And how the family business first took me there.
The post What the Webb Telescope Really Showed Us About the Cosmos’ Beginning appeared first on Nautilus.
And how the family business first took me there.
The post What the Webb Telescope Really Showed Us About the Cosmos’ Beginning appeared first on Nautilus.
Parasites, weather, and luck can play a role in determining whether some animals are male or female.
The post Animal Sex Determination Is Weirder Than You Think appeared first on Nautilus.
The jet stream is one of Earth’s defining features—but it wasn’t easy to find.
The post Searching for the River of Wind appeared first on Nautilus.
Even when we know they’re “fake,” placebos can tame our emotional distress.
The post Sugar Pill Nation appeared first on Nautilus.
One question for Sönke Dangendorf, a coastal flooding researcher at Tulane University.
The post Why Is Sea Level Rise Worse In Some Places? appeared first on Nautilus.
The coming federal budget, to be tabled in May, would be Treasurer Jim Chalmers’ first opportunity to build what he calls “values-based capitalism”.
In an essay published in The Monthly, Chalmers envisions an Australian capitalism that is not defined by just one notion of value (presumably economic value), but by values, or “our (Australian) values”.
The post Values-based capitalism, or financial value-based government? appeared first on Progress in Political Economy (PPE).
After 53 years in captivity, she has a chance at a better life.
The post The Story of a Lonely Orca appeared first on Nautilus.
Medicine uses race to try to provide more equitable care. But that prescription likely does more harm.
The post Is There Any Place for Race in Medicine? appeared first on Nautilus.
Play and art engage all of our senses and enhance attention.
The post To Supercharge Learning, Look to Play appeared first on Nautilus.
One question for Luis Ciria, a neuroscientist at the University of Granada.
The post Exercise Is Great for Our Brains, Too, Right? appeared first on Nautilus.