In antiquity, standing on the edges of a canoe or paddle board and jumping up and down can propel the craft forwards. And researchers have figured out how. The team behind this work created a simplified model of a canoe subject to a vertical force that represented a person rhythmically pushing down while standing close to the canoe's edge. Bob along to physical review fluids to read that research in full.
Cold exposure in mice activates brown fat to deny tumours glucose, and the future of extreme heatwaves.
00:45 How cold temperatures could starve tumours
A team of researchers have found that exposing mice to the cold could starve tumour cells of the blood glucose they need to thrive. They showed that the cold temperatures deprived the tumours of fuel by activating brown fat – a tissue that burns through glucose to keep body temperature up. The team also showed preliminary evidence of the effect occurring in one person with cancer, but say that more research is needed before this method can be considered for clinical use.
Research article: Seki et al.
08:59 Research Highlights
Evidence of the world’s southernmost human outpost from before the Industrial Revolution, and how jumping up and down lets canoes surf their own waves.
Research Highlight: Bones and weapons show just how far south pre-industrial humans got
Research Highlight: How jumping up and down in a canoe propels it forwards
11:24 The future of extreme heatwaves
Climate scientists have long warned that extreme heat and extreme heatwaves will become more frequent as a result of climate change. But across the world these events are happening faster, and more furiously, than expected, and researchers are scrambling to dissect recent heatwaves to better understand what the world might have in store.
News Feature: Extreme heatwaves: surprising lessons from the record warmth
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