South Australia’s tiny pygmy bluetongue skink is baking in a warming, drying homeland, so Flinders University scientists have tried a bold fix—move it. Three separate populations were shifted from the parched north to cooler, greener sites farther south. At first the lizards reacted differently—nervous northerners diving for cover, laid-back southerners basking in damp burrows—but after two years most are settling in, suggesting they can ultimately thrive.
source https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/06/250626081530.htm
Flashback: The 2016 Chrome and Android‑apps story that predicted today’s
Googlebooks moment
-
A 2016 warning about Android apps on Chrome feels newly relevant as
Googlebooks pushes Android PCs into the agentic era and challenges
Microsoft again.
s...
2 hours ago
No comments:
Post a Comment