Wednesday, April 09, 2025

 

Ancient tools from a South African cave reveal connections between prehistoric people



Field Museum
Researchers in cave 

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Archaeologists working in the cave overlooking the ocean

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Credit: Sara Watson



In a cave overlooking the ocean on the southern coast of South Africa, archaeologists discovered thousands of stone tools, created by ancient humans roughly 20,000 years ago. By examining tiny details in the chipped edges of the blades and stones, archaeologists are able to tell how the tools were made. In a new study published in the Journal of Paleolithic Archaeology, researchers analyzed these stone tools and discussed how the different techniques used to make them hint at the ways that prehistoric people traveled, interacted, and shared their craft.

“This is an important insight into how people who lived in this region were living and hunting and responding to their environment,” says Sara Watson, a postdoctoral scientist at the Field Museum’s Negaunee Integrative Research Center and lead author of the study.

During the period when these blades were made, between 24,000 and 12,000 years ago, the Earth was nearing the end of the last major ice age. Since so much of the Earth’s water was frozen in glaciers and ice caps, the sea level was lower, and the region that’s now the coast of South Africa was a few miles inland. “Instead of being right on the water like they are today, these caves would have been near vast, open plains with large game animals like antelope,” says Watson. “People hunted those animals, and to do that, they developed new tools and weapons.”

The caves, part of what archaeologists call the Robberg technocomplex, no longer overlook a plain— they're in a towering cliff face over a rocky beach. “It’s a 75-foot climb up to the cave from the shoreline,” says Watson. “We had safety ropes and a staircase made of sandbags, and we had to be harnessed in while doing the excavation.”

Every day, Watson and her colleagues made the climb with all their excavation and photography equipment, weighing up to 50 pounds per person. “Since these are extremely, extremely old sites, from before the end of the last ice age, we had to be very careful with our excavation,” says Watson. “We used little tiny dental tools and mini trowels so that we could remove each little individual layer of sediment.”

Beneath ancient dust and dirt, Watson and her team found thousands of stone tools: small, sharp blades, as well as the larger pieces of rock from which these blades were chipped. The bigger rock that blades are made from is called a core. “When your average person thinks about stone tools, they probably focus on the detached pieces, the blades and flakes. But the thing that is the most interesting to me is the core, because it shows us the particular methods and order of operations that people went through in order to make their tools,” says Watson.

Watson and her colleagues observed several distinct patterns of how the cores had been broken into smaller blades. “In a lot of these technologies, the core reduction is very specific, and it’s something that you are taught and learn, and that’s where the social information is,” says Watson. “If we see specific methods of core reduction at multiple sites across the landscape, as an archaeologist, it tells me that these people were sharing ideas with one another.”

For instance, one particular method of breaking tiny bladelets off of a core that Watson found in the Robberg caves is a style also found hundreds of miles away in places including Namibia and Lesotho. “Same core reduction pattern, same intended product,” says Watson. “The pattern is repeated over and over and over again, which indicates that it is intentional and shared, rather than just a chance similarity.”

Overall, Watson says that the study reveals how much there still is to learn about the Robberg caves and the people who used them thousands of years ago. “We have a very long and rich history as a species, and humans go back a lot farther in time than most people realize,” says Watson. “People living around the last ice age were very similar to people today.”






Prehistoric stone tool cores



Archaeologists at the field site




An array of stone tools, and a toothbrush used to excavate them



Archaeologist climbing up the cliffside to the cave site





Archaeologist working in the cave


Credit

Sara Watson

 

 

World’s first birth following conception with a fully automated remotely operated ICSI system



Automation poised to transform fertility treatment with greater efficiency and standardisation



Reproductive BioMedicine Online

What the embryologist sees during manual vs remotely controlled automated ICSI 

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Above is what the embryologist sees through the microscope when performing routine manual ICSI: two microtools and a mature egg.

Below is what the authors see when performing remotely controlled automated ICSI: two microtools, a mature egg and digital controls to perform all ICSI steps remotely. At the bottom of the screen are buttons for the autonomous steps. On the left and right are digital controls to take over should an autonomous step fail. The embryologist can be one meter away using a laboratory computer or many kilometres away using a home computer.

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Credit: Conceivable Life Sciences




10 April 2025: The world’s first baby has been born following conception with a fully automated, digitally controlled intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) system. ICSI, developed and adopted into widespread use in the 1990s and now a routine method of assisted conception, achieves fertilisation by injecting a single sperm cell into the centre of a mature egg.

The details are reported today in the peer-review medical journal Reproductive Biomedicine Online.(1) The automated system was described and developed by a multidisciplinary team of specialists from Conceivable Life Sciences in New York and Guadalajara, Mexico, led by embryologist Dr Jacques Cohen, Chief Medical Officer Dr Alejandro Chavez-Badiola and Lead Engineer Professor Gerardo Mendizabal-Ruiz. Treatment was provided under review board oversight at Hope IVF Mexico (Guadalajara) as part of a pilot investigation into various processes of automation in the fertility laboratory.

The system was developed as a workstation automating each of the 23 steps of the standard ICSI procedure. These steps were operated independently either under artificial intelligence (AI) control or under the digital control of a remote operator. Presently, all the world’s ICSI procedures are performed manually by skilled embryologists operating microinjection systems. However, as studies have indicated, performance by the ICSI embryologist can vary significantly between individuals; now, says Dr Cohen, automation of the ICSI process ‘represents a transformative solution that promises to enhance precision, improve efficiency, and ensure consistent outcomes’ through reduced variability and work-related stress on human operators. He adds that the automated process might not only provide standardisation but will also improve egg survival and optimise timing of the injection.

AI has made significant advances in the IVF laboratory, with progress in sperm and egg selection. In the application of this latest system AI was used to position the sperm cell in the injection pipette and direct the microinjection itself within the egg.

‘With AI,’ explained Professor Mendizabal-Ruiz, ‘the system autonomously selects sperm and precisely immobolises its midsection with a laser ready for injection - executing this rapid, precise process with a level of accuracy beyond human capability.’

The successful birth was accomplished in a 40-year-old woman referred for treatment with donor eggs at Hope IVF Mexico in Guadalajara, following a previously unsuccessful IVF attempt which had produced only one mature egg and no embryos. In the study cycle, five eggs were assigned to fertilisation with automated ICSI, and three as controls with standard manual ICSI. The automated system was set up on site but thereafter remote operators, in the Guadalajara clinic and in New York, issued commands via a digital interface to perform each of the 23 microinjection steps for each egg (a total of 115 steps). Overall, the entire procedure took an average of 9 minutes 56 seconds per egg, a little longer than routine manual ICSI because of its experimental nature, but, said Professor Mendizabal-Ruiz, ‘we expect to reduce procedure time significantly’.

Four of the five injected eggs in the automated system achieved normal fertilisation and all three in the manual control group. One high quality embryo which progressed to the blastocyst stage in culture had been fertilised with the automated system under remote control in New York, 3700 km away. After this vitrified/thawed blastocyst was transferred in a subsequent cycle, a pregnancy was established which continued normally to delivery of a healthy male baby.

Dr Chavez-Badiola explains that the ICSI system described in this report supersedes all previous developments in ICSI by automating each single step of the microinjection procedure, with the additional steps of sperm handling and selection by AI.

Now, he adds, the system’s validity in a wider treatment application will depend on its safe performance in a study involving more cases. Nevertheless, he notes, the development so far, validated by a healthy live birth, marks a significant step towards full automation in the IVF laboratory. Here, automation has already become established practice in embryo culture, with incubators visualising embryos with time-lapse images and AI monitoring development and predicting outcomes. Automation is also being applied during the cryo-storage of eggs, sperm and embryos, as well as in sperm assessment and preparation procedures.


1. Mendizabal-Ruiz G, Chavez-Badiola A, Hernadez-Morale E, et al. A digitally controlled, remotely operated intracytoplasmic sperm injection system: The first live birth. Reprod Biomed Online 2025; doi:10.1016/j.rbmo.2025.104943

* For more information on this press release and the published paper, please contact:
Duncan Nicholas, RBM Online Development Editor
dev.editor@rbmonline.com

 

Girls’ education projects succeed when whole communities ‘live the change’ and carry it forward


A study of 27 projects educating marginalized girls in lower- and middle-income countries finds that whole communities need to be mobilized as “agents of change” to ensure the effects last



University of Cambridge

Agness, a CAMFED Learner Guide in Hurungwe district Zimbabwe, talking to two students. 

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Agness, a CAMFED Learner Guide in Hurungwe district Zimbabwe, talking to two students.

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Credit: Credit: Jon Pilch/CAMFED




Education projects supporting marginalised girls in lower-income countries are more likely to achieve lasting transformations when they mobilise young women and their communities as “agents of change”, a new report indicates.

The recommendation comes from the latest evaluation of the Girls’ Education Challenge: a UK Government-supported initiative which has funded projects reaching more than 1.6 million girls. The University of Cambridge-led study finds that these projects initiated “virtuous cycles” of change – particularly by rooting themselves in communities and empowering young women to lead the way.

In many low- and lower-middle-income countries, girls face persistent inequalities that limit their learning and life chances. Many drop out of school early due to early marriage, pregnancy or because they are expected to work at home. Marginalised girls, who live in extreme poverty, have disabilities, or come from remote areas, are least likely to attend or complete school.

 

Although some aid programmes target marginalised girls, their impact can be short-lived. Aside from the difficulties of changing deep-seated social norms, the initial momentum from girls’ education programmes is easily lost when funding ends, and is also vulnerable to economic shocks, conflict, and environmental crises. For this reason, the new evaluation explores how far Girls’ Education Challenge (GEC) projects managed to deliver sustainable change, and under what conditions.

The study was undertaken by a collaboration which has carried out previous evaluations for the GEC, led by the Research for Equitable Access and Learning (REAL) Centre at the Faculty of Education, University of Cambridge. One earlier study, in 2023, provided substantive evidence of the projects’ success in enhancing the learning and life opportunities of marginalised girls, but warned that long-term success would depend on sustained investment.

Although it reiterates that warning, the new report, which is based on evidence from 27 projects with a particular focus on Nepal and Zimbabwe, expresses cautious optimism that they have laid the foundations for lasting progress.

REAL Centre Director, Professor Pauline Rose, said: “Many girls’ education projects emphasise the importance of community buy-in, but the GEC projects succeeded in part because they also worked through communities – embedding processes of transformation in local structures and making communities, along with young women themselves, the carriers of change.”

One key reason for the projects’ success, the authors argue, was their relatively long duration, from 2017 to 2024. This allowed them to challenge entrenched social norms – such as support for preventing early marriage or gender-based violence – that often represent barriers to girls’ education and life chances.

Rather than simply running awareness campaigns, many projects engaged influential local figures, groups and school committees to help challenge these attitudes. In Zimbabwe, for instance, a mothers’ support group and local faith leaders were engaged to monitor girls’ wellbeing, and proved instrumental in identifying and reporting cases of child abuse and early marriage. One teacher-mentor told the researchers that their efforts had “significantly reduced incidents of early marriage”.

 

In Nepal, parent-teacher associations and school management committees were directly involved in managing school supplies, handling requests for uniforms and hygiene items for girls attending school, and delivering GEC activities. Local businesses provided work experience and supported the girls’ career development. This embedded approach, which mobilises the community to support girls’ education is, the report suggests, key to sustainability.

Echoing findings from the 2023 report, the authors also emphasise the importance of empowering young women as “agents of change”. In several of the participating countries, graduates of GEC-backed projects were trained to run life skills sessions, support groups, and mentoring schemes for other students. This approach, which is embodied in initiatives such as the Campaign for Female Education’s “Learner Guides” programme, is increasingly acknowledged as invaluable to sustaining progress in girls’ education and has also been adopted by organisations such as UNICEF and the World Bank.

Beyond its immediate educational impact, the new study suggests that this model had ripple effects which reshaped social expectations. As girls progressed into higher education or employment, the report suggests they became visible role models who helped communities perceive the broader benefits of ensuring access to a quality education. “Once people have moved forward and grabbed education, they can’t think of going backward and not educating their children,” one teacher in Nepal told the research team.

A third mechanism of long-term change was the projects’ alignment with national and local government priorities, as well as the work of other organisations. In Nepal, authorities took direct responsibility for aspects of the GEC project, for example; while an implementing partner in Uganda emphasised the importance of the project’s integration into school development planning and governance.
 

Although it suggests that the GEC projects have therefore laid the groundwork for sustained progress, the report also draws attention to the basic fragility of girls’ education, especially its vulnerability to system-wide shocks and emergencies. One GEC partner in Kenya, for instance, reported that after a prolonged drought, some families had begun to see the “bride price” they might get for marrying off their daughters as a potential solution to their financial difficulties. “That may erode the gains we have worked towards,” they said.

“Unfortunately, girls’ education, particularly for the most marginalised, is often a casualty of any crisis,” Dr Amna Ansari, the report’s lead author, said. “We need the international community and national governments alike to remain committed to supporting it, but the mechanisms for sustaining positive change are nevertheless becoming clear. When communities are mobilised, girls are empowered to lead, and projects are connected to their systemic context, a virtuous cycle emerges, along with a groundswell of local support. Those are the features that can carry change forward.”

The report can be accessed here.

ENDS.

 

AMS science preview: Fire weather, bumpy hurricane flights, climate extremes and protests


Early online research from journals of the American Meteorological Society



American Meteorological Society




The American Meteorological Society continuously publishes research on climate, weather, and water in its 12 journals. Many of these articles are available for early online access–they are peer-reviewed, but not yet in their final published form. Below are some recent examples.


JOURNAL ARTICLES

Multi-factor Change in Western U.S. Nighttime Fire Weather
Journal of Climate

Western fires become less prone to “lay down” at night. Wildfires typically calm down at night–a crucial break for firefighters–yet firefighter and satellite measurements confirm increased nocturnal fire activity in the western U.S. from 1980 to 2020. This study shows increases in meteorological variables conducive to nocturnal fire. Extremely dry nights (low water vapor) have increased over 75% of the study area–in some places 10- to 12-fold. Across 81% of the study area, the authors find increases in nights where drier air combines with windier weather or other dangerous factors.

Spatiotemporal Analyses of Lightning and Tornado Exposure to Large Outdoor Gatherings in the Conterminous United States
Weather, Climate, and Society

Baseball, amusement parks, and severe weather. A study of potential human exposure to lightning and tornadoes for United States large outdoor public gatherings found that amusement parks, Major League Baseball games, and state fairs during March-August have the greatest potential exposure to lightning and tornadoes overall. The New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival topped the list for lightning exposure, while Coors Field in Denver (in June) and Six Flags Over Texas in Arlington (in April) had the highest likelihood of tornado exposure.

Bridging the Gap Between National Weather Service Heat Terminology and Public Understanding
Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society

Heat index and warning terms may still lack clarity with the public. A small survey found that most respondents’ understanding of heat-related terminology does not match National Weather Service definitions. Almost half of participants said that “heat index” was synonymous with air temperature (less than 10% understood that heat index includes humidity) and many did not fully understand the terms Excessive Heat Watch, Heat Advisory, and Excessive Heat Warning. The authors recommend exploring plain language messaging alternatives.

What was the Bumpiest Flight Ever on NOAA’s WP-3D Hurricane Hunter Aircraft?
Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society

Extreme turbulence on hurricane flights leads to new scientific “bumpiness” metric. Motivated by their newsworthy experience during a Hurricane Hunter mission into Hurricane Ian (2022), the authors develop a novel “bumpiness index” to objectively quantify three-dimensional turbulence felt aboard NOAA’s WP-3D Orion Hurricane Hunter aircraft missions. The Hurricane Ian flight was found to be the second bumpiest on record, with a flight into Hurricane Hugo (1989) taking the prize for “bumpiest ever.”

The Changes in Heating and Cooling Energy Demand in Beijing and Shanghai under Global Warming
Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology

Energy demand for heating and cooling is shifting in Chinese megacities. From 1961 to 2020, winter heating demand decreased and summer cooling energy demand increased in China’s Beijing and Shanghai megacities. While the reduction in energy used for heating during winter currently outweighs the increase in energy demand for summer cooling, summertime energy demand is more sensitive to temperature overall. As global warming continues, this implies that the summertime energy draw will outpace reductions in winter energy demand.

Impacts of Irrigated and Non-irrigated Land Use on Convective Environments and Related Diagnostic Variables During GRAINEX in Nebraska, USA
Journal of Hydrometeorology

Irrigation may favor storm development on the Great Plains. Data from the Great Plains Irrigation Experiment (GRAINEX) in Nebraska comparing large irrigated areas with non-irrigated grassland and transitional areas suggest that irrigated areas display atmospheric conditions considered more favorable to the formation of convective storms.

Earth, Wind and Fire: Are Boulder’s Extreme Downslope Winds Changing?
Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society

Extreme winds sputtering in Boulder. Throughout the mid-late 20th century, the NSF NCAR Mesa Lab occasionally measured 120+ mph wind gusts in the Boulder, CO, area. Yet after 1995, peak recorded wind gusts almost never approached 100 mph. The authors examine this apparent reduction in peak wind events, and find that it is likely real, perhaps due to increased local temperatures. Stricter building codes and increased tree growth in the area may also contribute to reduced wind damage.

Lightning Fatalities in Europe (2001–2020)
Weather, Climate, and Society

European lightning deaths skew toward males, teens, and SE Europe. A study of 1,282 lightning fatalities recorded in the European Severe Weather Database (ESWD) over 2001-2020 found the greatest share of deaths in southeastern Europe (especially Bulgaria). 77.8% of those killed by lightning were male, with a spike around age 15. Lightning deaths on the job were most common among farm workers; hikers topped the list of those who died during leisure activities.

Climate Extremes and Protests in India, Pakistan and Bangladesh, 1995-2013
Weather, Climate, and Society

Social unrest is strongly correlated with climate extremes in India, Bangladesh, and Pakistan. A study combining media-reported protests with satellite data on climate conditions vs local averages found that heavy rains and high temperatures are strongly, positively associated with protest activity. Protests are also strongly, positively associated with abnormally wet or dry spells over longer time periods, with a delayed effect, suggesting long-term social and political impacts of drought and heavy rain.

Impact Matters: Detection and Early Warning of Agriculturally Impactful Flash Droughts
Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society

Warning farmers of flash drought. How exactly to define a rapid-onset (flash) drought is still up for debate, with many methods attempting to diagnose and monitor them–yet all lack a direct connection to agricultural impact. A new flash drought indicator, based on soil water deficit (scarcity of water available in the soil for plants) has proven useful for early detection of agriculturally impactful flash droughts.

Modeling the Predictors of Extreme Weather Affective Experience and its Influence on Extreme Weather Decision Making
Weather, Climate, and Society

Positive “extreme weather affect” related to tornado readiness. Analysis of survey responses about extreme weather found that respondents who described their feelings about extreme weather positively–conveying that they were interested, alert, attentive, or active in response to severe weather warnings–rated significantly higher on tornado preparedness. Those with a negative severe weather “affect” were significantly less likely to be prepared for a tornado.

You can view all research published in AMS Journals at journals.ametsoc.org.


About the American Meteorological Society

The American Meteorological Society advances the atmospheric and related sciences, technologies, applications, and services for the benefit of society. Founded in 1919, AMS has a membership of around 12,000 professionals, students, and weather enthusiasts. AMS publishes 12 atmospheric and related oceanic and hydrologic science journals; hosts more than 12 conferences annually; and offers numerous programs and services. Visit us at www.ametsoc.org/.

About AMS Journals

The American Meteorological Society continuously publishes research on climate, weather, and water in its 12 journals. Some AMS journals are open access. Media login credentials are available for subscription journals. Journals include the Bulletin of the American Meteorolocial SocietyWeather, Climate, and Society, the Journal of Climate, and Monthly Weather Review.

 

European bird declines linked to range of climatic conditions experienced





University of East Anglia




New research suggests conservation efforts could more effectively identify and protect bird species at greatest risk from climate change by better understanding the range of specific conditions they need to thrive.

The study, led by the University of East Anglia (UEA), examined the relationship between the extent of the climatic conditions that species tolerate and in which populations can survive - known as climatic niche breadth - and their likelihood of declining in response to climate change.

For species inhabiting a similar area of geographic space, those able to tolerate a wider range of climate conditions are less likely to experience population declines, and are more likely to be increasing, compared to those with narrower climatic preferences.

The authors say their findings, published in the Journal of Biogeography, provide valuable insights into how climatic niche breadth can act as an important factor in predicting bird species vulnerability to climate change.

They suggest incorporating species' climatic niches into climate change risk assessments to better inform conservation strategies, arguing that variation in climatic conditions within a species range can provide greater nuance in understanding their resilience to factors that affect their population.

“Deciding which species are more at risk isn’t straight forward, and species may be declining for a range of reasons,” said lead author Karolina Zalewska, a postgraduate researcher in UEA’s School of Environmental Sciences.

“Rare species and those that have smaller distributions are more likely to be vulnerable to climate change. This study has shown that birds that are more widespread, such as the house sparrow and the common starling, can also face threats to their populations.

"Species, whether rare or widespread, with narrower climatic niches may be more susceptible to the rapid changes brought on by climate change compared to those with broader niches, and this may be one of the underlying reasons behind the population declines observed.

"Our results emphasise the importance of understanding and incorporating the level of exposure to climatic variability when assessing vulnerability to climate change and long-term population declines."

Human-induced climate change has increasingly been identified as a major threat to global biodiversity. However, the extent of this threat is likely to be uneven across species, due to differences in life histories or exposure to environmental change, with some climatic conditions, such as variables of temperature and rainfall, being more widespread than others across geographic area.

While species with broad geographic distributions would be expected to experience a wider range of climatic conditions and so be more resilient to environmental change, recent population declines of many widespread species suggest other factors may be involved, with the breadth of climatic conditions a species experiences being a possible indicator of their resilience to climate change.

Co-author Prof Aldina Franco, also from the School of Environmental Sciences, said: “Faced with the challenges of the global biodiversity crisis and climate change, the rapid assessment of species vulnerability to environmental change has become of paramount importance to address priorities for conservation. As climate change accelerates, our study highlights the need to prioritize species that are most at risk due to their more restricted environmental requirements.”

The researchers drew on data for the population trends of 159 European breeding bird species across 29 European countries from the Pan-European Common Bird Monitoring Scheme. These 40-year population trends were related to the climate conditions species experience and their distribution area.

They used 30-years of climate data for the species breeding ranges to construct representations of their climatic niches and produced a new index of climatic niche breadth that accounts for species distribution area.

This analysis, along with additional factors such as the species' diet, primary habitat type, migratory status, and average body mass, was then used to explore how these variables influence the long-term population trends.

“These findings can help us understand the threats associated with climate change and allow for rapid assessment of the importance of climatic factors on population trends, providing an invaluable tool for targeting species conservation,” added Miss Zalewska. “In particular, we show that the climatic niche breadth to range area index can help predict which species may be more vulnerable to population declines.”

Within the species included in this study, 58 had a decreasing population trend, populations of 68 species were stable and 33 were increasing.

As in previous studies the team found that species associated with farmland habitats, both in the UK and wider European area, such as the corn bunting or skylark, were more likely to be declining while those able to tolerate human-modified environments, including blackbirds and blue tits, were more likely to experience increasing population trends.

The work was supported by funding from the UK’s Natural Environment Research Council and the ARIES Doctoral Training Partnership.

‘European breeding bird declines associated with narrower climatic niches’, Karolina Zalewska et al is published in the Journal of Biogeography on April 10.