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Newly identified fossil sheds light on evolutionary history of saber-toothed cats

Fossils tucked away in a museum drawer and identified merely as “feline” are actually from a very ancient and enigmatic saber-toothed cat that inhabited North America more than 5 million years ago. Newly identified by a UC Berkeley paleontologist, the nearly complete skull helps clarify how these large-fanged felines evolved over millennia before going extinct about 10,000 years ago.

One clear takeaway is that these cats started out with smaller fangs—the upper canines—but evolved increasingly longer ones that may have led to their ultimate demise. California’s state fossil, Smilodon fatalis (originally called S. californicus), was the culmination of that trend. It had some of the largest upper canines of any saber-toothed animal—up to 7 inches (18 centimeters) long—but was the last saber-toothed animal to survive.

According to Berkeley postdoctoral fellow Narimane Chatar, the cranium, teeth and lower jaw (or mandible) she stumbled upon in the American Museum of Natural History in New York are from the species Adelphailurus kansensis, originally discovered in Kansas and known only from jaw fragments and teeth. Now, with the first complete skull of the cat, she has been able to tentatively place the animal within the family tree of saber-toothed carnivores and contrast it with the most recognizable saber-toothed cat, Smilodon, which ranged throughout the Americas.

The AI Future No One Wants to Talk About

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In today’s video I speculate about the future of artificial intelligence.

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Wikipedia Co-Founder Has Been Banned from Editing the Site

It’s important to mention that Sanger had started the WikiProject Intellectual Diversity project to reinforce Wikipedia’s original purpose, which was to provide knowledge neutrally and transparently, especially because, in later years, some people have thought that the site leans toward left-wing ideas.

Sanger said that he feels more sorry for Wikipedia because he was trying to fix the site, but it was overrun by bias and censorship. He wrote about the whole thing for The Free Press, but you can read it only if you are willing to pay the subscription fee.

Huxley-Gödel Machine: Human-Level Coding Agent Development by an Approximation of the Optimal Self-Improving Machine

HTML conversions sometimes display errors due to content that did not convert correctly from the source. This paper uses the following packages that are not yet supported by the HTML conversion tool. Feedback on these issues are not necessary; they are known and are being worked on.

12 Critical Technologies Reshaping the Industrial Era: A Resource/Framework for Understanding Convergence, Risk, and Resilience

Exploring 12 critical technologies reshaping the industrial era: a resource for understanding convergence, risk, and resilience.

This framework outlines 12 critical technologies, their applications, and their impact across 13 essential infrastructure sectors, along with data-driven imperatives for action. It is designed to be a living resource, regularly updated, and is primarily based on my published writings in various outlets, including Forbes, Skytop Media Group, GovCon Wire, Homeland Security Today Magazine, Security Information Watch, and my book “Inside Cyber.”

The findings are that these emerging technologies that will shape our future do not operate in isolation. Convergence acts as the catalyst.

Non-invasive brain stimulation: current and future applications in neurology

Non-invasive brain stimulation (NIBS) shows considerable promise as a therapeutic strategy for neurological and psychiatric disorders. This Review explores the role of NIBS techniques, including repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation and transcranial electrical stimulation, for treating cognitive impairments, speech and language difficulties, and motor control deficits in people with neurodegenerative or brain lesion disorders.

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