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When It Comes to Back Pain, Maybe You Should be Your Own Doctor

Empowering patients to retake control of their back pain produced surprising results

Ovaries Might Take on an Immune Function After Menopause

The reproductive organs might have hidden role

11 Books to Read This July

Marvelous maggots, biological warfare, AI survivalists, space myths, and more

Coincidences in My Life Have Me Wondering

My search for a hidden structure to astronomically unlikely occurrences

Latest Stories

Does Your Chatbot Need a Therapist?

Scientists want to use LLMs to model human emotions and study human mental health

Rat Disease Has a New Pick-Me-Up

Drugs in human waste may shape how disease spreads from rats to humans

Read Stories from Our Newest Print Issue: PrecariousSee more

The Cephalopods Are Coming

Fossil records reveal Earth’s mass extinctions are followed by a rise of ocean cephalopods. They’re rising again.

Schrödinger’s Kittens Are All Grown Up

Offspring of the most famous thought experiment in physics are now testing the very fabric of the universe

The Most Precarious Day in the Universe

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

This Was a Big Week for Marie Curie, More Than 120 Years Ago

Despite steep odds, she became the first woman in France to earn a doctorate in science

Today Was the Day Galileo Caved

On this day almost four centuries ago, the father of modern science was forced to bow to political and religious pressure to save his life

The Model for Botticelli’s Venus Died at 23

And researchers have a new theory for her untimely demise

How Humans Are Like Bloodhounds and Bats

A conversation with writer Richard Louv, who coined the term “nature deficit disorder”

“Me, Myself, and I”: The Increasing Narcissism of Western Music

Individualistic pronouns have grown more common in pop songs over the past half century

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Can We Air-Condition Our Way Out of Climate Change?

No. But in the midst of intense heat waves it may be necessary to save lives.

Hidden Fungal Networks Could Stretch from the Earth to the Sun a Billion Times Over

A new map of global mycorrhizal fungi details the massive scope of the vital systems

Watch Bison Fend Off a Wolf Attack on a Newborn Calf

They’re not usually considered prey for wolves

Evidence of Recently Discovered Bat Behavior Found Hiding in Plain Sight in Renaissance Painting

The Flemish painter Jan Brueghel the Elder captured the bird-eating behavior in 1611

Science Is Political—and Spiritual

Author and physicist Chanda Prescod-Weinstein on the crisis in American science

Aliens Probably Have Consciousness 

A conversation with a philosopher about extraterrestrial and machine minds

Was the Saber-Toothed Cat Doomed by Its Signature Fangs?

Five million years of evolutionary history were hidden in a museum drawer

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Lung-on-a-Chip Reveals How Asthma Attacks Permanently Change Airways 

Researchers built a cultured lung and gave it an asthma attack

The Trouble with Trash 

A conversation with a trash man turned sociologist about our dangerous waste problem and the heroics that hide it

When Earth Was an Asteroid Rain Hell

The constant barrage made it impossible for continents to form in the planet’s early days

Inside the Brain of a 319-Million-Year-Old Fossil Fish

It paves the way for understanding how ray-finned fishes came to dominate Earth’s oceans

Four New Chameleon Species Found in Tropical “Sky Islands”

Two of which are named after pioneering female scientists

How Fruit Flies Manage Their Exceptionally Long Sperm

If human sperm were a foot long, fruit fly sperm would span three football fields

Some Neanderthals Were Genetically Healthy Right Up Until the End

Not all populations of the ancient human species were struggling prior to their mysterious demise

Archaic Hominin Species Buried Only Their Women

Ancient proteins recovered from the teeth of Homo naledi fossils tell the tale