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Pluto, Axolotls, and Earthquakes from Soccer Games

The universe is weird. It also happens to be very, very loud. Or quiet, depending on what you are listening for.

Space Secrets

They found something on Pluto. And Titan, too. A mysterious compound hanging out there. Researchers call it a “Rosetta stone.” Which implies we are finally cracking a code. Or at least holding a piece of the key. 🌌

Speaking of codes. A repeating radio signal from deep space has a source now. Identified. Not an alien greeting. Yet.

We also have the Milky Way’s center, unpacked. Euclid telescope dropped a photo of our galaxy’s “crowded heart.” Sixty million stars in one frame. Try focusing your eyes on that for a second. Good luck.

Important reality check for the UFO folks out there: disclosure won’t look like Steven Spielberg’s movie. No dramatic speeches on the White House lawn. Higgs boson was the template. Bureaucratic, dry, confirmed. Then ignored. That is the play.

The Earth Shaking Itself

Did Mexico break the ground? Maybe. The national team won a World Cup game against Ecuador. 2026 edition. The fans went wild. Seismic warning systems registered the hype. Not an earthquake. Just pure, unadulterated joy hitting the pavement. 🇲🇽

Norway does this every time they score. Bergen trembles. A seismometer at the university recorded the vibes. Literal vibrations from soccer goals. Who needs plates tectonic when you have this level of passion?

Then Venezuela actually broke. Not the spirit. The crust. A rare “seismic doublet.” Two big quakes in quick succession. Stress moving from one fault part to another like a bucket brigade gone wrong. Space lasers showed the shift. The ground literally moved. New satellite imagery doesn’t lie. The terrain is rearranged.

Curiosities

Look up this weekend. A giant asteroid is passing by Earth. Not crashing. Just passing. Visible from different parts of the world for a few nights. Bring a telescope. Or just hope you have good eyes.

Down in Mexico, science got old. Like, really old. A new fossil species of axolotl, Ambystoma quetzalcoatl, was identified. First fossil salamander found formally in Mexico. They have been hanging around here for millions of years. We were just busy noticing other things. 🦎

Coffee nerds, listen up. No hot water. Just ultrasonic waves. Scientists brewed espresso using sound. It takes 75% less energy. The taste is comparable to the real deal. Sound like your morning commute? Or just the future? ☕

And West Antarctica is losing it. Missing ice. Too much ice. Temperatures jumped 45 degrees above normal. Right in the dead of winter. No ice forms. The freezer is broken.

It all hangs in the air. Or on the ice. Or in a cup of sonic coffee. We keep digging.

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