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Bolsanaro arrested; Raccoons domesticating; Webb detects supermassive dark star
330 Articles •
Brazil’s Ex-Leader Bolsonaro Arrested Over Allegations of Escape Plot
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What happened: Brazil's former President Jair Bolsonaro was taken into federal custody on Saturday morning from his Brasilia home, ending his house arrest. Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes ordered the preventive detention citing flight risk after evidence showed Bolsonaro's ankle monitor was tampered with and his son organized a large supporters' vigil that could enable escape.
Why it matters: This marks a critical test of Brazil's democratic institutions as a former head of state faces a 27-year sentence for plotting a coup after losing the 2022 election. The Supreme Court will review the detention Monday while supporters are expected to demonstrate, raising concerns about public order and potential political unrest in Latin America's largest democracy.
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Urban Raccoons Evolving Shorter Snouts in Early Domestication
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What happened: University of Arkansas researchers analyzed nearly 20,000 raccoon photos across the U.S. and found urban raccoons have snouts 3.5% shorter than rural ones, indicating early domestication syndrome. The study, published in October in Frontiers in Zoology, suggests city raccoons are self-domesticating by adapting to human proximity, abundant trash food, and fewer predators.
Why it matters: If raccoons continue domesticating, you may face increased disease risks including rabies, distemper, and roundworm transmission to pets and humans. Friendlier raccoons could become nuisances leading to trapping and relocation, though relocated animals struggle to survive, and some residents already illegally keep them as pets.
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22 Articles •
Webb Telescope Detects Evidence of Supermassive Stars
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The discovery: JWST spotted galaxy CANUCS-LRD-z8.6, a 'Little Red Dot' existing just 570 million years after the Big Bang, hosting a supermassive black hole of 100 million solar masses that is disproportionately large compared to its small stellar population and young age.
Why it matters: This discovery challenges current galaxy formation theories by showing black holes may have grown much faster than their host galaxies in the early universe, potentially requiring scientists to revise fundamental models of how galaxies and black holes co-evolved over cosmic history.
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155 Articles •
Washington Resident Dies from Rare H5N5 Bird Flu
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What happened: A Grays Harbor County resident died yesterday from H5N5 avian influenza, marking the first recorded human infection with this variant globally. The older adult with underlying health conditions owned a backyard flock where health officials detected the virus, and was hospitalized in King County since early November before dying.
What it means: Health officials say public risk remains low with no evidence of human-to-human transmission among monitored contacts. If you have backyard poultry, avoid contact with sick or dead birds, get a seasonal flu vaccine to reduce mutation risk, and report any bird illness to the Washington State Department of Agriculture at 800-606-3056.
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151 Articles •
Nigerian Separatist Leader Nnamdi Kanu Gets Life Sentence
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What happened: A Federal High Court in Abuja convicted IPOB leader Nnamdi Kanu on seven terrorism counts last Thursday, sentencing him to life imprisonment instead of the death penalty prosecutors requested. The 58-year-old separatist was found guilty of inciting violence through broadcasts calling for Biafran secession between 2018 and 2021, and was subsequently moved to a correctional facility in Sokoto.
Why it matters: The verdict could significantly impact security and daily life in southeastern Nigeria, where IPOB has enforced disruptive sit-at-home orders that shut down markets, schools and travel since Kanu's 2021 re-arrest. The sentencing marks a potential turning point in a decade-long separatist movement that has disrupted economic activity and raised tensions in the region.
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