Kids News - Social Studies for Kids

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Ancient Shipwrecks In The Mediterranean Provide Insights Into The Start Of Global Trade

Historians have long suspected that the Eastern Mediterranean Sea, a popular ancient shipping route, is home to numerous shipwrecks. However, seven decades of search by marine archeologists had failed to unveil any traces of the boats. That changed on April 21, 2020, when the Enigma Shipwrecks Project (ESP) team revealed the discovery of a dozen ancient trading vessels in the Levantine Basin, the easternmost part of the Mediterranean Sea....

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Ancient Shipwrecks In The Mediterranean Provide Insights Into The Start Of Global Trade

Americans Plan To Go The Extra Mile To Appreciate Moms On Mother's Day

The COVID-19 pandemic shelter-in-place mandates and the need for social distancing has changed our lives in unprecedented ways and put a damper on everything — from graduations to proms, milestone birthdays and even summer vacations. However, it has also helped raise awareness of the importance of family. Hence, it is not surprising that many Americans plan to go the extra mile to demonstrate their love and appreciation for the real-life superhero in their lives on Mother's Day, which will be celebrated on May 10, 2020....

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Americans Plan To Go The Extra Mile To Appreciate Moms On Mother's Day

Carbios's Plastic-Eating Enzyme May Help Alleviate The World's Pollution Problem

The negative health impacts of plastic on both wildlife and humans have been well-documented. However, the versatile material, which is used for everything from grocery bags to drink bottles to food packaging, is hard to avoid. Experts estimate that of the 359 million tons of plastics produced annually worldwide, about 150–200 million tons end up in landfills or the environment. To make matters worse, the material derived from the small percentage of plastic that is recycled is of lower quality and can only be used a few times for items like clothing or carpets before it has to be discarded....

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Carbios's Plastic-Eating Enzyme May Help Alleviate The World's Pollution Problem

Boston Dynamics' Robot "Dog" Joins The Fight Against COVID-19

While the novel coronavirus is dangerous for everyone, it is particularly so for the first responders who are being exposed to the illness daily. In the US alone, almost 5,500 nurses, doctors, and other healthcare professionals have been infected with COVID-19. Of these, dozens have succumbed to the disease. Now, hospital workers worldwide may get some reprieve thanks to Spot, a semi-autonomous four-legged robot developed by Waltham, Massachusetts-based robotics company, Boston Dynamics....

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Boston Dynamics' Robot "Dog" Joins The Fight Against COVID-19

'Warrior' Velociraptor Cousin May Have Been Among The Last Surviving Raptors

When Robert Sullivan, a research associate at the New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science in Albuquerque, found some dinosaur bones in 67-million year-old Cretaceous rocks in New Mexico's San Juan Basin, in 2008, he had little idea they belonged to a new raptor species. More significantly, the feathered dinosaur roamed southern North America just prior to the mass extinction event, when most raptors had already disappeared from the fossil record....

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'Warrior' Velociraptor Cousin May Have Been Among The Last Surviving Raptors

Rare Homo Naledi Juvenile Fossils Provide Clues Into How Early Humans Aged

Over the years, paleontologists have been able to uncover many mysteries about human ancestors from unearthed skeletal remains. However, not much is known about their development and growth. because most hominin fossils are those of adults, and remains of developmentally young hominins are uncommon. Now, a perfectly-preserved partial skeleton of a Homo Naledi juvenile, who lived on Earth between 335,000 and 226,000 years ago, ​ is providing insights into how our ancient relatives may have aged....

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Rare Homo Naledi Juvenile Fossils Provide Clues Into How Early Humans Aged

Robots Help Japanese Students "Attend" Graduation Ceremony

Japan has always been at the forefront of robotic technology. Over the years, the androids have been deployed to work in banks, run hotels, and even serve as personal assistants to the elderly. Now, in what is being hailed as an "industry first," a Tokyo university has used avatar robots to enable students to "attend" their graduation ceremony without leaving home....

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Robots Help Japanese Students "Attend" Graduation Ceremony