This New Tool Lets You See Floods From Around the World, Dating Back to 1985
An innovative interactive map could aid future disaster planning, especially for vulnerable countries in the developing world
Inside the Local Movement to Recover Colombia’s River Turtles
In river basins across the country, communities are working to protect the endangered and endemic reptiles
Six Native Artists and Their Works Receive Major Recognition
The upcoming 2023 Renwick Invitational explores how Indigenous worldviews and the present moment inform what Native artists are making today
Climate Change Is Transforming the Bodies of Amazonian Birds
A 40-year study found 77 species of rainforest birds weigh less on average, and many have longer wings, than they used to
The Newest National Marine Sanctuary Is in Lake Michigan. Here’s How to Explore It
Covering 962 square miles, the Wisconsin Shipwreck Coast National Marine Sanctuary includes 36 known shipwrecks
This Apparel Company Wants to Have a Profound Effect on Your Energy Use
LifeLabs Design was founded by a pair of Stanford professors who have developed fabrics capable of cooling and warming the wearer
The Real Betty Crocker May Never Have Existed, but She Still Became a Symbol for American Women
Created as a customer service tool 100 years ago, the fictional character marks the evolution of domesticity in the United States
Presumed Extinct Tentacled Butterfly Ray Is Found
Scientists were shocked to find the species holding out in the water off Iran
How Scientists Are Using Robotic Animals to Learn About Real Ones
Biomimetic bots can teach researchers a lot about how creatures interact in the natural world
Half of These Earwigs Use Their Right Penis. The Other Half Use Their Left Penis. Why?
Scientists mated males with females under a microscope to try and understand why some are southpaws and others are righties
Why Museums Are Primed to Address Racism, Inequality in the U.S.
Smithsonian leaders discuss how the Institution can be a powerful place for investigating and addressing society’s most difficult issues
How Coastal Darkening Is Harming Kelp Forests
The environmental threat that researchers are only beginning to study is dramatically reducing the productivity of the plant
The Victorian Woman Writer Who Refused to Let Doctors Define Her
Harriet Martineau took control of her medical care, defying the male-dominated establishment’s attempts to dismiss her as hysterical and fragile
Before Romeo and Juliet, Paolo and Francesca Were Literature’s Star-Crossed Lovers
Centuries after Italian poet Dante published “The Divine Comedy,” Romantic artists and writers reimagined the tragedy as a tale of female agency
Some Whales Can Eat Upwards of 16 Tons of Tiny Shrimp a Day
The giant mammals consume enormous quantities of marine organisms, three times more than previously thought, then their poop fertilizes the sea
Giant Sea Lizards Ruled the Waves While T. Rex Roamed on Land
A new fossil discovery shows marine reptiles called mosasaurs lived up until the asteroid impact that killed non-avian dinosaurs
The Science Behind Six Spooky Lakes and Other Tales of Haunting Hydrology
From shipwrecks to beach-side ghost towns, the real world can be just as eerie as science fiction
Could Skin Patches Be the Future of Covid Vaccines?
The device might survive longer storage times and pose a better option for people afraid of needles
How ‘Scream’ Explored the Exploitative Nature of the Nightly News
Twenty-five years ago, the first installment of the horror franchise hit theaters just as a national debate about on-screen violence reached a fever pitch
Page 142 of 1322