Ed Dwight Was Going to Be the First African American in Space. Until He Wasn’t
The Kennedy administration sought a diverse face to the space program, but for reasons unknown, the pilot was kept from reaching the stars
How Sugar’s Bacteria Could Point the Way to More Efficient Agriculture
New research proves the power of beneficial bacteria and fungi that help sugarcane grow larger and rebound from stress faster
Fourteen Fun Facts About Love and Sex in the Animal Kingdom
Out in the wild, flowers and candy just aren’t gonna cut it
These Jellyfish Don’t Need Tentacles to Deliver a Toxic Sting
Smithsonian scientists discovered that tiny ‘mucus grenades’ are responsible for a mysterious phenomenon known as ‘stinging water’
Mexico City Is Proposing to Build One of the World’s Largest Urban Parks
More than twice the size of Manhattan, the park could restore the water systems of the region and serve as a model for cities around the world
Charles Darwin’s Publisher Didn’t Believe in Evolution, but Sold His Revolutionary Book Anyway
The famed naturalist and conservative stalwart John Murray III formed an unlikely alliance in popularizing a radical idea
Newly Discovered Tyrannosaur Was Key to the Rise of Giant Meat-Eaters
A partial skull found in Alberta helps put a timer on when the ‘tyrant lizards’ got big
When a Women-Led Campaign Made It Illegal to Spit in Public in New York City
While the efficacy of the spitting policy in preventing disease transmission was questionable, it helped usher in an era of modern public health laws
Nine Women Whose Remarkable Lives Deserve the Biopic Treatment
From Renaissance artists to aviation pioneers, suffragists and scientists, these women led lives destined for the silver screen
How Simple Blood Tests Could Revolutionize Cancer Treatment
The latest DNA science can match tumor types to new treatments, and soon, a blood test might be able to detect early signs of cancer
Why Mosquitoes Find Your Warm Blood So Appealing
These bloodthirsty buggers repurposed a gene normally used to sense and avoid high temperatures into a heat-seeking molecular machine
The Best Board Games of the Ancient World
Thousands of years before Monopoly, people were playing games like Senet, Patolli and Chaturanga
A New Experiment Hopes to Solve Quantum Mechanics’ Biggest Mystery
Physicists will try to observe quantum properties of superposition—existing in two states at once—on a larger object than ever before
Can Disease-Sniffing Dogs Save the World’s Citrus?
Once trained, canines can detect citrus greening disease earlier and more accurately than current diagnostics
New Generation of Dark Matter Experiments Gear Up to Search for Elusive Particle
Deep underground, in abandoned gold and nickel mines, vats of liquid xenon and silicon germanium crystals will be tuned to detect invisible matter
Spitzer Space Telescope Ends Operations After Scanning the Cosmos for 16 Years
Looking back on the groundbreaking discoveries of NASA’s little telescope that could
Artists Who Paint With Their Feet Have Unique Brain Patterns
Neuroscientists determined that certain “sensory maps” in the brain become more refined when people use their feet like hands
Some Salamanders Can Regrow Lost Body Parts. Could Humans One Day Do the Same?
In recent decades, the idea of human regeneration has evolved from an ‘if’ to a ‘when’
Deciphering the Weird, Wonderful Genetic Diversity of Leaf Shapes
Researchers craft a new model for plant development after studying the genetics of carnivorous plants’ cup-shaped traps
Albatrosses Outfitted With GPS Trackers Detect Illegal Fishing Vessels
By utilizing the majestic birds to monitor huge swaths of the sea, law enforcement and conservationists could keep better tabs on illicit activities
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