Kalanikumupa'aflipped into FrothyDinosaurs The Real Dilophosaurus Would Have Eaten the Jurassic Park Version for Breakfast - Scientific American scientificamerican.com - Matthew A. Brown,Adam D. Marsh The fading sun beat down on our backs after an already long day in the field. Exhausted, we toiled over shovels and dug with our bare hands to clear …
AvatarPete Conryflipped into The Slurred WordPuzzles When Scientific American Made M. C. Escher Famous scientificamerican.com - Stephen Ornes Between 1957 and 1986 Martin Gardner wrote the Mathematical Games column for this magazine, with a total of 297 installments. During that time he …
AvatarRick Timmerflipped into Health & SelfPigs Why Pet Pigs Are More like Wolves Than Dogs - Scientific American scientificamerican.com - Jason G. Goldman Given an impossible task, a dog will ask a human for help, but a wolf will not seek help—and neither will a pet pig.
Scientific Americanflipped into Scientific AmericanScience What Science Has Learned about the Coronavirus One Year On - Scientific American scientificamerican.com - Jeffery DelViscio,Britt Glaunsinger About a year ago, SARS-CoV-2 (which wasn’t called that yet) was just beginning to emerge in a cluster of cases inside China. We know what has …
AvatarPaul McGflipped into Health Aging Why Some People Get Terribly Sick from COVID-19 - Scientific American scientificamerican.com - Claudia Wallis You might have a sniffle and be done. You might run a fever with a cough and unshakable fatigue for five days—or 10. Or you might end up in a …
Infinite Mindflipped into Alpha Omega NewsScience Bizarre Bugs Found in Big City Show Nature's Weirdness Is Everywhere - Scientific American scientificamerican.com - Mark Fischetti City dwellers may be familiar with flies and cockroaches, but a closer look shows there is a mind-blowing array of tiny critters that creep and crawl …
Scientific Americanflipped into Scientific AmericanDeepfakes A Nixon Deepfake, a 'Moon Disaster' Speech and an Information Ecosystem at Risk - Scientific American scientificamerican.com - Jeffery DelViscio What can former U.S. president Richard Nixon possibly teach us about artificial intelligence today and the future of misinformation online? Nothing. …
Ruperto Garciaflipped into NatureWhales Blue Whale Song Timing Reveals Time to Go - Scientific American scientificamerican.com - Susanne Bard Blue whales off California’s coast sing at night—until it’s time to start migrating, and they switch to daytime song.
Samflipped into Personal InterestsDolphins Science Sound(E)scapes: Amazon Pink River Dolphins - Scientific American scientificamerican.com - Jeffery DelViscio,Timothy Weaver Need a break from politics and pandemic? You're probably not in the Amazon rainforest right now, but we can take you there in audio. Today, in part …
Falconflipped into EclecticaBaking Bread Science: A Yeasty Conversation - Scientific American scientificamerican.com - W. Wayt Gibbs,Steve Mirsky “Baking is applied microbiology,” according to the book Modernist Bread. During pandemic lockdowns, many people started baking their own bread. …
Scientific Americanflipped into Scientific AmericanScience What We’re Thankful for at Scientific American scientificamerican.com - Laura Helmuth At a lot of Thanksgiving dinners, people go around the table and take turns talking about something they’re thankful for. It’s nice! This …
Scientific Americanflipped into Scientific AmericanLanguage How to Turn 175 Years of Words in Scientific American into an Image - Scientific American scientificamerican.com - Moritz Stefaner Summarizing the history of a 175-year-old magazine—that's 5,107 editions with 199,694 pages containing 110,292,327 words!—into a series of graphics …
Vivian Narvaezflipped into IN THE GARDENScience Old Art Offers Agriculture Info - Scientific American scientificamerican.com - Susanne Bard Art museums are filled with centuries-old paintings with details of plants that today give us clues about evolution and breeding practices.
Scientific Americanflipped into Scientific AmericanDead Sea Scrolls Science News from around the World - Scientific American scientificamerican.com - Scott Hershberger Here are some brief reports about science and technology from all over, including one from Israel about what DNA reveals about the Dead Sea Scrolls’ …
Scientific Americanflipped into Scientific AmericanHIV Lessons from AIDS for the COVID-19 Pandemic - Scientific American scientificamerican.com - William A. Haseltine “We are now engaged in another deadly episode in the historic battle of man versus microbe. These battles have shaped the course of human evolution …
Scientific Americanflipped into Scientific AmericanScience River Ecosystem Restoration Can Mean Just Add Water - Scientific American scientificamerican.com - Jason G. Goldman Planners returned water to the dry bed of Arizona’s Santa Cruz River in 2019, and various species began showing up on the same day.
Scientific Americanflipped into Scientific AmericanAnimals Humans Make Wild Animals Less Wary - Scientific American scientificamerican.com - Jason G. Goldman From mammals to mollusks, animals living among humans lose their antipredator behaviors.
Scientific Americanflipped into Scientific AmericanNobel Prize Nobelist Talks CRISPR Uses - Scientific American scientificamerican.com - Steve Mirsky New Nobel laureate in chemistry Jennifer Doudna talks about various applications of the gene-editing tool CRISPR.