Skip to Content

A Century of David Attenborough

The unmistakable narrator of nature documentaries turns 100 today

These Whales Are Screaming in the Strait of Gibraltar

Critically endangered pilot whales struggle to communicate over the din of boats

For Every Patient Their Own Drug

Patients with exceedingly rare genetic diseases fall through the cracks of the medical system. This doctor is designing drugs for them, one at a time.

Watch NASA’s Curiosity Rover Unstick Itself From a Rock

This isn’t the first drill problem that’s plagued the rover

Most Bird Wings Aren’t Optimized for Flight

They’re flying on a wing and a prayer

Latest Stories

Mapping the Illegal Wildlife Trade Using Pangolin DNA

Genetic material from these improbable creatures helps pinpoint exploitation hot spots

How to Build a Trustworthy Robot

A conversation with a robot researcher about a possible future where robots are like teammates in hospitals, factories, and homes

Does Sexual Attraction Cloud Our Rejection Detection?

The ability to read signals may be impaired by arousal

From our latest print issue

See more

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

Chernobyl, 40 Years Later

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

Kon-Tiki Set Sail 79 Years Ago Today

The most epic, pseudoscientific adventure ever

Rome Was Built Today

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

What Your Dream Life Says About You

A conversation with a dream researcher about how dream content and recall may reflect personality and thinking style

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

The Things That Fuel Our Dreams

“What dreams may come” depends on your personality

Get unlimited, ad-free Nautilus. Become a member today.

Nature’s Overlooked Role in National Security

A conversation with an ecologist and a national security expert about the underappreciated risks posed by ecological disruption

Farewell to a Giant of Botany

Peter Raven, the transformative conservationist and father of “coevolution,” passed away this week

When a Species’ Survival Hinges on Every Single Embryo

The two female Northern white rhinos keeping the species alive

These Beetles Might Be Flying Ubers for Worms

Trigger warning for anyone squicked out by wriggling masses of things

Fruit Flies: Masters of Hypergravity

These insects not only survived gravity four times stronger than Earth’s, they thrived

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 Mysterious Hantavirus Outbreak That Put the Virus on the Western Map

More than 30 years ago, in the Four Corners region of the US, an Old-World pathogen was discovered in the New World

Read more

See all posts

AI Music vs. My Parents

My folks were taken in by the latest algorithmic “artist,” and it scares me

10 Books We’re Excited About This May

Quantum physics, AI pals, and seagull attacks

The First Male Neanderthal Genome

Genetic insights from a 110,000-year-old individual recovered from a cave in Siberia

Our Human Ancestors Dined on Takeout

Why early hominins opted for the to-go option

What Hurt This Jurassic Sea Monster?

The ichthyosaurs had some tremendous survival skills

Uncovering Hidden Martian Glaciers With Drones

We know they’re there, we just don’t know how deep they are

How Does Your Brain Know a Cat Is a Cat?

A conversation with renowned neuroscientists Lisa Feldman Barrett and Earl Miller about categories, “folk psychology,” beginner’s mind, and thinking fast and slow