Tag: History

  • From the archive: election special

    From the archive: election special

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    Nature, Published online: 05 November 2024; doi:10.1038/d41586-024-03634-5

    A look at the history of opinion polls and political campaigning in these snippets from Nature’s past.

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  • How a PhD Student Discovered a Lost Mayan City From Hundreds of Miles Away

    How a PhD Student Discovered a Lost Mayan City From Hundreds of Miles Away

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    A new Mayan city, lost in the dense jungle of southern Mexico for centuries, has been discovered from the computer of a PhD student hundreds of miles away. This is the story of how he did it.

    The settlement, named Valeriana after a nearby freshwater lagoon, has all the characteristics of a classic Maya political capital: enclosed plazas, pyramids, a ball court, a reservoir, and an architectural layout that suggests a foundation prior to 150 AD, according to a newly published study in the journal Antiquity.

    And how did Tulane University graduate student Luke Auld-Thomas find it? The answer lies in lasers. Until recently, archaeology was limited to what a researcher could observe from the ground and with their eyes. However, the technology of detecting and measuring distances with light, known as lidar, has revolutionized the field, allowing us to scan entire regions in search of archaeological sites hidden under dense vegetation or concrete.

    Let’s travel back in time. It is 1848 and the governor of Petén, Guatemala, Modesto Méndez, together with Ambrosio Tut, an artist and chronicler of the time, rediscovered Tikal, one of the most majestic archaeological sites of the Mayan civilization. In the middle of the 19th century, little was known about this advanced culture—which calculated lunar, solar, and Venusian cycles, and invented hieroglyphic writing and the concept of the number zero with hardly any tools.

    The dense rainforest surrounding Tikal and its lack of roads made it extremely difficult to reach the remains. But the Guatemalan government went deep into the heart of the Petén jungle anyway, in search of its cultural heritage. Guided by the rumors of the locals, machete in hand, along with tape measure and compass, they entered the Petén jungle on an almost impossible mission. Arriving at the Tikal site, Méndez and his team were amazed at what they saw: gigantic temples and pyramids, mostly covered by the jungle. The most imposing constructions, hidden by nature, towered above the tree canopy. Tikal, although partially buried, retained its majesty and gave clues to the enormous size of the city.

    History repeated itself in 2024—but with some important variations. Rather than a machete, Auld-Thomas armed himself with a search engine. WIRED spoke this week with him and Marcello Canuto, director of Tulane’s Middle American Research Institute, about the discovery.

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  • ‘Dark Tourism’ Appeals to Travelers Captivated by Death

    ‘Dark Tourism’ Appeals to Travelers Captivated by Death

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    During the month of October, many folks get into the spirit of Halloween by putting themselves in scary situations, like going to see a horror movie or visiting a haunted house. However, some travelers seek that feeling all year round by engaging in “dark tourism.”

    Dark tourism is the act of going to places that are connected to the macabre, or historical sites where death and suffering took place. Places such as Chernobyl; Auschwitz; Salem, Massachusetts; and notorious crime scenes are some of the places connected to the darker narratives of history that travelers choose to visit. Aside from the historical interest, people visit these places to feel a connection with the victims and come to terms with the injustices they suffered.

    Another part of the appeal is the physical charge one often gets from being in a state of unease. James Giordano, a neurobiology researcher at Georgetown University Medical Center, says getting frightened triggers a specific response in the human body.

    “The idea of being somewhere that is evocative of fright or evocative of horror and the garish is exciting,” Giordano says. “Going to those places is like we are hanging out over the edge a little bit.” Think of when someone might look intently at a grisly auto accident on the side of the road, he says. Going to some of these spaces where tragedy has occurred may evoke similar feelings, but in different ways.

    Fear, and the rush of adrenaline that comes with it, is present. So is a capacity to relate in some ways to the lessons of history that one can glean from visiting a site of historical terror. But another key element is also present: safety. People are expecting to be scared, but they also know they’ll be safe the whole time. As Giordano puts it, the allure of dark tourism is about getting “all of the rush but none of the reality.”

    More Than Just Witchcraft

    A museum in the tiny Swiss town of Ennenda commemorates the last person to be executed for practicing witchcraft in Europe. Visitors can learn about the historic site and even see the sword used to behead the impoverished accused woman, Anna Göldi, who was killed in 1782. Nicole Billeter, one of the curators of The Anna Göldi Museum, says the museum and its presentation are meant to educate visitors about incidents that happened hundreds of years ago in a way that counters the historical misinterpretations of witchcraft from the 19th century.

    “There are so many false images around witchcraft which are starting from the 19th century,” Billeter says. “Everyone has this historical picture of [what people who are condemned for witchcraft did] which is really historically false. We want to correct it.”

    Anna Göldi’s history is discussed in school in Switzerland, Billeter says, and so local tourists come seeking a connection to history. “In Switzerland, we have all kinds of young people,” she says. “I was astonished that teenagers are coming.”

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  • Thirty years since the race to the BRCA1 gene

    Thirty years since the race to the BRCA1 gene

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    It had long been suspected that the occurrence of breast cancer had a familial component, but early studies were confounded by the complexity of the disease. However, in 1990, researchers identified a key genetic determinant of inherited breast cancer risk1, which fired the starting gun for what turned out to be a four-year race to identify the underlying gene. This was achieved when Miki et al., in a 1994 paper in Science2, described a previously unknown gene in which affected individuals in high-risk families carried deleterious mutations. The work provided strong evidence that this was indeed the BRCA1 gene.

    Competing Interests

    A.A. is a co-founder of Tango Therapeutics, Azkarra Therapeutics, Ovibio, Kytarro and TillerTx; a member of the board of Cytomx, Ovibio Corporation, Cambridge Science Corporation; a member of the scientific advisory board of Genentech, GLAdiator, Circle, Bluestar/Clearnote Health, Earli, Ambagon, Phoenix Molecular Designs, Yingli/280Bio, Trial Library, ORIC and HAP10; a consultant for ProLynx, Next RNA and Novartis; receives research support from SPARC; and holds patents on the use of PARP inhibitors held jointly with AstraZeneca from which he has benefited financially (and may do so in the future).

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  • ‘We Were Wrong’: An Oral History of WIRED’s Original Website

    ‘We Were Wrong’: An Oral History of WIRED’s Original Website

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    Kevin: When we went to do the IPO, it was very, very clear that the digital side was far more valuable than the magazine side. That was the beginning of the craziness. Here’s a magazine that has a lot of revenue, respectability, great enthusiasm, and support from the readership. And here’s this really weird digital side that’s worth 10 times the magazine.

    Jane: When Condé Nast bought WIRED and Lycos bought HotWired, the company combined was worth less than the company separated. To this day, we liken it to Nike deciding to sell their footwear to Puma and their apparel to Adidas. Why would you do that? Why would you take the premier brand that had both the technical credibility as well as the upside of the lifestyle and culture stuff and pull it apart?

    Jeff: It was a very traditional and typical tech acquisition where the startup gets acquired and comes into the bigger corporate culture. It just doesn’t work very well.

    Jane: Louis and I were so crestfallen, heartbroken, and devastated, and everyone’s like, “Yeah, but everyone got rich.” That was not the point. It was a very, very difficult time.

    June: Almost all of us started to feel a pretty profound sense of loss and grief that the culture we knew, the values we believed in as innovators and creators, had been lost. That the industry was no longer about innovation, invention, creativity, and certainly not about democratization. That everything was about money.

    Well, maybe. There are 5.45 billion internet users on planet Earth, and sure, some of them are bad actors—no argument from WIRED. But most of us are still raving around the internet, hanging with pals, cruising for jobs and mates, catching up on gossip and news, buying and selling stuff, and finding fellow travelers who share our woes and our passions. And, yes, a slice of us are into fraud, abuse, and bad ideology. Did HotWired not anticipate that humans would be human?

    Hotwired Person Electronics Screen Floor Flooring Computer Hardware Hardware Monitor People and Furniture

    A day at the HotWired office

    Photograph: Courtesy of Julie Chiron; TREATMENT: JAMES MARSHALL

    Ian: Back in those days, we’d say, The nice thing about the internet is how safe it is. Everybody’s there to help you, and everybody just wants to do good things. People asked, Why require passwords for stuff, because who’s going to do anything terrible on the internet?

    Kevin: Today, a new thing comes along and people immediately say, “I don’t know what it is, but it’s going to hurt me. It’s going to bite me.” That’s definitely a change that wasn’t present when we were starting.

    Jeff: But nostalgia can be dangerous. It was really hard what we did, and stressful, and we didn’t know what we were doing. When people say, “If we could only go back to then,” I’m like, no, we only had modems. It was terrible.

    John P: As a business, HotWired failed. But all that stuff that we were doing, it was scientific investigation.

    Jonathan: We thought the internet was going to be good for people. We were wrong.

    Jeff: I still feel like literally anybody with an idea can start hacking on the web or making apps or things like that. That’s all still there. I think the nucleus of what we started back then still exists on the web, and it still makes me really, really happy.

    John: We were lucky with WIRED. With HotWired there was no choice, and we couldn’t do it differently if we went back and tried. But we were unlucky to be first.

    Condé Nast eventually bought WIRED’s website too—in 2006.


    Animation: James Marshall

    Let us know what you think about this article. Submit a letter to the editor at [email protected].

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  • Civil engineer Herbert Stone’s rock-solid views on Stonehenge

    Civil engineer Herbert Stone’s rock-solid views on Stonehenge

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    Nature, Published online: 29 October 2024; doi:10.1038/d41586-024-03397-z

    Precise calculations on the erection of Stonehenge’s boulders, and a bright aurora stretches between the stars, in our weekly peek at Nature’s archives.

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  • Why quantum theory is just like magic (and Einstein deserves more credit in this field than he gets)

    Why quantum theory is just like magic (and Einstein deserves more credit in this field than he gets)

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    Einstein and the Quantum Revolutions Alain Aspect Univ. Chicago Press (2024)

    French physicist Alain Aspect is a pioneer in ‘quantum entanglement’ — connections between the quantum properties of subatomic particles that are preserved even at distances too great for signals to travel at light speed. He shared the 2022 Nobel Prize in Physics for this work, which underpins quantum computers and other technologies.

    With his book on the foundations of quantum mechanics being released, Aspect, at the University of Paris-Saclay and the Ecole Polytechnique in Paris, tells Nature why he sees parallels between physics and magic, why Einstein doesn’t get all the credit he deserves and how there were two quantum revolutions, not one.

    What motivated you to write this book?

    First, I wanted to dispel the misconception, which I have heard from many colleagues, that Einstein’s work was good for relativity, but not for quantum physics. Einstein did not believe in the probabilistic nature of quantum theory, and famously said “God does not play dice.” But, in fact, he was a great contributor to the understanding of quantum mechanics. Einstein pointed out the puzzle of entanglement and laid the foundation for the quantum theory of light, which states that light is composed of particles called photons.

    Second, I wanted to popularize science. I knew that speaking about Einstein would be a good way to attract attention. The public should understand science — how else can you make decisions about the great problems that society faces, such as climate change?

    But, you should know, I did not exactly ‘write’ this book. In 2005, the French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS) gave me the Gold Medal — the highest scientific-research award in France. As part of that, the CNRS did an audio interview with me, which they decided should be the basis of a book. I worked hard on improving the transcript. People who know me say that they can hear my voice when they read it.

    In your book, you say that there were two quantum revolutions. What was the first?

    The revelation that particles can act as waves, and waves as particles. In 1905, Einstein showed that light exhibited this wave–particle duality. For centuries, most scientists had thought of light only as waves. But Einstein showed that it is made of particles, later called photons, and that each particle has an energy proportional to its frequency. That was the only way to explain why even a high intensity of low-frequency light cannot liberate electrons from a metal.

    Then, in 1924, another physicist, Louis de Broglie, postulated that particles of matter can also act like waves. Because electrons orbiting the nucleus of an atom behave like standing (or stationary) waves, they can occupy only certain energy levels. This prevents the electrons from continuously losing energy and collapsing into the nucleus, explaining the stability of matter.

    And the second quantum revolution?

    Entanglement. This is the extraordinary idea that, according to the rules of quantum theory, two particles can be so correlated that a measurement of the property of one will immediately determine the property of the other — even if they are far apart. Entanglement is both fundamental to quantum theory and has wide-reaching applications.

    For example, entanglement has led to new ways of transmitting and processing information. Certain calculations would be tremendously accelerated if one had a quantum computer capable of entangling a large number of quantum bits, or qubits, which are the quantum analogues of bits in a classical computer.

    And there are other real-world applications, such as quantum cryptography. With quantum entanglement, you can have information shared instantaneously between two separate locations in space. In theory, you could have a particle code for something at one location and decode it at another.

    What attracted you to this problem?

    Entanglement has its roots in a paper Einstein wrote with two colleagues, physicists Boris Podolsky and Nathan Rosen, in 1935. They pointed out that the principles of quantum mechanics allow for entangled particles. But this violates the idea of ‘locality’ — that a particle can be influenced only by its nearby surroundings.

    Einstein argued that, to have such strong correlations at a distance, the particles had to have properties that quantum theory couldn’t account for. Therefore, quantum theory could not provide the ultimate description of the world.

    Albert Einstein posing in front of some molecule models.

    Albert Einstein’s contributions to the field of quantum mechanics are under-appreciated, says Aspect.Credit: GpPhotoStudio/Alamy

    Decades later, in 1964, John Bell, a theoretical physicist, carefully read the 1935 paper and discovered something new. He found that, if entangled particles truly had hidden properties that quantum theory could not explain, the correlations between the particles could not exceed a certain level. If the correlations exceeded this upper limit, then entanglement was real.

    When I read that paper by Bell, it was love at first sight.

    On the one hand, I found Einstein’s reasoning impeccable. On the other, I understand the impeccable reasoning of quantum mechanics. How can it be that the two things are in conflict? For me, this was the most fantastic thing — that a philosophical debate on the nature of the world and the notion of physical reality could be resolved through an experiment.

    Some physicists tried to dissuade you from pursuing that experiment. What happened?

    When I visited Bell in 1975, he warned me that I would be considered a crackpot. When Einstein published his paper 40 years earlier, quantum physicist Neils Bohr seemed to counter Einstein’s argument. Also, quantum theory was so successful, many thought there was no point in questioning it. For physicists who belonged to this school of ‘shut up and calculate’, the issue was settled.

    But I was self-educated in quantum mechanics, and I hadn’t been brainwashed. I was totally open. And when you are open and you see a problem, you want to know the answer.

    What sparked your interest in science?

    I grew up in Agen, France, a village not far from Bordeaux. I had a fantastic secondary-school physics teacher there, Maurice Hirsch, and really, he’s the man who educated me. He showed us that physics is about describing the world with mathematics as precisely as possible, but not with so much complication that you lose your intuition.

    He was doing all these fantastic experiments, and one of them, which used a stroboscope to show how a standing wave on a string oscillates over time, later gave me the idea for an important element in my entanglement experiment.

    I used the interaction between light and an ultrasonic standing wave in water to develop a switch that redirected photons from one polarizer to another in just a few nanoseconds. The rapid switch meant that the two ends of the experiment could not communicate with each other, closing an important loophole in proving entanglement is real.

    Did you get a chance to tell your teacher?

    Yes, but his health was not good. I talked to him, but I don’t think he fully understood me. Then I did two things. First, I asked the mayor of Agen to name a street after him. I also have applied to name an asteroid after him.

    You also like magic tricks — what draws you?

    When I retired, I was kind of unhappy. To cheer me up, a friend, Thierry Giamarchi, who’s an excellent theorist and an excellent magician, said he could mentor me in magic tricks.

    What I like about a card trick is that, if I do it in front of you, you will say, “Well, this is unbelievable.” But there is an explanation, just as physics provides an explanation for things that seem unbelievable.

    I do the same tricks as an ordinary magician, but I use different words. For instance, when there are cards jumping from the table to my hands, I pretend that it is a quantum tunnelling effect. When I have cards going from my left hand to my right, I call it quantum teleportation.

    Is there some burning question about quantum physics that you still have?

    Yes — how many quantum bits or quantum objects can you entangle before you might reach a limit, where the group of objects would behave like a classical, non-quantum object.

    If there is a fundamental limit, it would be great news. We would understand the frontier between the quantum and the classical world. If there is no limit, then the large group of qubits would give us a fantastic quantum computer, which is also great. I would like to have the answer to that question.

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  • Massive lost mountain cities revealed by lasers

    Massive lost mountain cities revealed by lasers

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    Download the Nature Podcast 23 October 2024

    In this episode:

    00:48 The hidden cities of Uzbekistan

    Researchers have uncovered the scale of two ancient cities buried high in the mountains of Uzbekistan. The cities were thought to be there, but their extent was unknown, so the team used drone-mounted LiDAR equipment to reveal what was hidden beneath the ground. The survey surprised researchers by showing one of the cities was six times bigger than expected. The two cities, called Tashbulak and Tugunbulak, were nestled in the heart of Central Asia’s medieval Silk Road, suggesting that highland areas played an important role in trade of the era.

    Research Article: Frachetti et al.

    Video: Uncovering a lost mountain metropolis

    09:32 Research Highlights

    How children’s movements resemble water vapour, and why coastal waters might be a lot dirtier than we thought.

    Research Highlight: Kids in the classroom flow like water vapour

    Research Highlight: Sewage lurks in coastal waters — often unnoticed by widely used test

    12:06 Watermarking AI-generated text

    A team at Google DeepMind has demonstrated a way to add a digital watermark to AI-generated text that can be detected by computers. As AI-generated content becomes more pervasive, there are fears that it will be impossible to tell it apart from content made by humans. To tackle this, the new method subtly biases the word choices made by a Large Language Model in a statistically detectable pattern. Despite the changes to word choice, a test of 20 million live chat interactions revealed that users did not notice a drop in quality compared to unwatermarked text.

    Research Article: Dathathri et al.

    News: DeepMind deploys invisible ‘watermark’ on AI-written text

    22:38 Briefing Chat

    What one researcher found after repeatedly scanning her own brain to see how it responded to birth-control pills, and how high-altitude tree planting could offer refuge to an imperilled butterfly species.

    Nature: How does the brain react to birth control? A researcher scanned herself 75 times to find out

    Nature: Mexican forest ‘relocated’ in attempt to save iconic monarch butterflies

    Subscribe to Nature Briefing, an unmissable daily round-up of science news, opinion and analysis free in your inbox every weekday.

    Never miss an episode. Subscribe to the Nature Podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube Music or your favourite podcast app. An RSS feed for the Nature Podcast is available too.

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  • Splendid squirrel sneezes at will

    Splendid squirrel sneezes at will

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    Nature, Published online: 22 October 2024; doi:10.1038/d41586-024-03187-7

    The British–American space satellite Ariel-5 launched in 1974, plus the curious ablutions of squirrels, in our weekly dip into Nature’s archive.

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  • Strange gamma-ray flickers seen in thunderstorms for the first time

    Strange gamma-ray flickers seen in thunderstorms for the first time

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    Download the Nature Podcast 02 October 2024

    In this episode:

    00:46 Physicists spot new types of high-energy radiation in thunderstorms

    Physicists have identified new forms of γ-ray radiation created inside thunderclouds, and shown that levels of γ-ray production are much higher on Earth than previously thought.

    Scientists already knew about two types of γ-ray phenomena in thunderclouds — glows that last as long as a minute and high-intensity flashes that come and go in only a few millionths of a second. Now, researchers have identified that these both occur more frequently than expected, and that previously undetected γ-ray types exist, including flickering flashes that share characteristics of the other two types of radiation.

    The researchers hope that understanding more about these mysterious phenomena could help explain what initiates lightning, which often follows these γ-ray events.

    Research Article: Østgaard et al.

    Research Article: Marisaldi et al.

    Nature: Mysterious form of high-energy radiation spotted in thunderstorms

    10:00 Research Highlights

    Ancient arrowheads reveal that Europe’s oldest battle likely featured warriors from far afield, and why the dwarf planet Ceres’s frozen ocean has deep impurities.

    Research Highlight: Bronze Age clash was Europe’s oldest known interregional battle

    Research Highlight: A dwarf planet has dirty depths, model suggests

    12:09 A complete wiring diagram of the fruit fly brain

    Researchers have published the most complete wiring diagram, or ‘connectome’ of the fruit fly’s brain, which includes nearly 140,000 neurons and 54.5 million connections between nerve cells.

    The map, made from the brain of a single female fruit fly (Drosophila melanogaster), reveals over 8,400 neuron types in the brain, and has enabled scientists to learn more about the brain and how it controls aspects of fruit fly behaviour.

    The FlyWire connectome: neuronal wiring diagram of a complete fly brain

    Nature: Largest brain map ever reveals fruit fly’s neurons in exquisite detail

    22:16 Briefing Chat

    How researchers created an elusive single-electron bond between carbon atoms, and why bigger chatbots get over-confident when answering questions.

    Nature: Carbon bond that uses only one electron seen for first time: ‘It will be in the textbooks’

    Nature: Bigger AI chatbots more inclined to spew nonsense — and people don’t always realize

    Subscribe to Nature Briefing, an unmissable daily round-up of science news, opinion and analysis free in your inbox every weekday.

    Never miss an episode. Subscribe to the Nature Podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube Music or your favourite podcast app. An RSS feed for the Nature Podcast is available too.

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