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NASA's Artemis 2 moon rocket gets 2nd stage even as Trump tries to scrap Space Launch System (photos)

NASA's Artemis 2 moon rocket gets 2nd stage even as Trump tries to scrap Space Launch System (photos)

Yahoo06-05-2025
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Yahoo is using AI to generate takeaways from this article. This means the info may not always match what's in the article. Reporting mistakes helps us improve the experience.
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The ICPS is lowered onto SLS's stage adapter inside the VAB, May 1, 2025. | Credit: NASA
The Artemis 2 megarocket set to launch NASA's next astronauts to the moon in 2026 is almost completely assembled.
The giant Space Launch System (SLS) rocket continues to grow inside the NASA's Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB). Technicians at the Kennedy Space Center (KSC), in Florida, stacked the rocket's second stage onto the launch vehicle Thursday (May 1). The Interim Cryogenic Propulsion Stage (ICPS) is responsible for carrying the Orion spacecraft and crew the rest of the way into orbit around the Earth, and then sending them on their way to the moon.
This SLS rocket will launch the Artemis 2 mission, with NASA astronauts Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover and Christina Koch as well as Canadian Space Agency astronaut Jeremy Hansen. The quartet are flying the second installment of NASA's Artemis program, which aims to establish a permanent presence on the moon as a technology springboard to one day send humans to Mars.
The next mission, Artemis 3, would then deliver astronauts to the moon with the help of a Starship lander in 2027. That could be the last SLS rocket to fly, though. The Trump administration proposed canceling the SLS and Orion program after Artemis 3 in its 2026 budget proposal on Friday (May 2).
Artemis 2 is scheduled to launch sometime in early 2026 — more than three years after the launch of Artemis 1, in November 2022. Artemis 1 sent an uncrewed Orion spacecraft into lunar orbit on a mission that lasted about 25 days. Orion and crew won't enter lunar orbit for Artemis 2, but they will fly around the moon.
Rather than enter orbit, the ICPS will steer Orion and the Artemis 2 crew out of Earth orbit into a free-return trajectory around the moon. This slingshots the spacecraft around the lunar far-side on a course directly back to Earth.
Unexpected damage to Orion's heat shield caused by atmospheric reentry during Artemis 1 is to blame for the long wait time between Artemis 1 and Artemis 2. That damage delayed Artemis 2 and Artemis 3 by more than a year each. Artemis 3 is currently targeted for 2027, and will carry the first astronauts to land on the moon since the Apollo missions.
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a large section of a rocket is hoisted in a factory
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a large section of a rocket is hoisted in a factory
RELATED STORIES:
— NASA begins stacking SLS rocket for Artemis 2 moon mission (photos)
— 'We're pushing the limits:' Artemis 2 backup astronaut on 2025 round-the-moon mission (exclusive)
— Astronauts won't walk on the moon until 2026 after NASA delays next 2 Artemis missions
The ICPS arrived at the VAB last month. Now, NASA has shared photos of the ICPS being stacked inside the VAB on X, showcasing the stage as it was hoisted from the warehouse floor and lowered into the SLS stage adapter.
NASA also took deliver of Orion and its service module this week from the spacecraft's main contractor Lockheed Martin. Before it heads to the VAB for incorporation with SLS, Orion will be transferred KSC's Exploration Ground Systems for processing.
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A Fragment of Earth's Original Crust Still Exists—and It's Buried in Canada
A Fragment of Earth's Original Crust Still Exists—and It's Buried in Canada

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A Fragment of Earth's Original Crust Still Exists—and It's Buried in Canada

"Hearst Magazines and Yahoo may earn commission or revenue on some items through these links." Here's what you'll learn in this story: What are now thought to be the oldest rocks on Earth have been confirmed to have an age of almost 4.2 billion years, almost as old as the planet itself. Researchers were met with controversy for their initial claims, but dating isotopes of one metal that decayed into another showed that the igneous rock from northeastern Canada really was that old. This ancient piece of our planet could tell us more about its turbulent past. Earth is about 4.5 billion years old, and as the eons passed, the crust of the young planet experienced turbulence. Asteroid collisions shattered some parts, which melted and recrystallized, while tectonic plates constantly shifted and triggered volcanic eruptions that oozed magma over the surface. Erosion further erased evidence of our planet's early scars. The most ancient layers of crust were all but lost—until now. The oldest crust on our planet formed during what is known as the Hadean epoch. Reaching back to the period between 4.6 to 4 billion ago, this was when the Solar System was still forming in a thick haze of gas and dust (possibly the refuse from a supernova) that surrounded the nascent Sun. It is an epoch not even considered part of geologic time because, for years, the only rocks found dating back from this period were meteorites that fell from space. Hadean meteorites and lunar rocks up to 4.5 billion years old have been found before, but nothing directly from Earth even came close. As Earth became covered in swaths of ocean, layers of soil and landscapes as diverse as forests, deserts, mountains, volcanic plains, glaciers, grasslands and cities built by humans, primordial relics were buried even deeper. Anything found to have been part of our planet's crust in the distant past was 3.8 billion years old or younger. That puts even our latest findings in the Archean period, which followed the Hadean. Geologist Jonathan O'Neil of Ottawa University in Canada refused to believe there were no Hadean fragments of crust remaining. While zircons found embedded in Australian rocks were successfully dated back to that period, an actual piece of crust that old had never surfaced. In a controversial 2008 study, O'Neil and his research team claimed that they had discovered a part of the original crust in northeast Canada's remote Nuvvuagittuq Greenstone Belt. This formation has stayed intact almost since Earth was born. It could be a portal into Earth's earliest growing pains. There was just one problem. Another group of researchers steadfastly argued that the rocks of the Nuvvuagittuq Greenstone Belt were no older than 3.8 billion years. While the 4-billion-year-old rocks of the Acasta gneiss in the northwest of Canada were slightly older, having just barely formed at the end of the Hadean, they were still not old enough. O'Neil was determined to prove that the Nuvvuagittuq rock, originally a flood plain of magma that hardened into volcanic basalt, predated the other pieces of crust. It turned out that the evidence was hiding in the rock itself, and not in the form of zircons. When they first formed, they had contained samarium, a metal which oxidizes when exposed to air. Any samarium in the rocks was long gone. However, samarium isotopes had left behind chemical signatures of their decay into isotopes of neodymium. Two different isotopes of neodymium which had come from two samarium isotopes were both dated to 4.16 billion years. 'The age agreement between both extant and extinct radiogenic systems, in rocks related through igneous fractionation, is compelling evidence for preservation of Hadean rocks in the Nuvvuagittuq Greenstone Belt, opening a rare window into Earth's earliest times,' O'Neil and his colleagues said in a study recently published in Science. There could be more crust that ancient which has not been unearthed yet. It is even possible that some may have landed on the Moon. 4.4 billion years ago, not long after Earth formed, an extreme collision shattered part of the Earth and formed our only satellite, which has not been explored by humans since the Apollo Era. What future Artemis astronauts find once we return to the Moon might give us more insight about how our planet grew up. You Might Also Like The Do's and Don'ts of Using Painter's Tape The Best Portable BBQ Grills for Cooking Anywhere Can a Smart Watch Prolong Your Life?

125,000-year-old 'fat factory' run by Neanderthals discovered in Germany
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125,000-year-old 'fat factory' run by Neanderthals discovered in Germany

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Neanderthals were running a potentially lifesaving "fat factory" around 125,000 years ago in what is now Germany, a new study finds. The research, published Wednesday (July 2) in the journal Science, reveals that these archaic human relatives had a process for extracting grease from animal bones — and it may have saved them from a lethal condition. The condition, known as protein poisoning or rabbit starvation, happens when humans eat too much protein and don't get enough fat or carbohydrates. Neanderthals would have likely been at high risk of protein poisoning, as they largely ate meat. The "fat factory" discovery suggests that hominins, or humans and our close relatives, were practicing resource intensification — getting more utility out of the materials they had available — much earlier than previously thought. Before this analysis, the earliest evidence for resource intensification dated to 28,000 years ago, long after the Neanderthals' extinction, according to the study. Scientists found the Paleolithic factory after uncovering the fragmented remains of 172 large animals, including horses, deer and cattle, as well as Neanderthal-made anvils and hammerstones. After analyzing the bones, the team found that Neanderthals had first smashed the bones to get to the marrow — a soft, edible tissue inside of some bones — before boiling them to extract the fat. It appears that Neanderthals ate both the marrow and the fat, which would have maximized the amount of food and nutrients they got from an animal carcass. "It's surprisingly creative and innovative behavior from Neanderthals," Osbjorn Pearson, an archaeologist at The University of New Mexico who was not involved in the study, told Live Science. Related: 10 fascinating discoveries about Neanderthals in 2024, from 'Thorin' the last Neanderthal to an ancient glue factory Neanderthals, the closest extinct relative of modern humans, emerged around 400,000 years ago and went extinct around 34,000 years ago. Remains of the archaic humans were first discovered in the 19th century, and much of the archaeological evidence revealed since then suggests that Neanderthals were fairly sophisticated. They made tools, glue factories and possibly even art. While it was known that Neanderthals largely ate meat, little was known about how Neanderthals prepared animal carcasses. "We know a lot about Neanderthal hunting tactics, habits and consumption of meat and bone marrow … but to much lesser degree about all the processes after hunting and butchering," study first author Lutz Kindler, an archaeologist at the Monrepos Archaeological Research Center and Museum for Human Behavioral Evolution in Germany, told Live Science in an email. Archaeologists found 2,000 bone fragments at Neumark-Nord, an archaeological site in central Germany, that had been crushed to facilitate the grease extraction. "Fragmentation of the bones of large mammals into such a vast amount of small fragments is labour-intensive and time-consuming," so it's clear they served a purpose, study co-author Wil Roebroeks, a professor emeritus of paleolithic archaeology at Leiden University in the Netherlands, told Live Science in an email. In addition to bearing signs of being boiled, the bones are mostly broken near areas that contain the most fat, which supports the idea that the grease was rendered for consumption. Neanderthals might have eaten the fat out of necessity, Pearson said. They sometimes experienced periods of starvation and may have been desperate for sources of calories. "And it turns out that fat is just packed with calories," he said — fat supplies more than twice the calories per gram as carbohydrates and protein do. The bones also suggest that these archaic humans may have used some form of food storage, Roebroeks said. Neanderthals may have been "more similar to historically documented foragers" than previous research had suggested, he added. RELATED STORIES —130,000-year-old Neanderthal-carved bear bone is symbolic art, study argues —50,000-year-old Neanderthal bones harbor oldest-known human viruses —Neanderthal 'population bottleneck' around 110,000 years ago may have contributed to their extinction Kindler noted the overlaps between the revealed Neanderthal practice and modern human behavior. "The archaeological science of studying hominids is about finding the similarities between us today and them in the past," he said. Understanding what Neanderthals ate and how they acquired it may improve our understanding of human adaptations, Roebroeks said. The extra calories provided by bone-derived grease has been vital to human evolution, as more robust diets can lengthen lifespan and lead to increased reproduction.

A newly forming ocean may split Africa apart, scientists say
A newly forming ocean may split Africa apart, scientists say

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A newly forming ocean may split Africa apart, scientists say

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. A plume of molten rock deep beneath eastern Africa is pulsing upward in rhythmic surges, slowly splitting the continent apart and potentially marking the birth of a new ocean. At least, that's what a team of researchers led by Emma Watts of the Swansea University in the U.K. recently discovered. More specifically, the scientists' new study found that the Afar region of Ethiopia is underlain by a plume of hot mantle that rises and falls in a repeated pattern, almost like "a beating heart." These pulses, the team says, are closely tied to overlying tectonic plates and play a key role in the slow rifting of the African continent. "We found that the mantle beneath Afar is not uniform or stationary — it pulses, and these pulses carry distinct chemical signatures," Watts said in a statement. "That's important for how we think about the interaction between Earth's interior and its surface." The Afar region, which covers the northeastern region of Ethiopia, is one of the few places on Earth where three tectonic rift systems meet — the Red Sea Rift, the Gulf of Aden Rift and the Main Ethiopian Rift. As the tectonic plates in this so-called "triple junction" are pulled apart over millions of years, the crust stretches, thins, and eventually breaks, signaling an early step in the formation of a new ocean basin. Geologists have long suspected that a plume of hot mantle lies beneath this region and helps drive the rifting process — but, until now, little was known about how that plume behaves. To study what lies beneath, researchers collected over 100 volcanic rock samples from across Afar and the Main Ethiopian Rift. They combined this fieldwork with existing geophysical data and advanced statistical modeling to better understand the structure and composition of the crust and underlying mantle. Their analysis revealed a single, asymmetric plume beneath the region, marked by repeating chemical patterns or "geological barcodes," according to the new study." The chemical striping suggests the plume is pulsing," study co-author Tom Gernon of the University of Southampton said in the statement. "In places where the plates are thinner or pulling apart faster, like the Red Sea Rift, those pulses move more efficiently — like blood through a narrow artery." "We found that the evolution of deep mantle upwellings is intimately tied to the motion of the plates above," study co-author Derek Keir of the University of Southampton added in the same statement. RELATED STORIES — Do other planets have plate tectonics? — How satellites have revolutionized the study of volcanoes — Meteorites and volcanoes may have helped jump-start life on Earth "This has profound implications for how we interpret surface volcanism, earthquake activity, and the process of continental breakup." The team's study was published on June 25 in the journal Nature Geoscience.

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