Latest science news: Japan earthquake | Superbug breakthrough | COP30 updates

 Latest science news: Japan earthquake | Superbug breakthrough | COP30 updates
By: livescience Posted On: November 10, 2025 View:

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Ram-shaped teapot from ancient Canaanite cult discovered near ancient city of Armageddon

A very interesting teapot.

Antibiotic found hiding in plain sight could treat dangerous infections, early study find

Scientists have discovered a new antibiotic compound that shows promising activity against drug-resistant infections, so that's good.

NASA’s ultraquiet supersonic 'flying swordfish' makes history with first test flight

NASA has unveiled an experimental supersonic plane that looks like a swordfish. Swordfish are among the fastest animals in the ocean, but their commonly cited swimming speeds are very unreliable. NASA's new plane reached a top speed of about 240 miles per hour (386 kilometers per hour).

Bizarre robotic chair concept looks like a crab and can carry you around the house — it can even help you into your car

A terrifying, but potentially very useful, walking chair.

How to watch 'Kingdom' — TV and streaming details for David Attenborough's new BBC series

New nature series narrated by the 99-year-old Sir David Attenborough.

Headshot of Patrick Pester

Patrick Pester

Mysterious Andean holes explained

An aerial photo of the "band of holes" in southern Peru.

An aerial photo of the "band of holes" in southern Peru. (Image credit: J.L. Bongers; Antiquity Publications Ltd; CC BY 4.0)

Some 5,200 holes sit in ordered grids along southern Peru’s Serpent Mountain, many of them dating back more than a thousand years. So what could explain them? Long-forgotten rituals? Fog capture technology? Human sacrifices? Aliens?

A new suggestion made by archaeologists posits that the real answer isn’t quite that exciting (although it’s still pretty cool): The holes were likely used as accountancy tools in barter markets for goods along trade routes.

You can read the full story here.

Giza break

A few people and a camel are before a large Egyptian pyramid on a blue sky day.

The Pyramid of Menkaure on the Giza plateau. (Image credit: Joanot via Getty Images)

Two voids found on the eastern side of Egypt’s Pyramid of Menkaure could point to a second entrance to the ancient tomb, tests that used electrical currents and ultrasonic waves have hinted.

You can check out the full story here.

The weekend’s biggest news

We can’t always bring you breaking science news as it happens — sometimes our loved ones, days off and sleep schedules get in the way. Here’s some of the biggest science news that happened over the weekend:

  • A powerful 6.9 magnitude earthquake rattled the northern coast of Japan on Sunday (Nov. 9). Thankfully, there have been no immediate reports of injuries or damage, no abnormalities at the two nuclear power plants in the area, and a tsunami warning following the quake was downgraded.
  • Health officials are investigating 13 cases of infant botulism across 10 states linked to a recalled baby formula.
  • Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket was scheduled for launch on Sunday (Nov. 9) but it has been delayed until Wednesday (Nov. 12) due to poor weather conditions. The launch will be the first big test for the rocket’s first NASA mission, and a statement of intent for the company’s founder Jeff Bezos against competitor SpaceX.

Monkey business is closed

A stock image of a rhesus macaque in India, one of many countries in Asia where this species naturally roams.

A rhesus macaque photographed in India. (Image credit: McDonald Wildlife Photography Inc. via Getty Images)

Two weeks ago, Patrick covered news of several lab monkeys that escaped from an overturned truck in Mississippi that were allegedly diseased and dangerous.

On Friday night, we finally got news that the last of these monkeys has been tracked down following a report from a resident whose dog alerted her to its presence. Five of the escaped rhesus macaques were sadly killed by police, yet authorities say that this monkey was "successfully recovered."

Good COP, bad COP

A new study has warned that irreversible climate "tipping points" are more numerous and close to being triggered than previously thought.

COP30 is getting under way, and it promises to be more contentious than ever. (Image credit: Shutterstock)

Good morning, science fans! Ben here, back for another round of updates on the latest science updates from around the world.

While we're speaking of the pale blue dot that we call home, it's in a spot of trouble due to human-caused climate change, as it speeds toward near-certain overshoot of climatic guard-rails set by 2015's Paris Agreement. That's why delegations from 194 countries are meeting in Brazil for the UN's COP30 conference, making yet another attempt to forge better plans to stay within the agreement's limits and phase out fossil fuels.

This year's conference promises to be particularly contentious, with many leaders being no-shows and the Trump administration having exited the process entirely.

Where that leaves this conference is entirely unclear: Brazil insists that this year's conference will be one of "implementation", whereby countries focus on what they can contribute toward real-world impacts instead of striving toward longwinded, often defanged, consensus. Whether that means some countries can get away with contributing very little, and what can be done to counteract this, remains unclear.

Ben Turner

Ben Turner

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