Not Exercising Is Worse for You Than Being Obese
A large-scale study estimates that twice as many deaths can be chalked up to lack of exercise than can be blamed on being obese
Emphasizing Natural Brilliance Might Keep Women Away From Certain Fields
Disparities in science prompted researchers to look into other fields — such as philosophy and economics — as well to find a cause
These Photos From a Lunar Orbiter Could Be Abstract Art
Our distant view of the Moon from Earth is nice, but these close-ups are amazing
Iowa GMO Banana Trial Halted
Twelve volunteers were supposed to one whole GMO banana each — but so far they have eat zero
Some Bat Colonies Might Be Beating White-Nose Syndrome
A few recent discovering on the strange fungus wiping out North American bat colonies give reason to hope
America's Goats Are Concentrated in Texas
In 2012, famers reported more than 2 million goats living in the U.S.
Some Microbes Can Eat And Breathe Electricity
How many ways can life exist? Some recently discovered microbes can live on a cathode, apparently without the need for a carbon food-source
Two Men Tried To Cure Schizophrenia by Removing Their Patients’ Intestines
Bayard Holmes and Henry Cotton were separated by a generation, but both thought that mental illness arose from toxins produced within the body
Early Food Safety Workers Tested Poisons by Eating Them
They were hailed as heroes and even had a song
It’s Cheaper to Make Diabetes Test Strips of Silk Than of Paper in India
Skilled handloom weavers and abundant silk hold the key for an innovative solution
A Museum’s Butterfly Emerged Half Male, Half Female
The rarity is like a natural experiment that tells scientists how genes and hormones interact to produce different sexes
Monkeys Can Learn to Recognize Themselves in the Mirror
Generations of monkeys had tried and failed a classic test of intelligence, but the fault may have been in the way humans thought of the test
60 Years Ago, the First African-American Soloist Sang at the Met Opera
Marian Anderson performed as the fortuneteller Ulrica in Verdi’s Un Ballo in Maschera
Fossils Show How Flying Fish Started to Glide
In the quest to avoid being eaten, some fish took a leap into the open air
Jurassic Park May Have Been Right—Some Dinosaurs Hunted in Packs
The film inspired paleontologists to discover the truth about dinos, including whether raptors were social hunters
Insecticide-Treated Nets May Create Super Mosquitoes
Two species of mosquitos have interbred, giving rise to hybrids that can resist the most potent weapons used against them
There is A Scientific Reason That Cold Weather Could Cause Colds
The rhinovirus that most commonly causes colds likes chillier temperatures, where the host's immune system doesn't fare so well
Model Your New Year’s Resolutions After Marilyn Monroe’s in 1955
The actress wrote that she wanted to "keep looking around me — only much more so"
Two Climbers Are Free-Climbing One of Yosemite's Hardest Routes
Two athletes are halfway through an impressive 32-pitch climb up El Capitan's Dawn Wall
Create Your Very Own False Memories by Lying on Facebook
The brain is notoriously poor at recalling past events, and social media just makes it worse
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