Connect with us

Published

on

The US Department of Transportation said on Thursday it is investigating Elon Musk’s brain-implant company Neuralink over the potentially illegal movement of hazardous pathogens.

A Department of Transportation spokesperson told Reuters about the probe after the Physicians Committee of Responsible Medicine (PCRM), an animal-welfare advocacy group, wrote to Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg earlier on Thursday to alert it of records it obtained on the matter.

PCRM said it obtained emails and other documents that suggest unsafe packaging and movement of implants removed from the brains of monkeys. These implants may have carried infectious diseases in violation of federal law, PCRM said.

The Department of Transportation spokesperson said the agency took PCRM’s allegations “very seriously.”

“We are conducting an investigation to ensure that Neuralink is in full compliance with federal regulations and keeping their workers and the public safe from potentially dangerous pathogens,” the spokesperson said.

Representatives for Neuralink, including Musk, did not respond to comment requests.

The Department of Transportation probe adds to the scrutiny facing Neuralink, which is developing a brain implant it hopes will help paralyzed people walk again and cure other neurological ailments.

In December, Reuters reported that Neuralink has been under a federal investigation over potential animal welfare violations and that some of its staff made internal complaints about experiments being rushed, causing needless suffering and deaths.

The letter said records that the group obtained showed instances of pathogens, such as antibiotic-resistant staphylococcus and herpes B virus, that may have been transported without proper containment measures.

The incidents that involved potential breaches of hazardous material transportation regulations happened in 2019, when Neuralink relied on University of California, Davis to help carry out its experiments on primates, according to the documents cited by PCRM.

While Neuralink’s partnership with UC Davis ended in 2020, PCRM said the company continues to employ the neurosurgeon who oversaw the experiments and other staff involved may also still be employed.

Reuters reviewed the UC Davis records cited by PCRM in its letter. It is unclear whether further records exist that provide a different or fuller account of what happened. PCRM obtained the records from UC Davis through public information requests. Neuralink messages and records not shared with UC Davis are not subject to such information requests.

A UC Davis spokesperson would only say that the university abides by all biohazard and lab safety regulations.

PCRM’s letter said pathogens were carried on removed implants from monkeys after improper sanitization and packaging. The group said those pathogens could cause serious health issues in infected humans, such as bloodstream infections, pneumonia and severe brain damage, among other problems.

PCRM, which opposes the use of animals in medical research, did not identify any harm as a result of these incidents, but said Neuralink’s actions “may pose a serious and ongoing public health risk.”

“The company’s documented track record of sloppy, unsafe laboratory practices compel DOT to investigate and levy appropriate fines,” PCRM said in the letter.

PCRM said it also found instances that appear to describe UC Davis employees urging immediate biohazard training for Neuralink employees following incidents that had caused contamination concerns. On one occasion in April 2019, a UC Davis employee wrote in an email that the university’s primate center is “at risk” for “monkey contaminated hardware.”

“This is an exposure to anyone coming in contact with the contaminated explanted hardware and we are making a big deal about this because we are concerned for human safety,” wrote the employee, whose name was redacted from the records.

PCRM has raised concerns about Neuralink in the past. Last year, it wrote to federal officials about alleged animal-welfare issues during Neuralink’s research partnership with UC Davis, citing another set of records it obtained. A federal prosecutor in the Northern District of California referred PCRM’s complaint to the USDA Inspector General, which later launched the federal probe into Neuralink, Reuters previously reported.

During its partnership with UC Davis, Neuralink grew frustrated with what it regarded as the slow pace of testing on primates, current and former company employees told Reuters, and has since built out extensive in-house animal testing facilities. The company has missed deadlines set by Musk to proceed to human trials, however. His pressure on Neuralink’s staff to make progress contributed to mistakes plaguing some experiments, Reuters reported.

© Thomson Reuters 2023


Affiliate links may be automatically generated – see our ethics statement for details.

Continue Reading

Science

Did Domesticated Cats Originate in Tunisia? New Study Sheds Light

Published

on

By

Did Domesticated Cats Originate in Tunisia? New Study Sheds Light

The origin of domestic cats has been a prominent topic amongst researchers. Their emergence has been linked to the Neolithic period, where they accompanied the farmers while spreading across Europe, along with the agricultural adaptation. However, further investigations have been conducted wherein the significance puzzled the archaeologists. Recently, two large-scale investigations were conducted by the University of Rome Tor Vergata and 42 institutions, and another by the University of Exeter and contributors from 37 institutions, pointing out that Tunisia could be the place of the origin of the domestic cat.

The Tor Vergata Study on Cats

The expert team of researchers from the University of Rome Tor Vergata conducted paleo-genomic analyses, where they analyzed the specimens of cats from 97 archaeological sites across Europe and Anatolia. Likewise, they also took samples from North Africa, Bulgaria, and Italy.

According to the study published on bioRxiv titled “The dispersal of domestic cats from Northern Africa and their introduction to Europe over the last two millennia”, the researchers analysed a total of 70 low-coverage ancient genomes, 37 radiocarbon-dated cat remains, and 17 modern and museum genomes.

The Tor Vergata Study Results

The Tor Vergata Team, as a result of the nuclear DNA analyses, identified felines embedded by domestic ancestry that appeared from the first century CE onwards in Europe. The team also identified two introductory waves — one from the second century BCE, where wildcats were brought from Northwest Africa to Sardinia, raising the current island population, whereas the other wave belonged to the Roman Imperial period, where the cats genetically sounded similar to domestic cats in Europe. Here, Tunisia was observed as the base for early domestication.

The University of Exeter Study

According to a reprint titled, “Redefining the timing and circumstances of cat domestication, their dispersal trajectories, and the extirpation of European Wildcats,” the collaborative study by the University of Exeter shed light on a distinct timeline. They analysed 2,416 archeological field bones around 206 sites and cross-referenced morphological data, accompanied by genetic findings.

The key findings of this collaborative study defined that domestic cats first appeared in the early first millennium BCE in Europe. Their existence occurred before Roman expansion.

The Egyptian Connection

According to mythological theories, the emergence of domestication of cats was related to religious and cultural dimensions. In Egypt, the cats were considered holy. Also, in Greek culture, these creatures became religious symbols of Artemis and Diana — a multifaceted divinity.

Although the two studies offer different understandings, the results indicate that cats appeared in Europe after moving from North Africa as a result of cultural practices, religious reverence, and trade networks.

Continue Reading

Science

Ocean of Magma Might Be Flowing Underneath the Earth’s Surface

Published

on

By

Ocean of Magma Might Be Flowing Underneath the Earth’s Surface

A new study published on March 26 in the Nature journal revealed that the magma ocean formation near Earth’s core started around 4.4 billion years ago. It might be impacting the Earth today as odd mantle anomalies. Discoveries suggest that Earth inevitably sheltered a deep basal magma believed to have existed at the boundary between the mantle and core. This helped the scientists explain the baffling structure of the mantle, such as the Large Low-Velocity (LLVPS) discovered with the help of seismic imaging. This event has played a crucial role in Earth’s shape with thermal and tectonic evolution.

Discovery and Implications

Assistant Professor Charles-Édouard Boukaré of York University, Toronto, who led this study, told Live Science that these magma oceans could affect thermal communication between the mantle and core, further affecting the tectonic plates’ location.

A new model proposed by his team combines geochemical and seismic data to help researchers explore how early crystallisation could lead to the persistent molten layer formed deep inside the planet. Boukaré, James Badro, and Henri Samuel are affiliated with the French Research Institutions and played a major role in the study published in the Nature journal.

Formation of Basal Magma Ocean

The team discovered that the magma ocean formation is inevitable, irrespective of the direction of Earth’s mantle solidification, either from core to surface or vice versa. In each case, the new Earth model proposes that dense iron oxide-rich solids sank near the Earth’s core and remelted (iron has a low melting point) due to the high temperature and pressure conditions, causing a permanent ocean of magma. Boukaré emphasised that a basal melt would be formed despite the least conducive scenarios.

Lasting Effects and Geological Memory

This study shows that the deep magma ocean left a lasting imprint on the interior of Earth around a few hundred million years ago. In a statement given to the publication, Boukaré said that there is a memory, explaining that Earth’s internal structure was shaped very early in the past and still plays a significant role in bringing geological processes such as tectonic movement and mantle convection. Dating back around 4.4 billion years, LLVPS may be the remnants of this ancient primordial layer.

Looking to Other Planets

Boukaré is seeking to expand the model with further trace elements and practice it on other planets made of rocks. He said that maybe this basal magma ocean event is not so unique to the Earth. This research could open new doors into comprehending the planetary formation across the solar system.

Continue Reading

Science

Exoplanet Found Orbiting Binary Stars on a Sideways Path

Published

on

By

Exoplanet Found Orbiting Binary Stars on a Sideways Path

Researchers have found an odd Milky Way planet orbiting over and under the poles of two failing stars. Star systems arise from flattened, spinning disks of gas and dust, with materials gathering along the plane of the disk, forming planets, moons, and asteroids around a newborn star. Only sixteen exoplanets had ever been verified to circle a binary pair; all of those planets orbit in the plane of the stars’ orbits of one another, not over the poles. The elusiveness of these planets makes this find very fascinating.

Researchers knew of the two objects this odd planet orbits before they came upon it. They originally identified the do-si-doing pair using the SPECULOOS Southern Observatory in Chile in 2018, only to find they were brown dwarfs, failed stars insufficient in mass to ignite. The system began to look stranger once they zoomed in on the binary pair with the Very Large Telescope at the Paranal Observatory in Chile.

Scientists Find First Polar Planet in Bizarre Double-Brown-Dwarf System

According to the report, scientists have found the strangest planetary system yet observed, featuring the first-ever “polar planet” and a planet that orbits two stars. Better known as “failed stars,” brown dwarfs—stellar bodies that fail to gather enough materials to attain the mass required to start the fusion of hydrogen to helium in their cores—are the parent stellar bodies of exoplanet 2M1510 (AB). This discovery is the first solid evidence of such a fully formed system.

Exoplanet 2 M1510 (AB) b is a stellar body known as a “failed star” because it fails to gather enough matter to reach the mass needed to start the fusion of hydrogen to helium in its core. The chance of stellar bodies having a binary partner increases with mass, making a double-brown-dwarf star system pretty surprising.

Rare Eclipsing Brown Dwarf Pair Hosts First Known Polar-Orbit Planet

This is only the second pair of eclipsing brown dwarfs ever discovered, meaning one of the brown dwarfs eclipses the other, as seen from Earth’s vantage point. Team member Amaury Triaud of the University of Birmingham said that “a planet orbiting not just a binary, but a binary brown dwarf, as well as being on a polar orbit, is rather incredible and exciting.”

The discovery was incidental, since the observations were not aimed at such a planet or orbital arrangement. This realization usually helps one to understand what is sensible on the interesting planet we live on.

Continue Reading

Trending