This week’s science news reminds us how the past still speaks if we listen closely, with news of the discovery of 18 ancient Egyptian tombs filled with dozens of gold tongues topping the bill.

The ancient Egyptians believed that gold was the flesh of the gods, meaning that bestowing gold tongues upon the deceased could help them speak in the afterlife. But it’s not entirely certain whether all of the newly found gold objects were tongues (one may actually depict a wheat ear, a symbol of fertility), and the mystery of a possible false door inside the tomb is also stirring up debate.

A Hubble image of the Milky Way’s center, in the constellation Sagittarius. Researchers have discovered a sugar found in raspberries buried in a cloud in this region.

(Image credit: NASA, ESA, and G. Brammer)

A close up of a black shiny pill bug all rolled up.

A pill bug curls into a round ball for protection.

(Image credit: lophius via Alamy)

The large pit, discovered on Google Maps in 2024, is actually a 390 million-year-old meteor impact crater.

(Image credit: Gordon Osinski via Google Earth)

The newly described monkey has orange lips and a patch of white fur around the anus.

(Image credit:  Daniel Rosengren, Frankfurt Zoological Society  )

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