube, inset) seen as a potential elixir of life, was found in 2009, embedded in ancient permafrost at a site known as Mammoth Mountain in Yakutia, the largest region in Siberia. Russian scientists claim to be making progress in adapting the 3.5 million year old 'eternal' bacteria called Bacillus F to improve the longevity of humans.
iOS 9 feature reveals how much time YOU'VE wasted checking Facebook and playing Candy Crush
iOS 9 feature reveals how much time YOU'VE wasted checking Facebook and playing Candy Crush
The CYBERDOGS of war: Canines could spy on the enemy using remote-controlled cameras mounted on their backs
The Cerberus Digital Canine Transmitter, developed by Dorset-based Cobham Tactical Communications and Surveillance, is a pop up camera that can be mounted to a dog harness (pictured left). The camera is designed to allow the animal to squeeze through tight spaces and the handler can receive images from the camera on a handheld device (pictured top right) up to 1,600 feet away. It is expected to be used by special forces or police for surveillance or reconnaissance. A previous version of the technology used a collar mounted camera for search and rescue missions (pictured bottom right).
The world's first scale model of the solar system is created in Nevada, and it covers 7 MILES of desert
Based on Earth being the size of a half-inch marble, the team calculated the scale sizes of each orbit and planet, which were represented by balls and lightbulbs. They then shot time-lapse images (inset) of their cars driving around the orbits over 36 hours from the vantage point of a nearby mountain. The project was captured in a short film, titled 'To Scale: The Solar System' by Wylie Overstreet and Alex Gorosh.
- Now Apple 'game shames' iPhone users: New iOS 9 feature reveals how much time YOU'VE wasted checking Facebook and playing Candy Crush
- Hundreds of millions of iPhone users at risk as Apple store is hit by its first major hack: Malicious codes found in some of China's most popular Apps
- The world’s first scale model of the solar system is created in Nevada, and it covers 7 MILES of desert
- Could YOU land Elon Musk's Falcon 9 on a barge? Online game puts your skills to the test and reveals just how difficult it is
- Does this bacteria hold the key to the 'fountain of youth'? 3.5-million-year-old Siberian specimen boosts longevity and the immune system
- Edward Snowden says aliens could be sending us messages - but we may never detect them because they're encrypted
- British scientists set to genetically modify embryos for the first time in bid to understand why some women suffer repeated miscarriages
- How good are YOU at paying attention? Take the test that reveals just how bad humans are at noticing obvious changes
- The only remote you'll ever need: Logitech's Harmony Elite works with 270,000 gadgets from TVs to speakers and lights
- Hate hoovering? There's an app for that! Robot vacuum cleaner can be controlled remotely by your PHONE
- The CYBERDOGS of war: Canines could spy on the enemy using remote-controlled cameras mounted on their backs
- So long Project Morpheus! Sony officially names its virtual reality headset PlayStation VR and confirms it will go on sale next year
- Create a playlist with your FACE: Spotify tool scans selfies to see how you're feeling and makes music mixes to suit this mood
- The truth behind the five-second rule: Scientist reveals the chances of you getting sick from eating food dropped on the floor
- Navy seal! Photographer catches the astonishing moment mammal on a mission hitches a ride on a WHALE
- Birds fall in love too! Finches choose partners in a similar way to humans and have more chicks when they are enamoured
- Amazon takes aim at Apple: Firm revamps its Fire TV and launches $50 high-spec 7-inch Fire tablet
- Hundreds of millions of iPhone users at risk as Apple store is hit by its first major hack: Malicious codes found in some of China's most popular Apps
- Now Apple 'game shames' iPhone users: New iOS 9 feature reveals how much time YOU'VE wasted checking Facebook and playing Candy Crush
- Does this bacteria hold the key to the 'fountain of youth'? 3.5-million-year-old Siberian specimen boosts longevity and the immune system
- An end to puddles? Bizarre 'thirsty' concrete sucks up hundreds of gallons of water in less than a minute
- The world’s first scale model of the solar system is created in Nevada, and it covers 7 MILES of desert
- The 'Tesla of planes' has arrived: Futuristic Icon A5 seaplane reaches 110mph, and can be flown by almost anyone (as long as you have $197,000)
- Skype goes offline: Glitch prevents users from making calls and logging in
- Edward Snowden says aliens could be sending us messages - but we may never detect them because they're encrypted
- How good are YOU at paying attention? Take the test that reveals just how bad humans are at noticing obvious changes
- Hate hoovering? There's an app for that! Robot vacuum cleaner can be controlled remotely by your PHONE
- The CYBERDOGS of war: Canines could spy on the enemy using remote-controlled cameras mounted on their backs
- Hideous knobby-faced beast was the first to stand on all fours: 260 million-year-old fossils reveal creature walked like a cow
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Hideous knobby-faced beast was the first to stand on all fours: 260 million-year-old fossils reveal creature walked like a cow
Dubbed Bunostegos akokanensis, the knobby-faced 'pre-reptile' was unlike any other animal that roamed the supercontinent Pangea. Fossils found in Niger, suggest the long bone in all of its limbs did not have a structure called a twist that would allow it to move flat on the ground. The animal's shoulder was also not able to move in a way that allowed the creature to sprawl on its stomach. And the elbow of all four limbs would not allow the animal to sprawl on the ground. The bones are highlighted bottom left.
Could YOU land Elon Musk's Falcon 9 on a barge? Online game puts your skills to the test and reveals just how difficult it is
The 8-bit game, called SpaceX Falcon Lander (screenshot shown left) was developed by MIT Media Lab in Cambridge, Massachusetts and lets people use a keyboard's arrow keys to manoeuvre the rocket. The aim is to slow down and land the rocket on the platform, which may sound simple but is in fact fiendishly difficult. It's designed to show the difficulties faced by the SpaceX mission in landing the Falcon 9 Lander (top right) on a platform at sea (bottom right).
How polluted is YOUR city? Live interactive map shows exactly how much harmful smog is in the air where you live right now
Beijing based environmental monitoring project, the World Air Quality Index is publishing real time pollution maps across the world (pictured) to reveal levels of harmful particulate matter. PM2.5 particulates from car fumes and fossil fuel burning are thought to pose a high risk to human health. The maps allow city residents to see when are the best times to venture outside.
Offerings to the god Osiris found hidden beneath ancient Sudanese pyramids: 2,000-year-old structures marked Kushite graves
The pyramids (a ruin is shown left) were found close to the ancient town of Gematon in Sudan, which as part of the ancient kingdom of Kush. Kushites built pyramids for the dead from around 800 BC until their kingdom collapsed in approximately 400AD. In one tomb below a pyramid, archaeologists found an offering table (top right) which features a carving showing a priest offering incense to the ruler of the underworld, Osiris (pictured bottom right in a scene from an Ancient Egyptian tomb).
Amazing 'end of times' lights form among clouds over Costa Rica, bringing crowds to a standstill to watch incredible phenomenon
Crowds were brought to a standstill when they witnessed an astonishing 'end of times' lights form among clouds over Costa Rica. The spectacle, in the capital of San Jose, occurred on the country's Independence Day last Tuesday. It led some to describe the incredible phenomenon as being 'like a sign of God'.
From a beautiful sunset to majestic mountains: Stunning new images of Pluto reveal its 'Earth-like' landscape in incredible detail
Among the highlights is an incredible panorama (left) showing a sunset on the icy world, taken by New Horizons probe 15 minutes after it flew by the Pluto system in July. It shows more than a dozen thin haze layers extending from near the ground to at least 60 miles (100km) above the surface. Combined with other recently downloaded pictures, scientists say they now have evidence for a remarkably Earth-like 'water' cycle on Pluto - one that involves soft and exotic ices, including nitrogen, rather than water ice. The top right image shows the location of the glaciers seen in the panorama. The bottom right reveals local hills and small mountains on the surface.
Inside the cave that was home to Denisovans, Neanderthals AND Homo sapiens: Different species of early man used the same shelter for thousands of years
Geneticists at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Munich, Germany, studied DNA from three teeth (like the one pictured top right) and a pinky bone (pictured bottom right) found in the Denisova Cave in the Altai Mountains (pictured left). They found they belonged to individuals who lived thousands of years apart. The findings have provided fresh clues about how this mysterious human species lived and even that they had a strong sense of 'home'.
Samsung's 'Foldable Valley' could launch in January: Flexible smartphone uses a bendy plastic display to open and close like a book
Rumours suggest the South Korean tech giant's 'Foldable Valley' handset will have a bendy plastic display so it can fold like a notebook (conceptual image shown). The handset is expected to launch as early as January 2016 and trusted rumour blog SamMobile is reported that anonymous sources claim the device is currently being tested in China.
Huge swarms of AI drones are coming: Team sets world record by launching 50 UAVs controlled by just ONE person
The 50 UAVs were launched and flown autonomously in two 'sub-swarms' of 25 UAVs each. Once in the air, the drones talked to each using high-powered Wi-Fi. Researchers at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California, want to eventually create swarms of drones that act on their own on the battlefield.
Is the Earth causing the moon to SHRINK? Gravitational pull of our planet is creating thousands of cracks on the lunar surface
Scientists have spotted more than 3,200 faults - each several miles long and dozens of feet deep (pictured left) - on the surface of the moon, which appear to be caused by the tidal forces generated by the Earth (illustrated bottom right). These combine with the shrinkage of the moon's interior as it cools to leave large faults crisscrossing the surface (shown on the map top right).
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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.