Science Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Pinterest Share on LinkedIn Megan Murray and colleagues at the University of Technology Sydney have found that human hair and dog fur are extremely good at soaking-up oil spills on roads and other hard surfaces. “Dog fur in particular was surprisingly good at oil spill clean-up, and felted mats from human hair and fur were very easy to apply and remove from the spills,” says Murray. Although synthetic materials are readily available for soaking-up oil, they are not biodegradable. As a result, the Australian team has tested several natural materials including peat moss – which was not as good as human hair. They report their results in Environments. The shortlist for the Insight Investment Astronomy Photographer of the Year 2020 competition has been announced and includes some fantastic images of the sky. My favourite is a photo of polar stratospheric clouds above a snow landscape in Finland that was taken by Thomas Kast. He says the clouds “are something I have been searching for for many years and had seen only in photographs until that day”. The winners will be announced on 10 September and the shortlisted works will be exhibited at the National Maritime Museum in London starting in October. This week marks the 75th anniversary of the Trinity test and on his blog Restricted Data, Alex Wellerstein asks what would have happened if that first test of a nuclear weapon had failed? He considers three different types of failure and looks at some of the military and political implications. Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Pinterest Share on LinkedIn Products You May Like Ads by AmazonArticles You May Like Movie Review: ‘Sonic the Hedgehog 3’ The Fed’s dot plot shows only two rate cuts in 2025, fewer than previously projected PCE inflation November 2024: Alexandra Breckenridge Reveals Her Hopes for Mel & Jack in Season 7 NASA’s Parker Solar Probe will fly closer to the sun than ever on Christmas Eve