For some reason, the bodies of deceased monks stay “fresh” for a long time.
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When Olympic athletes perform dazzling feats of athletic prowess, they are using the same principles of physics that gave birth to stars and planets.
How the British obsession with tea triggered wars, led to bizarre espionage, and changed the world — many times.
Before it fueled Woodstock and the Summer of Love, LSD was brought to America to make spying easier.
And, if we have one, how close are we to it? No matter which direction we look in, or how far away our telescopes and instruments are capable of seeing, the […]
What was the universe like one-trillionth of a second after the Big Bang? Science has an answer.
Though gloomy and dense, Russian literature is hauntingly beautiful, offering a relentlessly persistent inquiry into the human experience.
We spend much of our early years learning arithmetic and algebra. What’s the use?
The largest moon in our Solar System, often overlooked, is a water-rich world. Does that mean life? Here on Earth, life took hold very early on in our planet’s history, and […]
A socially minded franchise model makes money while improving society.
Fintech companies are using elements of video games to make personal finance more fun. But does it work, and what are the risks?
The brain of an ancient bird offers clues to the survival of its modern-day relatives.
Scientists discover surviving viruses in 15,000-year-old glacier ice on the Tibetan Plateau in China.
The eastern inner core located beneath Indonesia’s Banda Sea is growing faster than the western side beneath Brazil.
Only the best physical theories outlast the minds that invented them. Throughout the 20th century, a number of discoveries revolutionized our Universe. The discovery of the interior structure of atoms as […]
In ancient Greece, the Olympics were never solely about the athletes themselves.
A new brain imaging study explored how different levels of the brain’s excitatory and inhibitory neurotransmitters are linked to math abilities.
For the ancients, hospitality was an inviolable law enforced by gods and priests and anyone else with the power to make you pay dearly for mistreating a stranger.
We just observed the first ‘lunar formation’ in an exoplanetary system. This one image, above, is the first to show moons actively forming around a planet. This colourful image shows […]
While we can see many solar storms coming, some are “stealthy.” A new study shows how to detect them.
Fear that new technologies are addictive isn’t a modern phenomenon.
The Inglehart-Welzel World Cultural map replaces geographic accuracy with closeness in terms of values.
A study finds that baby mammals dream about the world they are about to experience to prepare their senses.
The non-contact technique could someday be used to lift much heavier objects — maybe even humans.
Australian parrots have worked out how to open trash bins, and the trick is spreading across Sydney.
The few seconds of nuclear explosion opening shots in Godzilla alone required more than 6.5 times the entire budget of the monster movie they ended up in.
Opponents of 19th-century American imperialism were not above body-shaming the personification of the U.S. government.
Most of us will never run a 4 minute mile. But on a bicycle, almost anyone can do it. As human beings, we often take for granted how our bodies work. […]
Information may not seem like something physical, yet it has become a central concern for physicists. A wonderful new book explores the importance of the “dataome” for the physical, biological, and human worlds.