These Are The Stories I Have Been Reading, What Are You Reading?

Did anyone watch the"Death on a Comet?"TheRosetta Spacecraftcrashing intoComet 67P?Don't tell me any spoilers,because I haven't watched the recording I made of theScience Channel's program of the event.
If you have been following alongor have been taking notes,last week I saidSaturdaysis my day forScience.In the broadest sense of the word.Since I have so manyLinksthat I have saved to do stories on,there isn't enoughSaturdaysin theYearfor me to do a story on each one.Especially when new stories happen everyday.Instead of deleting theseLinksI am going to put them on thisBlogeverySaturdayuntil I catch up,then I'll write about any newSciencewhen it comes out.
Oldest fossils found in Greenland, from time Earth was like MarsBy Alister Doyle for Reuters.com"The earliest fossil evidence of life on Earth has been found in rocks 3.7 billion years old in Greenland, raising chances of life on Mars aeons ago when both planets were similarly desolate, scientists said on Wednesday."
Hubble discovers rare fossil relic of early Milky Wayon Science Daily.com"A fossilized remnant of the early Milky Way harboring stars of hugely different ages has been revealed by an international team of astronomers. This stellar system resembles a globular cluster, but is like no other cluster known. It contains stars remarkably similar to the most ancient stars in the Milky Way and bridges the gap in understanding between our galaxy's past and its present."
What's that Flipper, dolphins really CAN talk? Scientists record two of the sea creatures having a conversation for the first timeBy 3D Map Of Milky Way: European Space Agency’s Gaia Telescope Plots Position, Brightness Of Over 1 Billion StarsBy Avaneesh Pandey for International Business Times.com"The Milky Way — the galaxy in which we float along as an insignificant speck — is estimated to have roughly 100 billion stars. The observable universe, 93 billion light-years across, is believed to have over 100 billion galaxies — many of which are much bigger than our own."
Human skeleton discovered at Antikythera shipwreck after more than 2,000 years at the bottom of the seaBy

This is,These Are The Stories I Have Been Reading,What Are Yours?Jim Hauenstein,
And,
“It is not my intention to be fulsome, but I confess that I covet your skull.”
- Arthur Conan Doyle, -
That is my story and I am sticking to it!
Like what you are reading,or do not like what you see.Set up my Blog as your Homepage,or sign up as a Follower,or leave a Comment,and I will answer you in a Post.
Thanks for reading.
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Published on October 01, 2016 20:28
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