NEW A massive genome-wide study in the United States has revealed a ‘historical portrait’ of post-colonial population patterns across the country. In the study, researchers identified 'clusters' - or genetic communities - using data from more than 770,000 people born or currently living in the US. The study highlights the ancestral origins and migration patterns for specific groups to reveal the many different genetic communities Americans belong to. The map above shows the distribution of ancestral birth locations associated with these clusters.
Pall Einarsson, a geophysicist at the University of Iceland has warned that Katla, Hekla, Bárðarbunga (pictured) and Grímsvötn, could all soon erupt.
Pall Einarsson, a geophysicist at the University of Iceland has warned that Katla, Hekla, Bárðarbunga (pictured) and Grímsvötn, could all soon erupt.
Big Foot or big hoax? Terrified hiker cowers in fear as he films strange Yeti-like creature in the woods in Ukraine
The video showing a Yeti-like beast has resurfaced online in a Reddit thread about the most convincing Big Foot sightings. Filmed in Yalta, some argue it was the set of the film and an actor in costume. The filmer captioned the YouTube clip: 'I don't know who or what it was.'
The factory where dreams are made: Take a tour of Bugatti's high-tech French home where the £2million Chiron hypercar is built
This is the ultimate 'Through the Key Hole' photoshoot for petrol heads. Hypercar maker Bugatti has delivered an exclusive behind the scenes tour of it's ultra-advanced car plant where the Chiron is made. Painstaking hours of work go into building the 261mph cars - and the factory is so clean you could eat your dinner off the floor. To get the finished product (top left) the process begins when the engine is handbuilt (top right), and tested on Bugatti's rolling dynamometer (bottom left) before an astonishing number of quality checks (bottom right)
- Is another ash cloud about to cause travel chaos? FOUR of Iceland's volcanoes are on the brink of erupting
- Why stars like David Bowie turn to sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll: Music acts on the brain in the same way as addictive pleasures
- Tough love does NOT work: Being too firm with your child could make them rebel and perform badly at school
- Is YOUR phone safe? Security expert says hackers can attack your device via dozens of popular iOS apps
- Has the 12th Dead Sea Scrolls cave been found? Excavators discover a new site they believe was once home to the ancient religious writings
- Samsung's Galaxy S8 leaks AGAIN: Photo reveals the home button HAS been dumped (but the headphone jack is still there)
- New York City, Baltimore and Philadelphia set record high temperatures - but brace for up to a foot of snow tonight
- Is your dog badly behaved? Then it may be because you're NEUROTIC: Canines mirror their owners' traits
- Revealed: VIP Viking warrior found buried on the Scottish coast with a wealth of tools could be a WOMAN
- Will your next spectacles have METAL lenses? Harvard researchers reveal radical new material that could replace glass in everything from phones to eyewear
- About time! LG and Google reveal first Android Wear 2.0 smartwatches in bid to topple Apple
- Would YOU let your boss implant you with a microchip? Belgian firm offers to turn staff into cyborgs to replace ID cards
- Want to make your child a maths genius? Get them moving in the classroom, say researchers
- The immigrant maps of America: Genome study of over 770,000 people reveals the ancestral origins of each part of the country
- Would YOU drink 'spit beer' that you chew yourself (and stinks of cheese) or a Chinese brew that looks like porridge? Stanford students recreate 5,000 year old alcohol recipes
- Anonymous hacker shuts down 20% of the dark web in a campaign to tackle child pornography
- A cure for insomnia? Peanut-shaped robot pillow will slow your breathing to help you fall into a deep sleep
- Is the hashtag over? Researchers reveal Super Bowl ads have abandoned them (and Facebook and Twitter) for URLs
- Is YOUR phone safe? Security expert says hackers can attack your device via dozens of popular iOS apps
- Tough love does NOT work: Being too firm with your child could make them rebel and perform badly at school
- Anonymous hacker shuts down 20% of the dark web in a campaign to tackle child pornography
- Is another ash cloud about to cause travel chaos? FOUR of Iceland's volcanoes are on the brink of erupting
- The 'firehose' is back! Massive outpouring of lava returns to Hawaii after being halted by massive cliff collapse
- Why stars like David Bowie turn to sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll: Music acts on the brain in the same way as addictive pleasures
- ‘Zoom in… now enhance’: Google reveals 'Blade Runner' photo AI that can sharpen any image
- Massive landslide '30 times the volume of Uluru' hit the Great Barrier Reef 300,000 years ago: Researchers find vast debris field and giant hills on the seabed
- Has the 12th Dead Sea Scrolls cave been found? Excavators discover a new site they believe was once home to the ancient religious writings
- Why meteors can make your hair hum and your clothes rustle: Researchers say light from the fireballs can create bizarre sounds as they crash to Earth
- Finally it's settled! First-born children really ARE smarter (and their younger siblings can blame their parents)
- The biohacker developing an implantable VIBRATOR: Inventor claims his 'Lovetron 9000' could boost pleasure for partners when implanted under a man's pubic bone
- Were WAVES to blame for the Great Dying? Researchers say shoaling 252 million years ago may have stirred up chemicals on the sea floor that killed off 90% of life on the planet
- Is THIS the secret to immortality? Experts reveal how the hydra is able to infinitely regenerate itself, and the same trick could one day be used in human muscles
- Mark Zuckerberg is working on MIND-READING brain implants: Facebook founder pledges millions into 'neural recording' research
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Prosthesis explained: A look at the racing anti-robot at CES
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Would you ride this? 'Jyro' is a one-wheeled electric rideable
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Icaros the virtual reality fitness & gaming machine at CES 2017
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LG shows off their next generation robots at CES 2017
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Kérastase and Withings unveil the world's first smart hairbrush
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Cringeworthy moment driverless demo goes wrong during reveal
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Latest gadgets on display at Consumer Electronics Show in Vegas
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LG reveals their ultrathin 'wallpaper' TV at CES 2017
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Daily Mail tries out portable, immersive Royole headset
Slow motion video of chimps walking on a treadmill reveal how humans got their walk - and flexible feet are key
NEW A new study investigating the evolution of human gait has discovered our feet are more mobile than chimpanzees when walking upright – not less, as expected. Researchers used high-speed motion capture to measure the foot motion of chimps and humans walking at a similar speed. The findings go in contrast to traditional understanding on the difference between human and chimpanzee feet, suggesting fossil feet from humans’ earliest ancestors may tell a different story than previously thought.
Womb with a view! Breathtaking new 20-week MRI scan lets expectant parents watch their unborn babies wiggle, swallow and even pull on the umbilical cord in astonishingly clear detail
A revolutionary new type of scan developed by a London-based medical team is hoping to transform the way parents-to-be see their unborn babies. A new video shows the astonishing detail the high-tech scan can capture including heartbeat, brain and muscles. (Pictured: Grabs from a video showing a 20-week-old baby being scanned by the new technology produced by the iFIND team. Inset: a scan currently given to pregnant women on the NHS)
Is THIS the secret to immortality? Experts reveal how the hydra is able to infinitely regenerate itself, and the same trick could one day be used in human muscles
Researchers from the Israel Institute of Technology suggest that pieces of hydras also have structural memory that helps them shape their body plan according to the pattern inherited by the animal's skeleton. When regenerating, hydras use a tough network of stringy protein fibres – the cytoskeleton – to realign their cells.
Apple's 'spaceship' campus is nearly ready: Stunning footage reveals the firm's incredible attention to detail
Stunning new images reveal the astonishing attention to detail of the new Apple campus in Cupertino, California, which is expected to open in spring this year. Technology companies have long favoured generic office parks, but the Apple Campus 2 marks a new chapter in Silicon Valley architecture. More than $1 billion (£800 million) was allocated for the interior of the main building alone, according to a former construction manager. The Spaceship will have 360-degree curved glass fronted walls and central courtyard as well as a 1,000-seater auditorium, a gym and 300,000 square feet of 'research' space.
DIY 'Back To The Future' footwear: Designer creates his own Marty McFly self-lacing shoes using LEGO
Lego employee Vimal Patel has taken on fashion giant Nike, with his own version of their HyperAdapt 1.0 self-lacing trainers, which sell for upwards of $720 (£580). The Denmark-based designer crafted the shoes using inexpensive materials and tools to fix the DIY device to an old pair of Nike trainers. The Lego version uses battery-powered motors to drive a series of cogs that tighten laces - and Mr Patel says anyone can make their own version at home. Pictured inset are the self-lacing trainers featres in Back to the Future.
The golden era of Nasa's space race with Soviet Russia is brought back to life in stunning colourised images
The striking colourisations were carried out by Westport-based artist Matt Loughrey.The images, which have been expertly colourised over hundreds of hours of painstaking work, show (from top left clockwise) astronaut John Glenn in 1962 during project Mercury, intense discussions raging at mission control, Nasa software engineer and mathematician Margaret Hamilton in 1969 and mission control hard at work during the Apollo 11 moon landings.
The shocking animation that reveals how a massive Antarctic crack has grown 17 miles in the last two MONTHS - and experts say it is now 'inevitable' it will create one of the biggest icebergs ever seen
A widening rift is now running the length of the finger-shaped, 350-metre (160-feet) -thick ice block known as the Larsen C ice shelf, satellite images revealed. Since December, the crack has grown by the length of about five football fields each day. This time-lapse image below shows the rift gradually widening from late 2014 to January of this year, adding to an 11 mile advance spotted by researchers in September. The team studying the crack say it is now inevitable it will break off, leaving a massive iceberg.
Soccer ball recovered from the Challenger disaster finally makes it into orbit aboard the International Space Station
In 1986, astronaut Ellison Onizuka (pictured on right) boarded the ill-fated Challenger carrying a soccer ball from his daughter’s high school team with him. The ball, signed by the boys and girls of Clear Lake High School soccer, was eventually recovered from the 250,000 pounds of wreckage found in the Atlantic Ocean after the shuttle exploded just 73 seconds after launch. Now, more than 30 years after the tragedy, an image from the International Space Station shared by astronaut Shane Kimbrough reveals the soccer ball has finally made it to orbit.
The 'firehose' is back! Massive outpouring of lava returns to Hawaii after being halted by massive cliff collapse
When a portion of cliff collapsed at the Kilauea volcano’s Kamokuna ocean entry last week, it at first appeared to have taken the remarkable lava firehose with it. But, new footage captured during boat tours this weekend reveals the phenomenon has started up again. A steady stream of lava can be seen gushing from a hole in the side of the cliff, striking up bursts of debris as it collides with the water.
From a 16th century mechanical monk to an animatronic baby: Fascinating exhibition charts 500 years of robotic creations
An army of robots has invaded London's Science Museum on a mission to teach humans their 500-year-old history. 'Robots' explores the role played by humanised machines in religion, the industrial revolution, science and popular culture. Included in the exhibition are The Silver Swan robot, built in 1773 (top left), a robot baby that can move its arms and legs (top middle), a 16th century automaton monk (right), and Baxter, a robot used in factories in the US (bottom left).
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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.