Americans on average consumed about 58 pounds of beef and veal in 2019 – compared with a global average of 14 pounds.
Search Results
You searched for: Water
ÄIO’s fermentation process creates healthy, sustainable oils and fats by upcycling low-value industry organics.
A new tuna robot leads the way to more agile underwater robots and drones.
Only talk about the weather?
Glimpse into the ancient Maya empire through the writing of its own inhabitants.
Your life’s memories could, in principle, be stored in the universe’s structure.
A new study provides a possible scientific explanation for the existence of stories about ancient saints performing miracles with water.
Myrkl (pronounced “miracle”) is supposed to let you go wild without facing the consequences the next day. But does it actually work?
65 million years ago, a massive asteroid struck Earth. Not only did Jupiter not stop it, but it probably caused the impact itself.
A non-invasive method for looking inside structures is solving mysteries about the ancient pyramid.
We cannot afford to dream about living on other worlds while we continue to destroy ours.
The recipe for a perfect date night: a rom-com, a bowl of popcorn, and a syringe of testosterone — at least for gerbils, anyway.
From boosting empathy to improving therapy, virtual reality is poised to change our ideas of the self.
Quantum mechanics has taught us that even empty space contains energy. “Negative energy” is the state of having less energy than empty space.
An insect? A vermin? An unwanted animal? What in the world is Franz Kafka talking about?
Humanity is in trouble. Here’s how aliens could help.
Recent research suggests that Earth’s magnetic field bounced back just as complex life was starting to emerge on our planet.
A new study reveals what caused most life on Earth to die out during the end-Permian extinction, also known as the Great Dying.
A new book by historian and author Paul Strathern argues that the Northern European Renaissance has long been overlooked.
Environmental progress is happening quickly but we must keep pushing for change.
Fantasy, meet statistics: The census comes to Middle-earth!
A history of injustice and the greatest natural location for ground-based telescopes have long been at odds. Here’s how the healing begins.
The surface and atmosphere is colored by ferric oxides. Beneath a very thin layer, mere millimeters deep in places, it’s not red anymore.
Spaceguard shows that we can manage risks to the extinction of humanity — if only we put our mind to it.
Sight helps you see a room, but interoception lets you sense it from inside your own body.
Toxoplasmosis, which results from a chance encounter with a cougar and the parasite it carries, can push a wolf to seek alpha status.
“Not my circus, not my monkeys.”
The findings include signs of flash flooding that carried huge boulders downstream into the lakebed.
Astronomers used supercomputers and an international network of antennas to create the stunning map.