Humpback Whales Sing the Way Humans Speak

Humpback Whales Sing the Way Humans Speak

The English language is full of wonderful words, from “anemone” and “aurora” to “zenith” and “zodiac.” But these are special occasion words, sprinkled sparingly into writing and conversation. The words in heaviest rotation are short and mundane. And they follow a remarkable statistical rule, which is universal across human languages: The most common word, which…

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Plesiosaur Fossils Preserve Both Skin and Scales on Ancient Sea Monster

Plesiosaur Fossils Preserve Both Skin and Scales on Ancient Sea Monster

With serpentine necks, flippers and a mouth full of needle-sharp teeth, plesiosaurs have captured imaginations since paleontologists uncovered the first specimen more than two centuries ago. Their skeletal anatomy is well documented, but their external appearance has largely remained a mystery. Now researchers have conducted the first detailed analysis of plesiosaur soft tissue, offering a…

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Ancient DNA Points to Origins of Indo-European Language

Ancient DNA Points to Origins of Indo-European Language

In 1786, a British judge named William Jones noticed striking similarities between certain words in languages, such as Sanskrit and Latin, whose speakers were separated by thousands of miles. The languages must have “sprung from some common source,” he wrote. Later generations of linguists determined that Sanskrit and Latin belong to a huge family of…

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