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Earth's Rotation and Underground Resource LossGroundwater Depletion: Since 1990, 2150 gigatons of groundwater were ...
Sommnath S Samntha
Condoms and Vasectomies Aren’t Enough—Is a Male Birth Control Pill Next?
In this episode, host Rachel Feltman speaks with freelance science journalist Hannah Seo about a promising new development in ...
Scientific American
The Science of Marijuana and THC is Fascinating and More Important Than Ever
Why does weed make you hungry, happy, and forgetful—all at the same time? We're digging into the way THC impacts our bodies ...
Scientific American
Doctors discover new blood type and only one person has it
Most people know their blood type as A, B, AB or O, and whether they're “” or “negative.” But those are just 2 of 48 recognized ...
Scientific American
This Surgery Can Lead to Weight Loss—But Stigma Is Harder to Shake Off
Each year more than half a million people undergo bariatric surgery, a procedure geared toward weight loss. But research shows ...
Scientific American
Why Dungeons and Dragons is good for your brain
From building confidence to processing trauma, tabletop role-playing games like Dungeons & Dragons are proving to be powerful ...
Scientific American
What is Scientific American?
Every story is a science story. Please visit our website to discover the latest advances in science and technology: ...
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CDC Vaccine Panel Fired by RFK, Jr., Oceans Grow More Acidic, and Pangolins Threatened by Hunting
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., has fired the experts on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's vaccine advisory panel, sparking ...
Scientific American
How to Fight Bird Flu If It Becomes the Next Human Pandemic (Part 3)
Creating a bird flu vaccine requires several layers of bioprotective clothing and typically a whole lot of eggs. H5N1 avian influenza ...
Scientific American
Treating Traces of Trauma, Why Your Shoes Are Untied, and More: 60 Second Science Podcasts
Listen and learn about the way researchers have treated early-life trauma over the course of a mouse's life, how the formation of ...
Scientific American
Grocery shopping under the Greenland ice sheet
Last summer, our Chief Multimedia Editor Jeffery DelViscio visited the East Greenland Ice-Core Project. Scientists working at this ...
Scientific American
Asthma Preventing Microbes, Pollinator Plant Preference, and More: 60 Second Science Podcasts
Listen and learn about the microbes that may lower children's risk of having asthma, why an early flower bloom might be a sign of ...
Scientific American
Why Do We Sleep? - Instant Egghead #55
We spend nearly a third of our lives asleep, but scientists don't agree on sleep's purpose. Scientific American contributor Joss ...
Scientific American
What Everyone Gets Wrong about Colonoscopies
Colonoscopy gets a bad rap, but how much of what you've heard is actually true? In recognition of Colorectal Cancer Awareness ...
Scientific American
Mitochondria aren’t just the powerhouse anymore
Mitochondria are the powerhouse of the cell—it's a phrase Scientific American coined way back in 1957 that makes it into science ...
Scientific American
Going Outside Can Change Our Hormones and Improve Microbiome Diversity
Going outside has many benefits, from regulating our nervous system to diversifying our microbiome. But you don't need a forest ...
Scientific American
What is Sickle Cell Disease? And Can Science Cure it?
You have around 35 trillion red blood cells moving around your body at all times. Typically they are rounded and flexible.
Scientific American
4 nonfiction books Scientific American recommended In June
Scientific American reads— a lot. These are four of our recommendations from June, from slithering snakes to a river's impact.
Scientific American
Dinner with King Tut Explores the Wild World of Experimental Archaeology
Science writer Sam Kean joins Science Quickly to explore the hands-on world of experimental archaeology—where researchers ...
Scientific American
Could Mitochondria Be Rewriting the Rules of Biology?
Mitochondria are known as the powerhouses of the cell—but new research suggests they might be far more complex. Columbia ...
Scientific American
Russia’s Earthquake, Wonders of Walking and Surprising Plant Genetics
Host Rachel Feltman talks with Andrea Thompson, Scientific American's senior sustainability editor, to discuss the massive ...
Scientific American
How Are Prenatal Blood Tests Detecting Cancer?
Noninvasive prenatal blood testing, or NIPT, is a routine screening that is offered during pregnancy and looks for placental DNA to ...
Scientific American
Researchers report “climate of fear” in U.S. science
Nearly 2000 of the nation's leading scientists have signed an open letter denouncing the Trump administration's attack on science ...
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Scientific American Goes (Very) Woke #shorts
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Annie Campbell
Why fruit looks better in nets
Fruits and vegetables wrapped in a colorful net appear riper and more appetizing. This is caused by a perceptual phenomenon ...
Scientific American
Being cut off from other humans changes your brain. Here's the science on how.
Over the past few months, the phrase “social distancing” has entered our lexicon. Many of us have found ourselves separated ...
Scientific American
Scientific American: As Trump Touts Dangerous Cures, Here’s What We Know About COVID-19 Drug Tests
President Trump dangerously suggested injecting disinfectants could help patients sick with the coronavirus, then said he was ...
Democracy Now!
Is AI Conscious? Claude 4 Raises the Question
Host Rachel Feltman talks with Deni Ellis Béchard, Scientific American's senior tech reporter, about his recent exchange with ...
Scientific American
Neuroscience Meets Magic - by Scientific American
SUBSCRIBE to our channel: http://goo.gl/aLpxX --- Brain scientists Stephen Macknik and Susana Martinez-Conde explain the ...
Scientific American
Behind the Scenes of Gravitational-Wave Research at MIT's LIGO Lab
Come with Science Quickly on a field trip to the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) Lab at the ...
Scientific American
Using AI to Understand the Thoughts of the Dead
Writings and records are how we understand long-gone civilizations without being able to interact with ancient peoples. A recent ...
Scientific American
Scientific American: Psychology - Christina, In Her Own Words, Video Profile
From: Chapter 2, Biology and Behavior.
Macmillan Learning
How Did a Volcano Turn a Brain to Glass? Plus, Measles, Mystery Illness and Microbes
Officials have confirmed the first measles death in an outbreak in West Texas. A meeting to discuss which strains to focus on for ...
Scientific American
Must Be Microplastics on the Brain
Not much passes into our brain from the rest of our body, to the chagrin of drug makers everywhere. So it should be cause for ...
Scientific American
Are These Plants Out of Place? A New Look at Invasive Species
When you hear “invasive plant,” you might picture an aggressive species taking over and harming the environment. But what if the ...
Scientific American
The lab under Greenland's ice sheet
Thousands of meters below Greenland's ice sheet, there is a treasure trove of climate history records. To uncover this archive, ...
Scientific American
Check out this article at Scientific American!
This is just a brief announcement to bring a recent article at Scientific American to viewers' attention. The article features Jacob ...
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Is the National Weather Service Ready for an Extreme Summer?
The dedicated staff of the National Weather Service are responsible for the data that underpin your weather forecast and ...
Scientific American
Megalodon Diets, Teeth Sensitivity and a Bunch of Vaccine News
The measles outbreak in West Texas is slowing. Health officials think an increase in vaccination rates contributed to the slowdown ...
Scientific American
Scientific American's endorses Kamala Harris - Dr. Bret Weinstein & Dr. Heather Heying's response
Bret Weinstein
Our Fear and Fascination around Snakes
When writer Stephen S. Hall was a child, he would capture snakes—much to his mother's chagrin. Now the science journalist is ...
Scientific American