Central Park’s Horse-Drawn Carriages Could Be Replaced With Old-Timey Electric Cars
Demand for horse-drawn rides has reportedly spiked as tourists and locals alike rush in for a chance to take one last buggy ride through the park
Caterpillars Repel Predators With Second-Hand Nicotine Puffs
As far as spiders are concerned, caterpillars have a case of very bad breath
Dolphins Seem to Use Toxic Pufferfish to Get High
The dolphins' expert, deliberate handling of the terrorized puffer fish implies that this is not their first time at the hallucinogenic rodeo
This Texas Teen's Most Productive Fishing Hole Is the Sewer
Kyle Naegeli, 15, first discovered this unlikely fishing hole after he made a $5 bet with his dad
Tolkien's Dwarves Would Have Needed 38 Mini-Nuclear Plants to Melt All That Gold So Quickly
Unless those dwarf furnaces were burning some sort of Middle-earth super fuel, in real life Smaug probably would have just eaten the dwarves
The Latest Technology in Cheap Energy Storage Is Manufactured with Pasta Makers
A startup based in Manhattan called Urban Electric Power is taking a stab at the energy storage problem.
Science Is Inching Closer to the Possibility of Erasing Bad Memories
Scientists began tinkering with memory in the late 1960s, but it's only recently that research really began to hint that this might be possible
Coconut Crabs Eat Everything from Kittens to, Maybe, Amelia Earhart
According to one theory, Earhart did not drown in the Pacific but instead crashed on the remote Nikumaroro atoll, where she was eaten by coconut crabs
Sewage Water Reveals Community’s Illegal Drug Habits
Sewage analyses in the US found the highest levels of methamphetamines to date, but revealed that cocaine use in the US seems on par with that in Europe
Animals And Humans Use Similar Tactics to Find Food
The authors think this particular foraging method may have evolved in early humans and stuck around through the eons due to its effectiveness
This Trippy New Headband Supposedly Allows Wearers to Take Control of Their Dreams
A startup called iWinks is attempting to commercialize lucid dreaming, or dreams in which the dreamer realizes she's dreaming
How the North American Aerospace Defense Command Got Into the Business of Tracking Santa
It all began in 1955 with Sears, a wrong number and a very confused Colonel
See Every One of Santa's International Guises
An entrepreneurial kid could potentially rack up on the gifts by traveling around the world, hitting three Christmas jackpots in one short month
A Recap of Our Five Favorite New Species of 2013
An owl, a cat, a dolphin, and of course the olinguito, are among this year's biggest new species finds
Look Closely, And You Can Find New Species—Even in Well-Explored Countries Like Norway
Determination is all that's needed to discover new species
This 200 Million-Year-Old Plant Species Helps Explain the Origin of All Flowers
Of the 300,000 flowering plants known today, Amborella is the only one that directly traces back to the common ancestor of them all
1,000 Years Ago, Patients Survived Brain Surgery, But They Had To Live With Huge Holes in Their Heads
The practice finally came to an end when the Spanish arrived in the 16th century and decided to make it illegal
In Germany, Santa’s Sidekick Is a Cloven-Hooved, Child-Whipping Demon
The Krampus is even gaining a following on this side of the pond, with Krampus art shows, Krampus beer crawls and Krampus rock shows
A Game Designer Thinks He Can Improve on Chess’ 1,500-Year-Old Rules
A young MIT-grad and game designer named David Sirlin says he's come up with something better than the timeless board game
The Tolkien Nerd’s Guide to “The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug”
As Peter Jackson ventures further from J.R.R. Tolkien’s original text, the source material becomes harder to pin down but is still satisfyingly nerdy
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