This Non-Movie-Star Shark Is Feeding Close to Shore
Pretty great but not so white
Beavers Don’t Just Build Dams, They Build Nations
A journey to the hidden settlement of nature’s busy hydro-engineer
The Cephalopods Are Coming
Fossil records reveal Earth’s mass extinctions are followed by a rise of ocean cephalopods. They’re rising again.
9 Books We’re Excited About This June
Sea monsters, Niagara’s toxic legacy, and animal orgasms
Schrödinger’s Kittens Are All Grown Up
Offspring of the most famous thought experiment in physics are now testing the very fabric of the universe
Latest Stories
Tadpoles Use a World War I Naval Strategy to Dazzle Predators
Sometimes all it takes is a new paint job
Did a Roman Legionnaire Wear Eyeliner?
An ancient makeup bottle turns up far from its Egyptian home
Read Stories from Our Newest Print Issue: Precarious
See moreThe Most Precarious Day in the Universe
On the same day the world descended into war, physicists saw reality itself unraveling
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Cutting-edge science, unraveled by the brightest living thinkers.
Astronomy
See more AstronomyThe Moon Bases of Yesteryear
With NASA recently detailing its plans for a lunar settlement, here’s a look at how that concept has taken shape through history
History
See more HistoryIs This Why Science Advances One Funeral at a Time?
As researchers age, they produce less disruptive work
Psychology
See more PsychologyHow the “Perfectionism Pandemic” Is Crushing Young People
Our current achievement economy may deserve the blame
The Impossible Strength of the Testosterone Myth
Scientists keep knocking it down but it keeps roaring back
Does Sexual Attraction Cloud Our Rejection Detection?
The ability to read signals may be impaired by arousal
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Environment
See more EnvironmentAfter the Black Death, Italy’s Oak Trees Came Back
Turns out getting rid of large swaths of humanity benefits nature
Nobody Could Save Timmy the Whale
Months of rescue efforts by influencers and millionaires may have just prolonged his death
Zoology
See more ZoologyThis Blood-Sucking Fly Drastically Transforms When It Finds Its Prey
Just in case you needed some new nightmare fuel
Wearing DEET Might Be Like Ringing the Mosquito Dinner Bell
Pavlov’s dog, meet Pavlov’s mosquito
Philosophy
See more PhilosophyThe Bad Seed and the Problem of Blame
A conversation with behavioral geneticist Kathryn Paige Harden about the heritability of vice
A Light in the Dark: Finding the Good in the Natural World
Is it absurd to think that science can inform our values?
How ‘Tiny Shortcuts’ Are Poisoning Science
Seemingly harmless data tweaks are undermining the integrity of the entire field. We must define the problem to prevent it
What Happened When the First Animals Started to Move
Life on Earth wasn’t always mobile
Read more
See all postsEditing the Pesky Bones Out of a Popular Farmed Fish
Genetic modification could make carp more accessible for millions
Nightmarish Heron-like Dinosaur Unearthed in Patagonia
Pretty tough to be a fish 70 million years ago
How Right-Wing Politics Make You Physically Ill
Over the past two decades, right-wing ideology has become associated with less trust in medicine—and poorer health
The Genetic Secrets of a Shark That Lives for 500 Years
How the Greenland shark lives long and prospers
The Many Ways to Build a Black Hole
Gravitational waves point to a multifaceted assembly line for the cosmic oddities
This “Feathered Dragon” Shook Its Tail Feathers in the Time of Dinosaurs
Some things never go out of style
The Supernova That Sparked the Original Scientific Revolution
Centuries before we started debating the transformative effect of AI on science, a new light in the sky shone the way
Why Do More Women Than Men Develop Alzheimer’s?
A study in mice suggests loss of estrogen between brain cells as a possible cause






































