Surprise discoveries that were thousands of years in the making dominated this week’s science news, with scientists discovering that Ötzi the Iceman’s body was teeming with ancient yeasts, which scientists promptly used to make a sourdough.

First discovered in Italy’s Ötztal Alps in September 1991, Ötzi was a prehistoric man who died, likely by murder, some 5,300 years ago before being mummified naturally inside glacier ice. But bad news for Ötzi was good news for four strains of cold-adapted glacier yeasts, which infiltrated his body shortly after his death and may still be active today. In fact, some of these yeasts are just right for baking bread — the scientists used it to make a sourdough they described as “very very good.”

Southern house mosquitoes spread West Nile virus and other diseases.

(Image credit: Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images)

Two people hold hands while skydiving over Earth, a view of its surface next to the blue sky is seen.

Scientists have a general idea about how strong gravity is, but they don’t yet have a precise value for this fundamental force.

(Image credit: AscentXmedia via Getty Images)

An artist’s concept of NASA’s MAVEN spacecraft at Mars. NASA lost contact with MAVEN in Dec. 2025, and determined it to be “unrecoverable” on June 3, 2026.

(Image credit: NASA/GSFC)

The “extinct” Methana volcano, near Athens, was once quiet for nearly 110,000 before awakening and erupting energetically.

(Image credit: Posnov via Getty Images)

The Long March 12B is a reusable, commercial rocket that will help China to build its own satellite megaconstellations.

(Image credit: VCG/VCG via Getty Images)

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