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Are Humanoid Robots the End of Human Work?

Here’s what the people making the robots think

The Science of Cities. 10 Books You Must Read

Nautilus ventures into the urban world to map the mysterious complexity of cities

The Most Precarious Day in the Universe

On the same day the world descended into war, physicists saw reality itself unraveling

When One Dead Whale Becomes a Decades-Long Buffet

An ocean floor feast that’s bottomless

The Earthquake Illusion

Why we think quakes are becoming more frequent

Latest Stories

These Odd Birds Flirt by Clapping in the Middle of the Night

Who needs love songs when you can snap your wrists together loudly?

Illustrating the Precarious

How our cover artist sees these quaking times

A Look Back at Hubble’s Most Breathtaking Images

It’s been 36 years since it beamed back the first glimpses of our universe from space

Read Stories from Our Newest Print Issue: Precarious

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How to Predict an Earthquake

In the trenches with a paleoseismologist

We Got Lucky as a Species

From an ancient brush with extinction came the big modern brain

Coral Reefs Are at a Tipping Point

My underwater dive to discover whether the beautiful ocean organisms are ever coming back

NASA Astronaut Films Spectacular Fireball Over Earth

The crewman captured the light show while waiting on a supply craft

How Did We Miss the Asteroid That Will Narrowly Miss Us?

Space still harbors surprises aplenty, even with our rapidly evolving technologies

Is This Why Science Advances One Funeral at a Time?

As researchers age, they produce less disruptive work

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

The Impossible Strength of the Testosterone Myth

Scientists keep knocking it down but it keeps roaring back

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

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Nobody Could Save Timmy the Whale

Months of rescue efforts by influencers and millionaires may have just prolonged his death

Stare Into the Heart of an Ancient Iceberg

The beauty of the blue ice belies a fragility exposed by human activity

The Tonga Volcano Cleaned Up After Itself

The blast scrubbed some of its own methane emissions from the atmosphere

These World-Record Humpbacks Crossed 9,000 Miles of Open Ocean

Their migrations may be a “tail” of mating opportunities

New Species of Deadly Box Jellyfish Discovered

The fatal marine creature lives near Singapore’s “Island of Death Behind”

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