United States

Here’s why you can’t seem to find your mate!

Washington, Feb 13: Psychologists have ultimately found the reason behind people’s reluctance in choosing a mate- sense of scarcity.
The International team led by Xianchi Dai, Klaus Wertenbroch and Miguel Brendl from INSEAD, the international business school have been studying what they call the “value heuristic.”
A heuristic is a sort of cognitive short cut or “rule of thumb” that we use when we are unable to make a truly informed decision.
The study suggests that many mate-seekers are often mystified by thought of how many relationship-worthy bachelors and bachelorettes are still available.
The connection between scarcity and value is something we all know; for example, gold is considered precious because it is rare, not because it makes for a poor construction material.

Humans were in transit at New World's doorstep for 20,000 years

Washington, Feb 13: A new research has determined that humans had inhabited Beringia, which now lies submerged under the icy waters of the Bering Strait, for almost 20,000 years, before stepping into the New World.
Scientists from the University of Florida (UF) Genetics Institute carried out the research.
“Our model makes for a more interesting, complex scenario than the idea that humans diverged from Asians and expanded into the New World in a single event,” said Connie Mulligan, an associate professor of anthropology at the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and assistant director of the UF Genetics Institute.

72 million yr old dinosaur used built in trumpet to woo females

DinosaurLondon, Feb 13: Scientists have discovered the fossils of a new species of dinosaur in Mexico,

Archaeologists find earliest evidence of ancient Egyptian agricultural settlement

Washington, Feb 13: Archaeologists have found the earliest evidence ever discovered of an ancient Egyptian agricultural settlement.

Discovered by Archaeologists from UCLA (University of California, Los Angeles) and the University of Groningen (RUG) in the Netherlands, the findings included farmed grains, remains of domesticated animals, pits for cooking and floors for what appear to be dwellings.

None of the varieties of domesticated animals or grains are indigenous to the area, so they would have to have been introduced.

The findings, which were unearthed in 2006 and are still being analyzed, also suggest possible trade links with the Red Sea, including a thoroughfare from Mesopotamia, which is known to have practiced agriculture 2,000 years before ancient Egypt.

Scientists release first known photographs of gorillas mating face-to-face

GorillasWashington, Feb 13: Scientists from the Wildlife Conservation Society and Max Planck Institut

US will make way for Indo-US nuclear deal: Dana Perino

Washington, Feb 13: White House Press Secretary Dana PerinoThe Unite

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