Mount Everest is not the farthest point from Earth’s centre: This South American mountain holds that record |

Ask almost anyone to name the highest point on Earth and the answer will likely be Mount Everest. Towering above the Himalayas at 8,848 metres (29,029 feet), Everest has long been celebrated as the world’s tallest mountain. Climbers dream of reaching its summit and geography textbooks have cemented its place in popular imagination.Yet there is…

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Nigerian teen develops biodegradable sanitary pads from farm waste and earns global recognition: Meet Raheema Auwal-Panti |

15-year-old Nigerian student Raheema Auwal-Panti is attracting international attention for an innovation that tackles two major challenges at once, plastic pollution and menstrual-product accessibility. The founder of PantiPads, a biodegradable sanitary-pad initiative launched in 2025, has developed menstrual products made from agricultural waste materials that would otherwise be discarded. Her project uses cassava peelings, banana…

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Scientists develop ‘smart paint’ that reflects 97% of sunlight and could reduce AC use during heatwaves |

As heatwaves become more frequent and intense around the world, scientists are exploring new ways to keep buildings cool without increasing energy consumption. Researchers at the University of Sydney, working with startup Dewpoint Innovations, have developed a nano-engineered coating that reflects up to 97% of sunlight and stays significantly cooler than conventional surfaces. The experimental…

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Meet the Moon Trees: Apollo 14 astronaut carried hundreds of tree seeds around the Moon in 1971 and now they are flourishing across America |

More than five decades ago, Apollo 14 carried an unusual payload into deep space when hundreds of tree seeds accompanied the mission on its journey around the Moon. While astronauts Alan Shepard and Edgar Mitchell explored the lunar surface in February 1971, command module pilot Stuart Roosa remained in lunar orbit with the seeds packed…

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NASA alert: Massive 370-foot asteroid 2026 HW2 to pass Earth in high-speed flyby today at 44,000 km/h |

Asteroid alerts often sound more dramatic than the actual risk they pose. This time, NASA is tracking asteroid 2026 HW2, a building-sized space rock currently moving through Earth’s orbital neighbourhood. Travelling at nearly 44,000 kilometres per hour, the asteroid is expected to make its closest approach to Earth around 4:30 pm IST today. Despite the…

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Forest guardian: Billionaire Mike Gregg bought 17,300 acres of forest for $10 million to protect Australia’s wildlife |

When Australian tech investor Mike Gregg became wealthy through his business ventures, he faced a choice common among many successful entrepreneurs about how to use his fortune. Instead of purchasing luxury assets or launching another commercial project, Gregg and his wife Sue invested around $10 million of their own money to buy 17,300 acres of…

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Lost Himalayan blueberry rediscovered in Arunachal Pradesh after 188 years: Rare Vaccinium piliferum found in dense forests |

On the edge of Arunachal Pradesh, where the forest starts to tighten, and the river systems cut through steep green slopes, a small botanical record has reappeared in a way few expected. A plant tied to old herbarium sheets and colonial-era field notes has been seen again after slipping out of documented sight for generations….

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Who are the Japanese? Massive DNA project uncovers a forgotten ancestral population |

For decades, the accepted explanation for the origins of the Japanese people was relatively straightforward. Modern Japanese populations were understood to descend from two major ancestral groups: the Jomon, ancient hunter-gatherers who inhabited the Japanese archipelago for thousands of years, and the Yayoi, migrants from continental East Asia who arrived bringing rice farming, new technologies,…

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Quote of the day by Canadian-American psychologist Albert Bandura: “Where everyone is responsible, no one is really responsible” |

Albert Bandura (Image: Wikipedia) Some quotes remain relevant because human nature rarely changes as much as people think it does. Societies evolve. Technology changes rapidly. Entire industries disappear and new ones emerge. Yet human behaviour often repeats the same patterns generation after generation, especially when responsibility becomes shared among large groups of people. That is…

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Oldest evidence of human cremation discovered: Burned 100,000-year-old Homo sapiens bones found in Ethiopia’s Afar Rift |

In a remote stretch of Ethiopia’s Afar Rift, something quietly unsettling has begun to emerge from the ground. Fragments of bone, scattered within ancient sediments, are being studied for what they might represent rather than what they obviously are. Among them are remains attributed to early Homo sapiens, dated to around 100,000 years ago, and…

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