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Chernobyl, 40 Years Later

A lot has changed at the site of the world’s worst nuclear disaster

Scorpions Wield Metal-Tipped Weapons

They pack an even more impressive punch than previously thought

New Frog Species Gets Olympian Name

It’s a big honor for such a small amphibian

The Mix-up at the Heart of the Supreme Court’s Conversion Therapy Ruling

A psychiatrist on the crucial distinction the case glosses over, how media coverage has made it worse, and why that’s dangerous for LGBTQ+ youth

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Saving the Girl with Dementia

It takes a family to drive research for a rare disease forward

When Scientists Are Dinosaurs 

At the paleontology conference, her new theory was shouted down

(Almost) A Eulogy for Voyager

The robotic space probe is 15 billion miles away and is nearing the end of its life in the distant cosmos

The Peace That an Eclipse Brings

The total solar eclipse in 2024 hushed the Earth by striking awe in the humans in its path

Rome Was Built Today

Celebrating the scientific and technical contributions of Rome on the mythical birthday of the eternal city

The Birth of Genius

Leonardo da Vinci, polymath and victim of the vagaries of science funding, was born on this day

The Bra-and-Girdle Maker That Fashioned the Impossible for NASA

Crafting a spacesuit demanded perfection from seamstresses to gluers to engineers — every stitch could mean life or death

The Things That Fuel Our Dreams

“What dreams may come” depends on your personality

The Science of Spooky Sounds

A conversation with a “pseudoscience” researcher about how infrasound could be linked to ghosts

The Problem with Psychedelic Research

A conversation with a psychedelics researcher about a fundamental flaw in how we test these mind-bending drugs

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Earth Day Started with an Oil Spill

The day of environmental action and protest has grown and evolved over the past 56 years

The 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

The Predictive Powers of Bear Poop

It doesn’t even need to leave the intestines to tell a story

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Where Brains Process Smell

First “smell map” reveals organization where scientists had predicted chaos

Trump’s War on Science Continues

As sacked National Science Board members and lawmakers speak out, US research preeminence further dims on the international stage

When “Extinct” Volcanoes Reawaken

They’re filled with a lot more fury than their millennia-long slumber would suggest

What Mummies Read Before a Long Nap

Archaeologists have recovered a scrap of the Iliad in the belly of an interred Egyptian