Science News Briefs from around the World: December 2022

Lightning-resistant trees in Panama, an Australian avian arms race, hydrogen-powered trains in Germany, and much more in this month’s Quick Hits

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AUSTRALIA

An “innovation arms race” may be brewing between humans and trash-can-raiding cockatoos in Sydney’s suburbs. Humans keep trying new defenses, such as placing bricks or rubber snakes on their bin lids, but the birds continue developing strategies to open them.

BRAZIL


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Fossilized teeth revealed Brasilodon, a rodentlike animal that lived 225 million years ago, as the oldest known mammal. Scant fossil evidence had made the animal hard to classify, but new analysis suggests that its teeth are mammalian rather than reptilian.

DENMARK

Denmark has become the first United Nations member state to pay for “loss and damage” caused by its greenhouse gas emissions. Its $13-million donation will go toward recovery efforts in the countries hit hardest by climate change.

GERMANY

The world’s first commuter train route powered entirely by hydrogen is in the works in the state of Lower Saxony. The trains emit only water and steam, offering a green alternative to diesel fuel.

INDONESIA

Skeletal analysis uncovered the earliest known limb amputation: 31,000 years ago a child on the island of Borneo had the lower part of his leg surgically removed. The bone shows signs of healing, indicating the child survived the procedure.

PANAMA

A multiyear study along the Panama Canal shows that lightning shapes the composition of forests by killing some tree species more often than others. Species with dense wood and large water-carrying tissues can thrive despite lightning strikes, whereas palm trees (which lack these features) almost always die when struck.

Daniel Leonard is a freelance science journalist and former Scientific American editorial intern whose work focuses on space, tech and natural history. Follow Leonard on Twitter @dalorleon

More by Daniel Leonard
Scientific American Magazine Vol 327 Issue 6This article was published with the title “Quick Hits” in Scientific American Magazine Vol. 327 No. 6 (), p. 22
doi:10.1038/scientificamerican1222-22a

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